Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WDIV-TV (channel 4) is a television station in Detroit, Michigan, United States, affiliated with NBC. It serves as the flagship broadcast property of the Graham Media Group subsidiary of Graham Holdings Company. WDIV-TV maintains studio facilities on West Lafayette Boulevard in Detroit, making it the only major television station in the market ...
Get ready for some heartfelt goodbyes in July to some of the best-known TV journalists in Detroit. WDIV-TV (Channel 4) Vice President and General Manager Bob Ellis announced Tuesday that sports ...
Scillian, the evening anchor on WDIV-TV (Channel 4) for 28 years, announced his retirement during Tuesday's 6 p.m. newscast. A bridge from an era of star anchors like Bill Bonds and from old media ...
Mara MacDonald had an unforgettable moment during her 2004 job interview with Detroit’s WDIV-TV. As the Local 4 News reporter wrote on the station’s ClickOnDetroit site, “When they ...
After graduating from the William Allen White School of Journalism at Kansas, Scillian worked from 1985 to 1986 at WAND-TV in Decatur, Illinois. He spent the next three years as the main anchor at KLTV in Tyler, Texas, before moving to KFOR in Oklahoma City in 1989. He joined WDIV as a reporter in 1995, and took an anchor position in 1996. [2]
Mort Crim (born July 31, 1935) [1] is an author and former broadcast journalist. Crim joined Channel 4 (soon to be named WDIV-TV) in Detroit in 1978. Crim stayed with the station 19 years before retiring from anchoring TV newscasts in 1997. Previously, he served as an anchor at WHAS-TV in Louisville, KYW-TV in Philadelphia and WBBM-TV in Chicago.
WDIV-TV (Channel 4) reporter Paula Tutman preparing to fly with the the United States Air Force Thunderbirds for a story. Tutman has been with WDIV-TV, the Motor City's NBC affiliate, since 1992 ...
The Tigers have spent most of their broadcast televised history across two of Detroit's heritage "Big Three" network stations, WJBK (Channel 2, Fox; formerly with CBS from 1948 to 1994) and WDIV (Channel 4, NBC; originally WWJ-TV from 1947 to 1978), as well as two of the market's former legacy independent stations, WMYD (Channel 20, formerly ...