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WTVJ's remote broadcast van at the offices of The Miami Herald in 1950. WTVJ's first news effort consisted of a collaboration with The Miami Herald and the Herald radio station WQAM, Televiews of the News, which debuted as a weekly program on December 11, 1949. The Herald 's photographers and WQAM announcers produced and presented the program.
Ansin's petition to deny alleged NBC could induce WTVJ to liberally preempt popular CBS shows for lower-rated syndicated programming, disenfranchising Miami television viewers. WTVJ's general manager Alan Perris rejected such a scenario, [97] even though prior to the sale, WTVJ declined to carry CBS News Sunday Morning, which WPLG aired instead ...
News of Ralph Renick's death was the lead story on every Miami station [citation needed], and was the end of an era in television news. When WTVJ's analog nightlight service ended on June 26, 2009, long-time anchor Bob Mayer said farewell, and ended the analog transmission by running archive footage of Renick uttering his sign-off catchphrase ...
The crash happened just before 6 p.m. Saturday in Miami Gardens when a black Kia Sorento rear-ended a white ... the Miami Gardens Police Department said in a news release. ... According to WTVJ-TV ...
Manolo de Jesus Reyes Xiques JD (July 29, 1924 – January 3, 2008) was a Cuban-American Spanish-language television news broadcaster in Miami, Florida. Reyes became a television news pioneer in the 1960s when he began one of South Florida's first Spanish-language newscasters. [1]
Weaver was born in New York City.He moved to Florida to attend the University of Miami.Shortly after graduating in 1949, he was hired by WTVJ, becoming Miami's first TV weatherman alongside anchor/news director Ralph Renick and sportscaster Bernie Rosen. [1]
During that broadcast, pioneering Miami WTVJ news anchor Ralph Renick quoted from Damon Runyon’s “Sand in Your Shoes” letter that the journalist and writer had written in 1936 to Paramount ...
Nespral began her career in television as a spokesmodel on Sábado Gigante on Univision.She then joined Univision's TV Mujer (or TV Woman) on its final season.After the cancellation of TV Mujer in 1990, she was chosen as one of the anchors of Univision's national news show Noticias y Mas (News and More), the predecessor to Primer Impacto (First Impact).