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WYFF (channel 4) is a television station in Greenville, South Carolina, United States, serving Upstate South Carolina and Western North Carolina as an affiliate of NBC.Owned by Hearst Television, the station maintains studios on Rutherford Street (west of US 276) in northwest Greenville, and its transmitter is located near Caesars Head State Park in northwestern Greenville County.
Carol Clarke is an American news anchor. Clarke works for WYFF News 4, broadcasting out of Greenville, South Carolina, and serving the upstate of South Carolina, western North Carolina and northeastern Georgia. It's the nation's 36th television market. Clarke has anchored and reported for WYFF-TV since 1985.
During a Tuesday night WYFF 4 telethon, donors raised over $300,000 for Helene recovery efforts. Clarkson's partner, Pilot Pens, donated $20,000 to the American Red Cross.
A teenage worker was killed Friday when the go-kart he was driving smashed into an industrial-size forklift inside a South Carolina amusement park – leaving the victim’s family begging for ...
Heather Baynard, a 14-year-old with cerebral palsy, reportedly died on April 11, 2022, hours after her father carried her cold, gray, listless body into a local hospital like a sack of potatoes.
Five South Carolina residents were reportedly killed during Tropical Storm Helene. Meanwhile, the Upstate was hit with 600,000 power outages and flooded roads. ... Coroners in Greenville, Anderson ...
After working for CBS News, she was the primary anchor for WGCL-TV in Atlanta. A native of Greenville, South Carolina, where she graduated from Wade Hampton High School (Greenville, South Carolina), and a graduate of Clemson University, she is currently the 4pm news anchor at WYFF-TV in Greenville, South Carolina. She is married and has one son.
Three other stations in the Greenville market used the WFBC call sign: The original AM station owned by the Peace family, owners of the Greenville News and Greenville Piedmont, and broadcasting on 1330 kHz, now WYRD; television channel 4, signed on by the family in 1953, which used the calls until 1983 (when it became WYFF); and TV channel 40 ...