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Pages in category "Television anchors from Los Angeles" The following 128 pages are in this category, out of 128 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Saturday Night Live cast members [a] Performer Time on SNL No. of seasons Repertory player Featured player Middle group Weekend Update anchor Hosted Best of... Writer; Fred Armisen: 2002–2013: 11 Aristotle Athari: 2021–2022: 1 Dan Aykroyd: 1975–1979: 4 Peter Aykroyd † 1980: 1 Morwenna Banks: 1995: 1 Vanessa Bayer: 2010–2017: 7 Jim ...
He is currently an anchor/reporter for NBC Los Angeles and can be seen worldwide across all NBC platforms. In 2018, Kovacik won the Emmy for Outstanding Hard News Reporting. [ 1 ] He was selected as Journalist of the Year at the 55th Southern California Journalism Awards in 2013.
Shortly before "NBC's Saturday Night" lit up American TV sets on Oct. 11, 1975, producer Lorne Michaels and seven unknown actors and comedians appeared on "The Tomorrow Show," a late-night talk ...
KTBC-TV aired its first television broadcast on Thursday, November 27, 1952, becoming the first television station in Austin and Central Texas.Originally housed in a small studio in the Driskill Hotel, [2] the station was originally owned by the Texas Broadcasting Company (from whom the call letters are taken), which was in turn owned by then-Senator and future U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson ...
The Austin iteration of the long-running reality show, which starred Wes Bergmann, Nehemiah Clark, Rachel Moyal-Smith, Melinda Collins, Lacey Hanmer, Johanna Botta and Danny Jamieson, aired in 2005
2017–18: Fox Sports West: Alex Faust: Jim Fox: Alex Curry (home) Jon Rosen (road) Patrick O'Neal: Sean O'Donnell: 2016–17: Fox Sports West: Bob Miller or Gary Thorne or Ralph Strangis or Chris Cuthbert or Jiggs McDonald: Jim Fox: Alex Curry (home) Jon Rosen (road) Patrick O'Neal: Sean O'Donnell: 2015–16: Fox Sports West: Bob Miller or ...
An early KECA-TV logo slide from the 1950s. Channel 7 first signed on the air under the call sign KECA-TV on September 16, 1949. [2] It was the last television station licensed to Los Angeles operating on the VHF band to debut and the last of ABC's five original owned-and-operated stations to make its debut, after San Francisco's KGO-TV, which signed on four months earlier.