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  2. WTNH - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WTNH

    On January 12, 2015, CT Style was added at 9 a.m. and the noon newscast become an hour long. On April 26, 2010, WTNH re-branded from News Channel 8 to News 8. In addition, WTNH began broadcasting its newscasts in 16:9 widescreen enhanced definition, with WCTX's newscasts and Connecticut Style being included in the upgrade.

  3. Al Terzi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Terzi

    Terzi continued as news co-anchor until he left in June 1978 and then became News Anchor, then News Director, at WPEC-TV12 in West Palm Beach, FL. In October 1978, Terzi was seriously injured when the twin-engine Cessna he piloted, with 4 other WPEC senior staff on board, had engine/fuel problems on approach to the Tallahassee, FL airport. He ...

  4. Janet Peckinpaugh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Peckinpaugh

    Peckinpaugh worked as an anchor for WVIT from 1995 until her retirement in December, 2006. Peckinpaugh is still regarded as a popular figure and is said to have been one of the most well-known TV anchors in Connecticut, with name recognition somewhere between 80 and 90 percent in Connecticut. During her career, she interviewed four U.S. presidents.

  5. Marysol Castro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marysol_Castro

    On September 2, 2011, it was announced that she would be leaving her post as weather anchor effective immediately. [5] In June 2015, Castro joined WTNH-TV ABC 8 in New Haven, Connecticut, to fill in as weekday morning traffic reporter and anchor. Castro was relieved of her fill-in duties in November 2015 and later left the station.

  6. Sonia Isabelle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonia_Isabelle

    Isabelle worked for News 8 (WTNH) in Connecticut from December 2002 to November 2013 where, as Sonia Baghdady, she anchored the weekday evening shows "News 8 at 5, 5:30 and 11pm". Before joining WTNH, she was an anchor and reporter for WWLP in Springfield, Massachusetts, and a reporter for a Long Island News 12 affiliate.

  7. Adrianne Baughns-Wallace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adrianne_Baughns-Wallace

    In October 1978, Baughns was named co-anchor of WFSB's 6 p.m. Eyewitness News broadcast, [5] becoming the first female anchor of an evening newscast in Connecticut. [6] She left WSFB in June 1982 to launch a TV production company of her own. [4] The departure was a lifestyle choice.

  8. Pat Sheehan (journalist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_Sheehan_(journalist)

    Pat Sheehan, born c. 1945, is a retired American television news anchor from Connecticut.. Sheehan spent most of his TV journalism career at WTNH-TV from 1971-74 and from 1979-83, WFSB-TV from 1974-79 and from 1983-88, and WTIC-TV from 1989-99, as a reporter, and then an anchor, that made him a Connecticut Television icon.

  9. Jennifer Lahmers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennifer_Lahmers

    In 2014 Lahmers moved to the Fox station in New York City, WNYW-TV, as a general assignments reporter. [1] In 2017 she was promoted to daily co-anchor of the station's early morning news program, Good Day Wake Up, which airs before Good Day New York, along with long-time New York television news reporter Sukanya Krishnan. [2]