Maria Shriver has worn many hats over the course of her 69 years—Peabody-winning journalist, former First Lady of California, best-selling author, media mogul, and most recently, founder of a brain health snack company.
Now, she adds another title to her résumé: honoree on the 2025 Forbes and Know Your Value “50 Over 50” U.S. list, which was released on Wednesday and celebrates women who are rewriting the rules and making their biggest impact after the age of 50.
For Shriver, this honor is more than recognition—it’s a reflection of the decades she’s spent reshaping the national conversation around women’s health, aging, and purpose. “You just need one person to come along and go, ‘I hear you, I get you, I see you. Let me go with you,’” she told Forbes’ Maggie McGrath. “And then all of a sudden you have the beginnings of a movement.”
A movement is exactly what she built with the Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement (WAM), which she founded in 2011 after her father, Sargent Shriver, was diagnosed with the disease. At the time, women were largely absent from the Alzheimer’s narrative—even though two-thirds of those diagnosed were women. “There was no research into women’s brains,” Shriver explained. “So we launched an organization to fund that research and to change the story.”
Her vision paid off. WAM has since become part of the Cleveland Clinic and secured $8 million in the last year alone to advance women-specific Alzheimer’s prevention research. “When you have a whisper that something’s not right—go after that,” she said.









