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Edward F. Hughes (March 30, 1938 – June 1, 2004) was a former news anchor best known for his longtime role as a news anchor for Norfolk, Virginia CBS affiliate WTKR from 1967 (when the station was known as WTAR) until shortly before his death in 2004. In addition, he was also the morning news anchor at radio station Z-104 for a time during ...
Terry Alan Zahn (April 27, 1946 – January 25, 2000) was a television reporter and anchorman in Hampton Roads, Virginia, from 1981 until his death in 2000 from multiple myeloma (a type of blood cancer).
WAVY-TV (channel 10) is a television station licensed to Portsmouth, Virginia, United States, serving the Hampton Roads area as an affiliate of NBC. It is owned by Nexstar Media Group alongside Virginia Beach –licensed dual Fox affiliate/ CW owned-and-operated station WVBT (channel 43).
WTAR-TV began airing news at the start of its history. The original newscast, Telenews, aired for 15 minutes a day, five days a week; it provided local news coverage including photography from the co-owned Norfolk newspapers. [11] The station spent decades dominating local news ratings in Hampton Roads.
"The Spirit of Hampton Roads", 1987. In the late 1980s, WVEC-TV introduced its most well-known promotional campaign, "The Spirit of Hampton Roads" – a campaign which has been customized and used by several other Belo Corporation stations (most notably the originator, WFAA-TV's "Spirit of Texas" campaign and the extremely successful "Spirit of Louisiana" from New Orleans' WWL-TV).
"Heartbroken by the news of the passing of John Lomax," longtime News 5 (WLWT-TV) anchor Courtis Fuller wrote. "A good man and a Cincinnati broadcast legend. "A good man and a Cincinnati broadcast ...
A former bank-turned museum houses relics of Hampton’s past, from 80-year-old banners announcing the famed Watermelon Festival, to porcelain dolls donated by longtime residents.
Bruce Rader is an American broadcaster who retired in February 2022 as sports director of WAVY-TV and WVBT-TV in the Norfolk-Virginia Beach after more than 45 years. He was the longest active television anchor in Hampton Roads television history.