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The current brand, Channel 2 News, dates to the 1980s and early 1990. WGRZ was the first in the market to adopt a 5 p.m. newscast (hence the newscast retaining its title "First at Five" ever since). In the early 1990s, WGRZ-TV used the "24 Hour News Source" format, providing news briefs each hour outside of regular newscasts.
O'Connell was chief weather anchor for WGRZ-TV, the NBC affiliate in Buffalo, New York, from the mid-1990s until 2018. [2] O'Connell also sub-hosted on The David Letterman Show on NBC, hosted the game show Go on NBC from October 1983 to January 1984, and presented the syndicated disco series Disco Step-by-Step from 1977 to 1980.
Later, he was the weekday evening news anchor, weekend co-anchor, and reporter for WPLG-TV in Miami. He also worked as a reporter and bureau chief for KUSA-TV (NBC) in Denver. [1] Beginning in 1988, Scott was a reporter for the syndicated news program Inside Edition. From 1992 to 1995 Scott was a correspondent for Dateline NBC.
WBEN-TV 4 (now WIVB-TV) 1948–1954 (secondary from 1949 to 1954) CBS WGRZ 2 (previously with NBC (as WGR-TV) from 1954 to 1956) Was a primary NBC affiliate for its first year of operation, but that affiliation was downgraded to secondary status when WBEN-TV picked up CBS programming in 1949. Lost NBC affiliation upon the sign-on of WGR-TV.
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This page was last edited on 21 June 2009, at 17:44 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...
Appropriately for a station with roots in a newspaper, WIVB-TV has a strong news tradition. WBEN-TV was the early news leader in Buffalo until approximately 1972, when (briefly) WGR-TV and then (more long-term) WKBW-TV overtook it. Channel 4 then spent most of the next 30 years as a solid, if usually distant, runner-up to WKBW-TV, well ahead of ...
Breaking news, also called late-breaking news, a special report, special coverage, or a news flash, is a current issue that warrants the interruption of a scheduled broadcast in order to report its details. News broadcasters also use the term for continuing coverage of events of broad interest to viewers, attracting accusations of sensationalism.