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A weekend edition of the show titled Weekend Express first aired in 2014. This version, last anchored by Susan Hendricks, followed the similar fast-paced headline format of Morning Express and aired on weekends from 7:00 am to 12:00 pm ET on HLN. [6] Previously, Weekend Express has been anchored by Lynn Smith and Natasha Curry. The show's ...
Beginning in early 2012, Atlanta local Dave Merlino joined Rob Johnson's morning show, re-billed as The Rob and Dave Show. The weekday lineup was The Rob & Dave Show at 6 a.m., Glenn Beck at 9 a.m., Rush Limbaugh at noon, a local version of The Rusty Humphries Show at 3 p.m., Mark Levin at 6 p.m., Michael Savage at 9 p.m., George Noory at ...
The Game, shot in Atlanta since moving to BET for the 2011 season - as of January 2012 the highest-rated ad-supported sitcom ever on cable [3] The Mo'Nique Show is filmed in Atlanta; The New Atlanta - an upcoming Bravo reality series set in Atlanta; The Real Housewives of Atlanta (series) The Rickey Smiley Show on TV One
Leave it to multi-hyphenate Donald Glover to reimagine what a Black comedy series looks like. Atlanta is known as one of the most daring television shows of the last 20 years, with Glover taking ...
In May 2007, WBTS hired a member of WHTA's "The A-Team" morning show, CJ. The newly created morning show "Murph Dawg & CJ in the Morning" rose in the 18–34 demographics. In Spring 2008, WBTS hit its highest numbers in station history, with a 6.5 share in 18–34. "Murph Dawg & CJ in the Morning" hit 5th place, with later dayparts reaching the ...
The Bachelor (American TV series) season 5; The Bachelor (American TV series) season 18; Baddies (TV series) Best of World Championship Wrestling; Black Lightning (TV series) BMF (TV series) Buckhead Shore
This category is for television series set in Atlanta, Georgia. ... Pages in category "Television shows set in Atlanta" ... (TV series) The Atlanta Child Murders ...
WERD in Atlanta was the first radio station owned and operated by African Americans. (WDIA in Memphis was on the air in 1948 doing black—or Negro as it was then called—programming, but the owners were not African American). Jesse B. Blayton Sr., an accountant, bank president, and Atlanta University professor, purchased WERD in 1949 for $50,000.