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She worked at the Weather Channel from 2004 to 2011 and with Al Jazeera America from 2013 to 2016. After some time as a freelance meteorologist at CBS News (working at WCBS-TV in New York City and WFOR-TV in Miami), she returned to her home state of Minnesota in 2017 to become a meteorologist for KSTP-TV in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul media
Cyndy Brucato (born August 13, 1951) is a journalist, public relations consultant and former longtime Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota, news anchor.She was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois, and was educated there through graduate school [citation needed] at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.
WCCO-TV (channel 4), branded CBS Minnesota, is a television station licensed to Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, serving as the CBS outlet for the Twin Cities area. It is owned and operated by the network's CBS News and Stations division, and maintains studios on South 11th Street along Nicollet Mall in downtown Minneapolis; its transmitter is located at the Telefarm complex in Shoreview ...
This prompted WCCO-TV, a station known for its hard news format, to become more image-conscious, [134] and the other TV news outlets in the Twin Cities began incorporating longer, photojournalism-driven stories into their newscasts. [119] KARE became the first Twin Cities station to offer closed captioning of its local news in 1988. [143]
Douglas wrote a daily weather column for the Star Tribune from 1997 until his replacement by the WCCO-TV weather team in February 2009. He provided forecasts for three local radio stations. He has been a reporter for the Twin Cities Public Television show Almanac.
Bill Carlson (November 26, 1934 – February 29, 2008), born William Meyer Carlson, was an American journalist and longtime television anchor at WCCO in Minneapolis, Minnesota. [1] Carlson was born in Thief River Falls, Minnesota and grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota. Carlson died of prostate cancer at the age of 73 on February 29, 2008. [2]
Within an hour of walking into the station, he was working. At the time, the station was known as WTCN-TV, but it was purchased by WCCO radio in 1952 and became WCCO-TV, with the WTCN-TV call sign being recycled a few years later for channel 11, which eventually became KARE. Moore had a variety of jobs in the early years of channel 4 ...
WCCO constructed a new 654-foot tower in Coon Rapids in 1939. This is the same tower used today, although the broadcast frequency was changed to 830 kHz as a result of the 1941 North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement -.