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WDRB launched additional newscasts on its schedule as its ratings position in the market strengthened: the first news expansion outside its established 10 p.m. slot came on October 5, 1998, when WDRB premiered the three-hour-long Fox in the Morning and a half-hour midday newscast at 11:30 a.m. (originally titled Fox First News); [41] the latter ...
WBKI-DT3 is utilized as an 'overflow' station for WDRB's newscasts (especially the 10 p.m. newscast), when Fox Sports programming overlays the timeslot. Both WBKI-DT1 and WBKI-DT3 carry an alert map display denoted with WDRB's news logo on the bottom of the screen during severe weather situations affecting the Kentuckiana region, and may break into both stations' programming in rare weather or ...
In 1993, Roberts became a recipient of the National Weather Association's "Weathercaster Seal of Approval". In 2000, he was inducted into the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia Hall of Fame , and selected "Person of the Year", the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia's highest honor.
Meteorological spring began on March 1, and from a historical standpoint, the typically coldest three months of the year have ended. Despite that, AccuWeather's team of long-range meteorologists ...
Instead, WDRB opted to launch its own newscast on channel 34 (as a result, WDRB became one of the few Fox stations to produce a newscast for another station in the same market). On September 17, 2012, WDRB began producing a half-hour weeknight 7:00 p.m. newscast, the WDRB Local Evening News at 7:00 on WBKI , which utilizes the same anchor team ...
Destiny Quinn, a native of Jonesboro, Ark., who has been anchoring the news in Tuscon, is joining the CW Lexington on March 22, where she will co-anchor with Congedo at 7 and 8 a.m. and with ...
Bob Ryan is a retired meteorologist who most recently forecasted for WJLA, the ABC affiliate in Washington, D.C. Prior to serving as the chief meteorologist at Washington NBC affiliate WRC-TV from 1980 to 2010, he was previously the Today Show's first on-air meteorologist, which was also the first network television meteorologist position.
She started her career at The Weather Channel, and then moved to Baltimore where she worked at WBFF, [2] also known as Fox Channel 45. [5] She then moved to WABC-TV in New York, and WMAR in Baltimore. [6] [7] [2] Johnson left WMAR in 1999, [8] partially because she was unable to accept the magnitude of the pay cut offered at the time. [9]