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Television sports anchors from Chicago (12 P) Pages in category "Television anchors from Chicago" The following 93 pages are in this category, out of 93 total.
The CBS Evening News is a daily evening broadcast featuring news reports, feature stories and interviews by CBS News correspondents and reporters covering events around the world. The program has been broadcast since July 1, 1941, under the original title CBS Television News, eventually adopting its existing title in 1963.
WBBM-TV (channel 2) is a television station in Chicago, Illinois, United States, serving as the market's CBS network outlet. Owned and operated by the network's CBS News and Stations division, the station maintains studios on West Washington Street in the Loop, and it transmits from atop the Willis Tower.
Bill Kurtis (born William Horton Kuretich; September 21, 1940) is an American television journalist, television producer, narrator, and news anchor.. Kurtis was studying to become a lawyer in the 1960s, when he was asked to fill in on a temporary news assignment at WIBW-TV in Topeka, Kansas.
NFL on CBS (1956) AFC games (and inter-conference games when the AFC team is the road team) The AFC Championship Game; The Super Bowl (every four years) The NFL Today (1961) PGA Tour on CBS (1970) Masters Tournament (shared with ESPN) PGA Championship (shared with ESPN) PGA Tour (shared with NBC Sports) College Basketball on CBS (1981)
CBS Evening News has found Norah O’Donnell’s successors in John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois, who will replace O’Donnell behind the anchor desk later this year. Just two days after O ...
Mary Ann Childers is an American media consultant and former newscaster. From 1980 to 1994, she worked as an anchor at WLS-TV in Chicago, [1] where she became the first woman to anchor a top-rated 10pm newscast in Chicago. [2]
The CBS Morning News title was originally used as the name of a conventional morning news program that served as a predecessor to the network's current CBS Mornings.For most of the 1960s and 1970s, the program aired as a 60-minute hard news broadcast at 7:00 a.m., preceding Captain Kangaroo and airing opposite the first hour of NBC's Today.