Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
He worked on the syndicated programs Personalities and Entertainment Daily Journal during this time. [6] Watkins was hired in 1992 by WLWT in Cincinnati to anchor weekend morning news. [6] While in Cincinnati, Watkins's wife Thierry worked in New York for American Journal, and he commuted there twice a month.
Gil Simmons is the chief weekday morning meteorologist for WTNH-TV, the local ABC-affiliated television station for the Hartford-New Haven, Connecticut television market. He also is the meteorologist for WTNH's sister station, WCTX-TV, the MyNetworkTV-affiliated television station in that market, and for WATR, an AM station located in Waterbury that serves the Naugatuck Valley.
Terzi returned to Connecticut in April 1980 to work as prime anchor at WTNH in New Haven. He remained there until January 1994, when he returned to WFSB. Terzi's colleague Janet Peckinpaugh alleged that he sexually harassed her when the two anchored at WTNH. Peckinpaugh was fired from WFSB in 1995.
Geoff Fox (born July 26, 1950) [1] is an American television broadcast meteorologist, with a career in the industry covering four decades.For 27 years he worked at the television station WTNH in New Haven, Connecticut, where he started in 1984 and was senior meteorologist until 2011.
WTNH (channel 8) is a television station licensed to New Haven, Connecticut, United States, serving the Hartford–New Haven market as an affiliate of ABC.
Robert Mark Marciano (born June 25, 1968) [1] is an American journalist and meteorologist with CBS News.He was employed by ABC News from 2014 until 2024. Marciano provided forecasts for the weekend editions of Good Morning America, a position Ginger Zee vacated when she was chosen to succeed Sam Champion on the daily editions of GMA.
In 1978, Picozzi began a 19-year stint at WTNH-TV as sports director. He was the TV play-by-play voice of UConn women's basketball from 1999-2012. He also called Atlantic 10 football for the Atlantic 10 Network and CAA football for Comcast SportsNet. [4]
Melvin G. Goldstein (October 23, 1945 – January 18, 2012), known on air as Dr. Mel, was an on-air television meteorologist and the chief meteorologist for WTNH in New Haven, Connecticut, from 1986 to 2011.