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Khazei came to Channel 7 in Boston, Massachusetts in January 1994 at the time when Sunbeam Television Corporation took over the station and introduced a "fast-paced, graphics-driven, and aggressive brand of local news" to the Boston market. She worked for the station's morning show and co-anchored the debut of WHDH's first 4 p.m. news. [1]
WHDH became Boston's NBC affiliate on January 2, 1995, replacing WBZ-TV (which had been with the network for 46 years). The final CBS program to air on channel 7 was the made-for-TV movie A Father for Charlie at 9 p.m. Eastern Time on January 1, 1995.
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Boston: 2 5 WGBH-TV: PBS: World on 2.2 : 4 20 WBZ-TV: CBS: Start TV on 4.2, Dabl on 4.3, Fave TV on 4.4 : 5 33 WCVB-TV: ABC: MeTV on 5.2, Story Television on 5.3
To the existing resources of NECN and WNEU, NBC added approximately 80 employees, new vehicles for weather coverage, and a leased helicopter. [57] [58] A second former WCVB anchor, J. C. Monahan, left that station to join NBC Boston in July 2017. [59] A year after the switch and launch, NBC10 Boston and WHDH had opposite ratings performances.
Pete Bouchard (born in California) is the current chief meteorologist at NBC 10 Boston. He has been with them since they launched on January 1, 2017. [1] Immediately prior, he worked at sister station New England Cable News, which he joined on January 11, 2016. [2] His real name is Joseph Pierre Leon Bouchard II.
Frances Rivera (born 1970 [2] [3]) is a Filipino-American journalist and television news anchor appearing on the overnight news program, Early Today on NBC.For ten years, until August 2011, she was a television reporter and anchor for Boston's NBC affiliate, WHDH.
WLVI and WHDH share studios at Bulfinch Place (near Government Center) in downtown Boston; through a channel sharing agreement, the two stations transmit using WHDH's spectrum from the WHDH-TV tower in Newton, Massachusetts. Channel 56 is Boston's oldest UHF station, with roots dating to 1953 and having been in continuous operation since 1966.
[4] She joined the WBZ-TV weather team in September 2001 and left in July 2009. After leaving WBZ-TV, she spent time raising her children and writing books in her spare time. [ 4 ] In late 2010, she contributed to the book, Extreme New England Weather written by Josh Judge, with her story of a deadly microburst in Stratham, New Hampshire , in 1991.