Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Retro Television Network began airing on WJAC-TV's second digital subchannel in the late December 2008. [13] Along with then-sister station WPXI, WJAC-TV 6.2 transitioned to MeTV at midnight on June 13, 2011, immediately following an episode of Ellery Queen, at which point the channel was switched to the MeTV feed for the start of Hogan's Heroes.
Bill Brown is a former morning news anchor for WJAC-TV, the NBC network affiliated television station serving the Johnstown-Altoona-State College, Pennsylvania metropolitan area. Brown began as a journalist for the Latrobe Bulletin and the Greensburg Tribune-Review. He joined WJAC in 1982 as a weekend reporter and weatherman.
Among those media workers listed as killed were six broadcast TV engineers, who worked inside a tower, and another professional photojournalist, who was a passenger on the first plane that was flown into the WTC. [107] Rod Coppola, TV engineer for WNET-TV, WTC (North Tower) [108] Donald DiFranco, TV engineer for WABC-TV, WTC (North Tower) [108]
Tim Rigby was the 5 and 6 co-anchor and 11 PM solo anchor for WJAC-TV in Johnstown, Pennsylvania for the station's 5, 6 and 11 p.m. newscasts. He had previously been the long-serving sportscaster from 1981 to 2011.
Marty Radovanic (also known as Marty Gin & Tonic) is a news anchor on WTAJ-TV in Altoona, Pennsylvania. [1] He previously worked as a longtime news anchor on WJAC-TV in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. At WJAC, Marty used to anchor the 6 PM newscast with Jennifer Johnson, and was a solo anchor on the 11 PM newscast until October 2017.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Pacholke, 27, died by suicide, Wausau Police shared Friday. The cause of death for Neena Pacholke, the Wisconsin news anchor and former University of South Florida women’s basketball player, has ...
Shortly after joining ABC News in the 1960s, he became White House correspondent for ABC, during the administrations of U.S. Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. Later, in 1977, Jarriel co-anchored ABC Evening News on Saturdays for two years, and in 1979, joined the network's newsmagazine 20/20 , as an investigative correspondent.