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On September 8, 2008, the newscast was reformatted to Fox 40 Live and was expanded to 4 + 1 ⁄ 2 hours from 4:30 to 9 a.m. The station hired well-known former Sacramento morning radio personality Paul Robins as anchor, and introduced a new news set adorned with flat-screens and an accompanying kitchen set.
Present and former television anchors in the Sacamento-Stockton-Modesto DMA. Pages in category "Television anchors from Sacramento, California" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
KTVU (channel 2) is a television station licensed to Oakland, California, United States, serving the San Francisco Bay Area.It is owned and operated by the Fox network through its Fox Television Stations division alongside San Jose–licensed KICU-TV (channel 36).
By the time of his retirement, Richmond had become the highly respected "dean" of Bay Area TV news anchors, the longest-serving anchor in the Bay Area's history. His final show garnered 400,000 viewers, giving the newscast a 15.6 Nielsen rating and making him "more popular than Oprah". [ 5 ]
After graduation he worked at local stations in Santa Rosa, California; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Providence, Rhode Island, before returning to the San Francisco Bay Area. He became co-anchor of KTVU's morning news program in 1992 and was the first anchor of the 5 p.m. newscast when it launched in 2005.
Pat McCormick (born c. 1933) [1] is a retired American local television personality and puppeteer who worked for San Francisco's KGO-TV, and Oakland's KTVU channel 2, where among many jobs he was the nightly news' weatherman, hosted the midday movie Dialing for Dollars program, and co-hosted the local edition of the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon.
KMAX-TV: 31 (digital 24) Independent: CBS News and Stations (Paramount Global) KCSO-LD: 33 (digital 3) Telemundo: NBC Owned Television Stations (NBC Telemundo License, LLC) KTXL: 40 (digital 22) Fox: Nexstar Media Group: Known as "Fox 40", the channel is owned by Nexstar, the largest local station owner in the United States. [2] KQCA: 58 ...
[2] [5] [6] Subsequent to this, he returned to KGO-TV. Wilson hosted a talk radio show on the number-one rated 50,000-watt KGO (AM) weekdays 2–4 p.m. up until his death in 2007. He was the winner of five Emmy Awards and a Peabody. [7] Wilson also co-anchored the 6 p.m weekday editions of KGO-TV's ABC 7 News. [2]