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Betschart was born just as Winfrey's talk show was debuting. She grew up watching with her mother and grandmother. And even though this young white woman has little overtly in common with an African-American woman of 55 who overcame a childhood of poverty to become one of the richest and most powerful people in the world, she still considers her "part of my family, like an aunt, who I take advice from all the time." What's telling about the devotion of fans like Betschart is that many of them care less about the content of Winfrey's show -- which is a little of everything -- than simply who Oprah is. Betschart herself prefers the shows that are inspirational in nature, as in the recent karaoke challenge, where Winfrey awarded winner Abraham McDonald $250,000 and a chance at stardom. She's less interested in seeing Tom Cruise declare his love for Katie Holmes. But mostly, "I watch her for who she is," Betschart says. "I like what she's about. I like what she represents. When I have a down day, she makes me feel better." To Cathy Peters, what Winfrey represents is proof that a woman can start with nothing and achieve unimaginable success. "It's very important for people to see that," says Peters, 51, a legal secretary in suburban Chicago. She thinks Winfrey is able to maintain her appeal to the average woman because "she's kinda been there and done that. She's been in most of our situations at some point in her life. So she can keep it real, and not let the billions get to her head." Peters and other fans say they'll surely watch whatever type of new show Winfrey might appear in -- if she decides to appear at all -- on her new network, a joint venture with Discovery Communications Inc. that launches in 2011. Just tell them where to tune in, they say. But success isn't a sure thing, says TV historian Tim Brooks. "She's entering a different world," Brooks says, noting that her previous cable venture, with the Oxygen network, didn't pan out. "Still, Oprah is such a major destination for viewers that I suspect they'll follow her wherever she goes." Certainly Arenibar, the Illinois fan, plans to seek out Winfrey in her new incarnation -- and it's fine with her if that incarnation is something totally new and different. "After all, she thrives on change," Arenibar says. "But I'm sure she's cooking something up. I'm sure we're still gonna get a piece of her somehow."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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