Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WSFA was the area's only VHF station until 1985, when Selma-based WAKA (channel 8) built a new transmitter that was halfway between Selma and Montgomery, thus giving it good coverage in Montgomery proper (but is still licensed to Selma to this day) and replaced WCOV as the area's CBS affiliate. In 1986, it dropped the "-TV" suffix, though as ...
This is a listing of current and former Baltimore, Maryland television news anchors. Pages in category "Television anchors from Baltimore" The following 25 pages are in this category, out of 25 total.
October 1967 and again in 1985 – Announcer and DJ William "Rosko" Mercer resigned on-air twice: first from WOR-FM in New York City in October 1967 over the station's employment of radio consultants; and then again in 1985, when he left WKTU-FM in Lake Success, New York, while on the air, again over a dispute with the station management.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
WDIV-TV (Channel 4) Vice President and General Manager Bob Ellis announced Tuesday that sports anchor Bernie Smilovitz and reporters Mara MacDonald, Rod Meloni and Paula Tutman will be leaving the ...
Baltimore is a major media market, even though the city is only a 45-minute drive northeast of Washington, D.C.. The city's primary daily newspaper, The Baltimore Sun, and other Baltimore-area affiliated newspapers are property of David Smith, executive chairman of Sinclair Broadcast Group, who owns more than 200 television stations, including Fox 45. [1]
Jeff Alexander has been the co-anchor of "Action 2 News at 4" on WBAY-TV since the newscast was introduced in 1996. His last day behind the desk is Friday.
On January 5, 1963, club members from Baltimore were trapped on a Trailways bus when returning to Baltimore after a WSFA meeting. The Baltimore Science Fiction Society was formed on the backseat of the bus. [2] It hosted the annual Disclave science fiction convention in or near Washington, D.C., from 1950 through 1997. After a four-year hiatus ...