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Harry Edwin Chapman was a news anchor at WTVF CBS (NewsChannel5) in Nashville, Tennessee for 35 years before retiring in 2006. He was a long time co-host of the midday CBS show "Talk of the Town" and hosted "Words and Music" on NewsChannel5+.
Co-hosts Harry Chapman and Joe Case joined the show a few months later. Case also did weather for the show and for the morning and midday newscasts, while Chapman was the station's entertainment reporter. WTVF aired the CBS Daytime lineup out of pattern in the late 1980s to early 1990s.
Over the years, it served as a launching pad for a number of successful broadcasters who worked at WGAU during their student days at the Henry Grady College of Journalism at the nearby University of Georgia: Harry Chapman, later with WTVF in Nashville, Tennessee, and Bruce Bartley, the lead newscaster of Atlanta's WSB Radio.
The discovery of several military medals in a pile of trash in Valley Park has prompted Harry Chapman to find their rightful owner.
In responding to a rude Facebook comment, Watson said she is retiring to take care of her mother, who's battling dementia.
Longtime Nashville reporter and anchor Amy Watson is retiring. The NewsChannel 5 veteran announced on social media she will be retiring on Friday, Oct. 25, after nearly 30 years in journalism.
Harry Chapman (1967) – longtime WTVF news anchor in Nashville, Tennessee; John Holliman (1970) – CNN war correspondent; John Huey (1970) – Time Inc. editor-in-chief, columnist; Maxine Clark (1971) — founder of Build-A-Bear; Brenda Hampton (1972) – creator and executive producer, 7th Heaven and The Secret Life of the American Teenager
H. E. Chapman (Harry Ernest Chapman, c. 1871–1944), Chief Constable of Kent, 1921–1940 Harry Chapman (news anchor) , American news anchor Topics referred to by the same term