Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pearson's career started in Louisville while working for Brown Forman Distiller in public relations and Louisville Times as a reporter before joining WHAS-TV as an anchor and reporter. [2] After moving to Atlanta in 1975, Pearson worked at WSB-TV for 37 years [ 1 ] and was the first female and first African-American to anchor the daily evening ...
Melissa Forsythe, who worked as a television news anchor and reporter on Louisville stations for nearly two decades, has died at age 71, according to Doug Profitt, a former coworker who now ...
It was the first television station in Kentucky to use newsreel film to gather footage for stories. From the late 1970s until 1991, as a CBS affiliate, the station's newscasts were titled Action 11 News. In 1991, its news branding was changed to Kentuckiana's News Channel, WHAS 11. In 1999, the station rebranded its newscasts as WHAS 11 News.
Pages in category "Television personalities from Louisville, Kentucky" The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Pages in category "Television stations in Louisville, Kentucky" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
ZZ Packer, writer; born in Chicago; lived in Louisville in her teens and graduated from Seneca High School in 1990; Bill Plaschke, Los Angeles sports columnist, panelist on ESPN's Around the Horn; George Dennison Prentice, newspaper editor and journalist for the Louisville Journal; Scott Ritcher, magazine publisher of K Composite Magazine, musician
Rebecca Jackson is a former Republican politician from Louisville, Kentucky. She previously served as the Jefferson County Judge/Executive and also ran unsuccessfully for the Republican party nomination for governor. She is the former chief executive officer of the WHAS Crusade for Children, a local charity that operates a large annual telethon ...
Raised in Philadelphia, Adam Lefkoe attended Syracuse University and later served as a sportscaster for WHAS-11 in Louisville, Kentucky. [1] [2] Lefkoe gained acclaim for littering his sportscasts with pop culture reference. In 2013, he went viral online for making 41 references to the sitcom Seinfeld over the course of a five-minute sportscast ...