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It was owned and operated by Champaign-based Midwest Television, headed by August C. Meyer Sr., a lawyer and chairman of the board of the Champaign-based Bank of Illinois. Meyer founded Midwest Television in 1952, and expanded the company's footprint by buying WMBD-AM – FM – TV in Peoria, Illinois , in 1960 and KFMB-AM – FM – TV in San ...
Rachel Yonkunas, who worked for the local news network since 2022, was stunned in September after her superiors demanded she take a $10,000 pay cut to join the station’s morning broadcast.
Quijano began her career as an intern at WCIA-TV in Champaign, Illinois, in 1994, and later became a reporter, producer, and anchor there. [3] [4] In 1998, Quijano left WCIA to become a general assignment reporter for WFTS-TV in Tampa, Florida. [3] [4] Quijano was a correspondent for CNN Newsource, an affiliate of CNN, starting in December 2000 ...
Between 1995-2003, Bunin was a sports anchor at five local news stations: WTVH-TV in Syracuse, New York, where he worked alongside future ABC anchor David Muir, WICZ-TV in Binghamton, New York, KNAZ-TV in Flagstaff, Arizona, WLAJ-TV in Lansing, Michigan, and WOTV-TV in Battle Creek, Michigan. His painful journey to ESPN was documented in the ...
She was bumped from the channel's flagship show to a later night broadcast, and finally, four days after she returned from her two-week annual training in 2010, she was told that her contract ...
Duffy worked at newspapers in Scranton and Cortland, New York before moving to Syracuse to work for the Herald-Journal, where she was a police beat reporter. She left that job in 1967 to work as a reporter at WHEN-AM and WHEN-TV (now WTVH). She took a year off from reporting in 1970, when she became press secretary for Syracuse Mayor Lee Alexander.
A WCPO 9 (WCPO-TV) news anchor will soon leave the station.. Kristen Swilley, anchor and reporter for WCPO, is leaving after nine years on the air, she shared via social media Sunday. Swilley said ...
The broadcast would eventually be reduced to 30 minutes in length. On October 24, 2012, WCIA upgraded local news production to high definition level. However, WCIX's newscasts were initially seen over-the-air in a letterboxed format because its main channel only transmitted in 4:3 standard definition until it was upgraded to full HD in 2015.