In 2021, when Know Your Value partnered with Forbes to publish our first ever “50 Over 50“ list, Vice President Kamala Harris, television producer and screenwriter Shonda Rhimes, founder Julie Wainwright and investor Cathie Wood headlined the inaugural edition.
To our delight, we discovered that some wannabe listers’ applications were rejected … because they were too young! Imagine that.
‘Their best years are ahead’: Forbes and Know Your Value reveal 4th annual ‘50 Over 50’ U.S. list
Today, Harris is a candidate for president (and is seen as the “younger” contender!) and Forbes and Know Your Value’s “50 Over 50” list has since become a global success and a cross-cultural, multigenerational movement.
We know the importance of spotlighting women around the world who are reshaping the image of life and work for women in their 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s and beyond. The lists shatter stereotypes and paves the long runway for the next generation of women leaders, firmly rejecting the notion that our best years are behind us.
Forbes and Know Your Value reveal 4th annual ‘50 Over 50’ U.S. list
Today as we release our fourth annual “50 Over 50“ U.S. list, we are celebrating groundbreakers in biotech, education, retail, architecture and beyond. And even singers and activists who are releasing new albums in their mid-80s (we’re looking at you, Mavis Staples!)
We have arrived — and then some.
This year’s list may be our most impressive yet. It includes actress Brooke Shields, filmmaker Ava DuVernay, Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour and basketball coach Dawn Staley — just to name a few. Our oldest honoree, activist and philanthropist Deborah Szekely, is proving it’s never too late to make an impact, even at the age of 102.
Another favorite: Hollywood starlet June Squibb, whose acting career took off after the age of 80! At 94, Squibb still performs her own stunts — as we saw in her new film “Thelma”— when she hilariously runs off with an adult scooter at a senior home. She is a shining example of how age does not mean limitation or irrelevance.
Also on the list: 67-year-old Valerie Jarrett, who served as senior advisor to President Obama from 2009 to 2017, making her the longest serving senior advisor to a president in history. Jarrett, who is now the CEO of the Obama Foundation, was nominated for our list by her daughter, Laura Jarrett, co-anchor of the Saturday TODAY show.
Women over 50 have made so much headway this year — whether it be in politics, the sciences, arts and entertainment. Female CEOs are now out earning their male counterparts. Women over the age of 50 account for 27 percent of all consumer spending. Forbes calls us “super consumers” because — with more than $15 trillion in purchasing power — we are the wealthiest and most active generation in history.









