Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
American television biography stubs (4 C, 510 P) Pages in category "American television personalities" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 720 total.
Josh Flagg was born on August 20, 1985, in Los Angeles, California. [18] He is the son of Michael and Cindy (Platt) Flagg of Los Angeles. He is the grandson of philanthropist, electronics industry executive and Jewish leader Herman Platt, and great-grandson of Benjamin Platt, founder and owner of the nationwide Platt Music Corporation chain of stores. [19]
Coldwell Banker Real Estate LLC is an American real estate franchise owned by Anywhere Real Estate, with headquarters in Madison, New Jersey. It was founded in 1906 in San Francisco , [ 1 ] and has approximately 3000 offices in 49 countries and territories. [ 2 ]
Ruth Lyons (born Ruth Evelyn Reeves October 4, 1905, died November 7, 1988) was a pioneer radio and television broadcaster in Cincinnati, Ohio. It is said Ruth Lyons accidentally invented the daytime TV talk show. Like Arthur Godfrey and others of the era, Lyons built a TV empire.
The Television Personalities' first album ...And Don't The Kids Just Love It was released in 1981. It set the template for their subsequent career: neo-psychedelia married to an obsession with youth culture of the 1960s. Their second album Mummy Your Not Watching Me [sic] demonstrated increased psychedelic influences.
The satellite television provider agreed to take on a substantial amount of the show's production budget in exchange for exclusive first-window airing rights on its 101 channel. NBC would then repurpose the episodes to be aired on the network later in the season. [10] Jeff Gaspin: 2009–2010
Barbara Ann Corcoran [2] (born March 10, 1949) [3] is an American businesswoman, [4] investor, syndicated columnist, and television personality. She founded The Corcoran Group, a real estate brokerage in New York City, which she sold to NRT for $66 million in 2001 and shortly thereafter exited the company.
King began her career as a production assistant at WJZ-TV in Baltimore, where she met Oprah Winfrey, an anchor for the station at the time.King later trained as a reporter at WUSA-TV in Washington, D.C. [7] [8] After working at WJZ, she moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where she was a weekend anchor and general-assignment reporter at WDAF-TV. [9]