Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Television anchors from Los Angeles" The following 129 pages are in this category, out of 129 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Later, Lund moved south to Los Angeles sister station KABC in 1972 as a reporter and anchor. She anchored the newscasts at 6:00 pm and 11:00 pm. Throughout much of her first tenure, she co-anchored with the late Jerry Dunphy. [4] Lund left KABC in June 1986 after negotiations to reduce her work schedule were unsuccessful. [5]
Channel 4 first went on the air as KNBH (standing for "NBC Hollywood") on January 16, 1949. [3] [4] It was the second-to-last VHF station in Los Angeles to debut, and the last of NBC's five original owned-and-operated stations to sign on. Unlike the other four, KNBH was the only NBC-owned television station that did not benefit from having a ...
Toyota began her broadcast career in Los Angeles in 1970 as a radio reporter with KNX-AM. [4] In January 1972 she was hired as a general assignment reporter at KNBC-TV; she became weekend anchor there in 1975, and was promoted to the 5 p.m. edition of NewsCenter 4 with Jess Marlow as co-anchor in 1977 followed by the 11 p.m. newscast in 1978 with John Schubeck as co-anchor.
According to the Los Angeles Times, he was the first main Black male news anchor at Houston's ABC affiliate KTRK-TV, and while reporting on Hurricane Harvey in 2017, he helped rescue a pregnant ...
Los Angeles news anchor Chauncy Glover, who formerly worked for Detroit’s WDIV-TV, has died at age 39. Glover passed away unexpectedly, according to KCAL, the CBS station in Los Angeles that he ...
Moyer was hired by NBC News in March 1972 and returned to Los Angeles, joining KNBC as reporter and weekend anchor. The KNBC Newservice, as it was known then, featured Jess Marlow, Tom Snyder, Bob Abernethy, and Tom Brokaw as the main nightly anchors and was the first serious competition in the local news ratings against KNXT's The Big News/Eleven O'Clock Report with Jerry Dunphy.
KCAL News anchor and three-time Emmy winner Chauncy Glover died unexpectedly Tuesday at age 39, prompting an outpouring of grief from fans in Los Angeles as well as Houston, where he was an anchor ...