Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
WTVR-TV was the only CBS station between Richmond and Roanoke until WCAV-TV signed on in Charlottesville in 2004. Local features and community programs have included "For Kids' Sake", "Paws for Pets", and Battle of the Brains and a 24-hour weather news channel called "CBS 6 Xtra" broadcast on broadband, digital cable, and digital sub-channel 6. ...
Ronald A. Burke (born September 27, 1963) [1] is an American news and sports anchor/reporter/host. He has worked for Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia, NBA TV, and WPBF-TV (West Palm Beach, FL). He also anchored and reported sports news at WBIS-TV (New York, NY), WTVR-TV (Richmond, VA) and WHSV-TV (Harrisonburg, VA).
Fox News’ Neil Cavuto, one of the few anchors whose time at the Fox Corp. owned outlet dates to its 1996 launch, said in late December he was leaving. All these exits take place amid a not-so ...
In 1978 she moved to Richmond, VA and started her career at WWBT-TV as a weather anchor and news reporter. In 1981, she crossed the street to work at WXEX as a co-anchor. Three months later the other stations in the market also had female co-anchors and all the on-air people had contracts.
News operations were expanded again into a new addition to the facilities in 1978. In the late-1980s, WWBT received a comprehensive on-air upgrade featuring an updated news set and graphics package. It was the first station in Richmond to use a satellite broadcasting truck called "LiveStar 12" and a helicopter identified as "Sky 12". [11]
WTVR-FM, a radio station (98.1 FM) licensed to Richmond, Virginia, United States Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about radio and/or television stations with the same/similar call signs or branding.
Michael Paul Williams (born 1958) is an American journalist and a regular columnist at the Richmond Times-Dispatch. Williams joined the Times-Dispatch in 1982 and became a columnist for the paper in 1992, becoming the first African American to hold this position. [1]
On the morning of August 26, 2015, news reporter Alison Parker and photojournalist Adam Ward, both employees of CBS affiliate WDBJ in Roanoke, Virginia, United States, were fatally shot while conducting a live television interview near Smith Mountain Lake in Moneta.