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Fox News’ Neil Cavuto, one of the few anchors whose time at the Fox Corp. owned outlet dates to its 1996 launch, said in late December he was leaving. All these exits take place amid a not-so ...
The channel was launched on September 13, 1999 as News 8 Austin. [2] The channel changed its name to YNN Austin (for "Your News Now") on January 10, 2011, [3] as part of gradual transition to a uniform brand for most of Time Warner Cable's other regional news channels that originated the year prior on its Buffalo and Rochester news channels in New York.
From 1996 to 1999, WSPA-TV produced a 10 p.m. newscast for WHNS, [75] which utilized WSPA's local reporting resources with a separate anchor lineup [76] and was dropped when WHNS started an in-house news department. [67] Since 2002, when a 10 p.m. newscast launched under the title The News on 62, [77] WASV-TV
Tuck returned to KFMB-TV in 1999 and resumed his position as anchor for News 8, which later became Local 8 News from 2001 to 2005. He departed KFMB-TV in late 2004 and in the following year, joined KUSI-TV as news anchor for their daily afternoon and evening newscasts alongside his KGTV colleague Kimberly Hunt. [6] Tuck departed KUSI-TV in 2007 ...
Prior to working for Fox News Channel, Mike Emanuel was a television journalist anchor/reporter for local TV stations in Midland-Odessa, Texas, Waco, Texas, Austin, Texas, and Los Angeles. Emanuel grew up in Westfield, New Jersey. [2] He holds a degree in Communication from Rutgers College of Rutgers University-New Brunswick.
He joined Channel 58 as sports director and sports anchor/reporter in 2009, following stints at stations in Orlando, Florida; Austin, Texas; Houston; Tupelo, Mississippi; and Dalton, Georgia.
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 ...
Sibila Vargas (born September 1, 1968) is an American news anchor who used to be the anchor of the 5, 6 and 11 p.m. weekday editions on WNBC-TV in New York City. More recently, Sibila also used to work at WSPA-TV in Spartanburg, SC and also used to work at both KCBS-TV in Los Angeles, and KRIV in Houston, Texas, and was also a former CNN entertainment reporter.