The women on Forbes and Know Your Value’s 2025 “50 Over 50” U.S. list are proving that age is not a limit—it’s leverage.
Know Your Value founder and “Morning Joe” co-host Mika Brzezinski had the honor of celebrating the extraordinary women who made this year’s list on Tuesday, marking the fifth year of the groundbreaking collaboration honoring women redefining success at every stage of life.
At HSBC’s New York City headquarters, the energy was electric as honorees gathered to toast their collective impact — women doing their most innovative, influential work at 50, 60, 70, 80 and beyond.
The crowd included current and former listees, including Planned Parenthood CEO Alexis McGill Johnson, Mattel’s Global Head of Dolls Jamie Cygielman, activist and podcaster Monica Lewinsky, Bogg Bag founder Kim Vaccarella, Guggenheim Partners Chief Investment Officer Ann Walsh, among many others.

The celebration served as both a milestone and a movement — proof that women are leading the way in every field, and that success doesn’t have an expiration date.
“Five years ago, when we launched this list, it started as a really simple, powerful idea,” said Brzezinski, founder of Know Your Value. “That women’s stories don’t just stop at 50. Ambition, the search for innovation, the search for happiness, for family, to have an impact — it doesn’t have an expiration date.”
Brzezinski reflected on how her “50 Over 50 “initiative has shifted the cultural conversation around aging. “There is not a tight window of time where you have to fit everything in before the clock runs out,” she said. “The ‘50 Over 50’ movement shows that you don’t need to have it all figured out by the time you’re 30. Hell no, you don’t.”
That message — that life can expand, not contract, with age — resonated deeply in the room. “Mistakes are building blocks,” Brzezinski said. “Life does not move in one direction or on anyone else’s schedule. Time is not a trap. It’s not a deadline. It’s a canvas for your greatest designs that are still yet to come.”
A highlight of the afternoon was Brzezinski’s conversation with Huma Abedin, vice chair of the 30/50 Summit, and Maria Shriver, the face of this year’s “50 Over 50” Impact list.

At 69, the journalist, author and brain health warrior brought both wisdom and urgency to the stage, reflecting on her lifelong advocacy for women’s health — and her mission to challenge cultural narratives around aging. “I’m so honored to be in the company of such extraordinary women,” Shriver said. “It’s so inspiring, and I’m so in awe of what everybody’s doing.”
Shriver has long used her platform to spotlight issues often overlooked in women’s health — particularly in brain research. Her work involving the discovery that women are at a higher risk for Alzheimer’s, prompting her to open the Cleveland Clinic’s Women’s Alzheimer’s Movement Prevention Center.









