Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bernard Shaw (May 22, 1940 – September 7, 2022) was an American journalist and lead news anchor for CNN from 1980 until his retirement on March 2, 2001. Prior to his time at CNN, he was a reporter and anchor for WNUS , Westinghouse Broadcasting , CBS News , and ABC News .
Bernard Shaw, who was CNN’s lead anchor for 20 years and distinguished the network’s coverage of such landmark events as the Gulf War, died Wednesday, the Warner Bros. Discovery-backed outlet ...
Susan Rook (born c. 1961) is a journalist best known for her years as a CNN anchor and original host of CNN's Talkback Live.. Rook started anchoring overnight news cutins, then moved up to more visible anchor assignments: co-anchoring "Newsnight" with Patrick Emory and later PrimeNews and "Evening News" (later renamed to World News), co-anchoring with Bernard Shaw and later hosting the topical ...
Bernard Shaw, CNN's first chief anchor when it launched on June 1, 1980, has died. Shaw died Wednesday of pneumonia unrelated to COVID-19, his family announced in a statement to the network ...
A husband and wife who both worked on-air at KARK-TV in Little Rock, Ark., were fired this week, along with two other station employees, after two videos they made and posted on YouTube became the ...
According to Cafferty, Shaw did not report the erroneous information, when all the network anchors did." While this passage implies that Jack Cafferty was the first to relay this anecdote, the story has in fact appeared in a number of published sources, including Whittemore's CNN: The Inside Story and subsequent publications.
Shaw was CNN's first chief anchor when the 24/7 cable news channel launched on June 1, 1980, instantly setting a standard of consummate professionalism and soon earning the trust of millions of ...
During the interview, Homer accidentally knocks Kent's cup of coffee into his lap, making him swear in pain. After the commercial break, Kent apologizes, but is relieved to find that, as the Internet has supplanted television as a source of news information, no one saw his on-air faux pas.