Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Former WJBK-TV (Fox 2 Detroit) reporter Erika Erickson, who left broadcast journalism in 2021 for health reasons, is coming back to Detroit TV news. ... Erickson will begin her new role as a ...
WKTV-DT3 is the third digital subchannel of WKTV, broadcasting in 720p high definition on channel 2.3. The subchannel is branded as "WKTV Plus". The station signed on November 10, 2014, as an affiliate of MeTV. [27] As recommended by Weigel Broadcasting, MeTV's owners, [28] WKTV-DT3 cleared the entire MeTV schedule. After much deliberation ...
[2] He got his first break in television covering the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake in San Francisco. His first full-time television job was at KGET-TV in Bakersfield, California. He won awards for his role as the "Scambuster" at KJEO-TV (now KGPE) in Fresno including his first Emmy. [3] He is the winner of more than 25 regional Emmy awards. [4]
Charles Royal LeDuff (born April 1, 1966) is an American journalist, writer, and media personality. He is the host of the No BS News Hour with Charlie LeDuff. [1] [2] LeDuff was employed by The New York Times for 12 years, then employed by The Detroit News, leaving in October 2010 after two years to join the Detroit Fox affiliate WJBK Channel 2 to do on-air journalism. [3]
WJBK-TV (Channel 2) reporter/anchor Hilary Golston and her mom, Denise Gray-Boddie, 75, is photographed at the home of Gray-Boddie in the North Rosedale Park neighborhood of Detroit, Friday, July ...
WJBK (channel 2) is a television station in Detroit, Michigan, United States. Owned and operated by the Fox network through its Fox Television Stations division, the station maintains studios and transmitter facilities on West 9 Mile Road in the Detroit suburb of Southfield.
Lou Gordon (May 17, 1917 – May 24, 1977) was a television commentator and talk show host, newspaper columnist, radio host, and influential political reporter, based in Detroit, Michigan. Gordon was known as a flamboyant, irreverent, and controversial interviewer.
As a broadcaster, Thomas began his career working for "Channel One" News in New York City. Here he was responsible for covering the Oscars and the MTV Movie Awards. Soon after, he spent some time working for "Louisville Tonight Live." He was then hired by WABC 7 where he worked as the entertainment and feature reporter.