Channel 8 news cleveland




















OPEN 24 Hours. Wkyc Channel 3 News. Lpc Publishing News Service. PR Newswire News Service. Business Wire News Service. Aphesis Publishing News Service. Wine Buzz News Service. Barrington Publishing News Service. Newstips News Service. Organic Spa Magazine News Service. BBB Rating: A. Direct Market Publishing News Service. Loconeal Publishing News Service.

Quick News News Service. Dick Feagler. He won multiple awards during his storied career. Dorothy Fuldheim. Dorothy Fuldheim was arguably Cleveland's most beloved TV journalist. When she was given her own half-hour news program on WEWS-TV Channel 5 in , Fuldheim became the first woman to anchor a news broadcast and host her own television news show.

Viewers recognized her flamboyant red hair and her often adversarial exchanges with guests. She interviewed figures as diverse as the Duke of Windsor and Dr. Luther King Jr. Fuldheim stayed with the network until the s, and was inducted into the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame in William A.

Ashbolt, The Plain Dealer. Tony Gaskins. He also covered city government and was noted for his deep, booming voice. Gaskins died of a heart attack in Plain Dealer Archives. Dick Goddard. Besides a brief stint in Philadelphia in and , Dick Goddard was a weather personality in Cleveland from to , when he retired. He became an advocate for animals rights and is also known as the founder of the popular annual Woollybear Festival, held every fall in downtown Vermilion, Ohio, on Lake Erie since Fred Griffith.

He also broadcast as the station's former public affairs director. He's retired and living in Shaker Heights. Score Photographers. Tom Haley. He also hosted "Scene on Sunday" and worked behind the scenes as a producer and director.

He died in at 88 years old. John Hambrick. He anchored the 7 p. In the early s, he and co-anchor Dave Patterson helped the nightly newscasts become the top rated television news program in Cleveland. He died in at 73 years old. Judd Hambrick. Judd Hambrick's path to Northeast Ohio was similar to his brother John's. He left Channel 3 in and was out of broadcasting for a time. Amy Hasten.

National audiences saw her talk about her boyfriend's suicide on "Inside Edition" in Eleanor Hayes. She did so from to , and also worked as an investigative reporter and hosted the show "Neighborhood. She now works as director of communications for the human resources division of the Cleveland Clinic. Mitchael J. Zaremba, The Plain Dealer. Ted Henry. His retirement in ended a more than four-decade career in broadcasting.

He was paired with 13 different co-anchors during the course of his long career, including, most notably Wilma Smith. One of the few local newscasters to report on national and international events, broadcasting live from Germany when the Berlin Wall fell and traveling to Rome to cover the death of Pope John Paul II. Bill Jacocks. Bill Jacocks joined WEWS Channel 5 in the early s as an assistant public affairs director, but later became the station's first black anchor.

He remained in that position until the mids, becoming a staple of the station's weekend broadcasts. Gus Chan, The Plain Dealer. Bruce Kalinowski. But before he became a beloved weather personality in Northeast Ohio, he worked for the Weather Channel when that station got off the ground in Kalinowski often gave shout outs to Cleveland, his home town. When he mentioned it on broadcasts, calling it "the best location in the nation.

Wally Kinnan. Wally Kinnan was a hero of World War II and former prisoner of war before he began his career in broadcasting as a meteorologist in Oklahoma in the s. He eventually became so well-known that he earned the nickname "the weatherman. Kinnan left Channel 3 in He died in in Houston at the age of Mark Koontz.

Mark Koontz ended a year career in broadcast news when he retired in His career including a year stint as a weatherman for WJW Channel 8 in Cleveland, where he started in Allie LaForce.

You probably recognize her as a sideline reporter for college football games in the SEC, but the former Miss Ohio Teen USA and Vermilion native got her start as a sports reporter and anchor for Cleveland's Fox 8, where she won an Emmy for anchoring the station's "Friday Night Touchdown" show.

Eileen McShea. She began as a meteorologist in the early '90s and also worked as a reporter. She left Channel 3 following a pay dispute in , and joined Channel 5 the next year, working in their weather coverage.

Today she works in public relations, according to her LinkedIn profile. Joe Mosbrook. He retired in Kelly O'Donnell. Barbara Plummer. She was known as "Miss Barbara. Sharon Reed. Sharon Reed had a long and distinguished broadcasting career that included a stint on Channel 19 that began in and ended in But for better or worse, she will always be known in Cleveland as the reporter who disrobed on television for controversial artist Spencer Tunick's nude group photo shoot in Cleveland.

She now works for the CBS affiliate in Atlanta. Michael Reghi. Those who listened to the Cavaliers on TV between and heard his voice doing the play-by-play.

He still works as a sports broadcaster for various outlets in Cleveland. Liz Richards. She was married for a time to the late radio personality Gary Dee. The marriage ended in a high-profile divorce, with Richards charging that Dee physically abused her. Al Roker. Al Roker was a weatherman for WKYC from to before eventually moving on to national fame on the "Today" show.

Joel Rose. He took his own life in after the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor's Office began investigating him for allegedly mailing obscene material to numerous women. Dick Russ. Dick Russ worked as an anchor and news reporter for 30 years before he left television in In that time he worked for Channel 3 and Channel 8 in Cleveland, and previously worked for Channel 23 in Akron.

Martin Savidge. Murrow and Peabody Awards. Gib Shanley. Gib Shanley reported on Cleveland sports for WEWS from to and also served as the voice of the Browns, calling the play-by-play for radio broadcasts of Browns games from to It was during that era that the Browns won their last title, beating the Baltimore Colts to win an NFL championship in Shanley went on to work for Channel 43 from the s to the mids.

He burned an Iranian flag during a broadcast at the height of the hostage crisis in Tehran in , after which WEWS received hundreds of phone calls, most of which were said to be in support of his actions. Shanley died in Linn Sheldon. Linn Sheldon played 'Barnaby' — an elf that lived in a magical forest — for a children's television program that first aired on KYW. He held that job for more than 30 years. Obie Shelton.

Charles Harris, The Plain Dealer. Wilma Smith.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000