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Romona Robinson (born 1959) [1] is an American television news anchor in Cleveland, Ohio.She is the first African American woman to anchor a nightly newscast in Cleveland, and the first solo anchor of a weeknight newscast in that city.
WOIO (channel 19) is a television station licensed to Shaker Heights, Ohio, United States, serving the Cleveland area as an affiliate of CBS.It is owned by Gray Media alongside CW affiliate WUAB (channel 43), Telemundo affiliate WTCL-LD (channel 6) and independent station WOHZ-CD (channel 22); WTCL and WOHZ also serve as relays for WOIO.
A familiar face in Cleveland TV news is about to leave the airwaves. Sia Nyorkor, who joined Cleveland 19 in 2015, has announced that she is leaving the station at the end of the week. Nyorkor ...
Current and former Cleveland, Ohio television news anchors: Pages in category "Television anchors from Cleveland" The following 46 pages are in this category, out of 46 total.
She later worked at WOIO/WUAB in Cleveland, Ohio, where Carlson, along with colleague Denise Dufala, became the first women to co-anchor a primetime major-market newscast. [ 21 ] Following her time in Cleveland, Carlson served as a weekend anchor and reporter for KXAS -TV in Dallas / Fort Worth, Texas , from 1998 to 2000.
Newscasts on WOIO and WUAB have used the same branding since May 2002, when all newscasts were renamed Action News, [199] later amended to 19 Action News. [200] As part of an overall rebrand to Cleveland 19 News in 2015, [139] WUAB's 10 p.m. newscast was moved to a 90-minute block at 9 pm, in turn moving MyNetworkTV programming into late ...
Santana was born in Cleveland at MetroHealth around 1979. [3] [4] She graduated from Cleveland Metropolitan School District schools and Lincoln West High School. [5] Her mother is a native of Puerto Rico. [6] Santana has two teenage children. [7] Santana developed a breast cancer outreach program at MetroHealth. [3]
Cover to Cover would be cancelled after 13 weeks, and after a brief stint in Kansas City, Missouri, as a news anchor, Swoboda returned to Cleveland in 1996 and once again was a co-anchor of the 6 p.m. newscast on WJW (by this time now a Fox affiliate), briefly reuniting her with Taylor, Goddard, and Coleman and reforming the popular and highly ...