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WYFF (channel 4) is a television station in Greenville, South Carolina, United States, serving Upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina as an affiliate of NBC.Owned by Hearst Television, the station maintains studios on Rutherford Street (west of US 276) in northwest Greenville, and its transmitter is located near Caesars Head State Park in northwestern Greenville County.
Carol Clarke is an American news anchor. Clarke works for WYFF News 4, broadcasting out of Greenville, South Carolina, and serving the upstate of South Carolina, western North Carolina and northeastern Georgia. It's the nation's 36th television market. Clarke has anchored and reported for WYFF-TV since 1985.
WYFF-TV weatherman Dale Gilbert did mid-mornings on WFBC-FM during part of this period as well as doing the morning weather Broadcasts on channel 4. WYFF (as WFBC-TV) and WFBC AM/FM shared the same building from 1955 until 1977, when a new radio facility was built adjacent to the TV station on Rutherford Street.
Greenville News reader Asks Angelia for the whereabouts of WYFF meteorologist Cedric Haynes.
Jane Robelot (born October 9, 1960) is an American television host, who served as a co-anchor of CBS television's This Morning from 1996 to 1999. In the 1980s, she worked at WSPA-TV in Spartanburg, South Carolina, then at then-CBS-owned WCAU TV Philadelphia before moving to CBS. After working for CBS News, she was the primary anchor for WGCL-TV ...
He returned to Vietnam in 1994 and reported from the same locations he had covered in the 1960s, producing an award-winning documentary and series of news stories. Kincaid retired from channel 13 in 1997; he died in July 2011. [13] Another well-known news anchor for WVEC-TV was Terry Zahn, who was hired from WAVY-TV in 1994. [14]
Kamel Seveion Sewell, 17, died of blunt force injury to the head when the go-kart and the forklift collided around 11:45 p.m. at Frankie’s Fun Park, according to the medical examiner’s office ...
The CBS Morning News title was originally used as the name of a conventional morning news program that served as a predecessor to the network's current CBS Mornings.For most of the 1960s and 1970s, the program aired as a 60-minute hard news broadcast at 7:00 a.m., preceding Captain Kangaroo and airing opposite the first hour of NBC's Today.