Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
KIRO-TV (channel 7) is a television station in Seattle, Washington, United States, affiliated with CBS and Telemundo.Owned by Cox Media Group, the station maintains studios on Third Avenue in the Belltown section of Downtown Seattle, and its transmitter is located in the city's Queen Anne neighborhood, adjacent to the station's original studios.
During her tenure at KIRO, she won multiple local Emmy Awards for broadcasting; locals also still remember her for hosting the Big Money Movie in the afternoon. Because of her success in Seattle, Hill was approached to co-anchor the Channel 2 News at CBS owned-and-operated KNXT (now KCBS-TV) in Los Angeles in 1974. [4]
For 25 years, KIRO's morning news, anchored by Bill Yeend, consistently placed at or near the top of the Seattle Arbitron ratings. Gregg Hersholt was the station's morning news anchor for the next 10 years until he left the station on May 28, 2010, ending his 26-year career there. Dave Ross now hosts Seattle's Morning News.
Area served City of license VC RF Callsign Network Notes Bellingham: Bellingham: 12 14 KVOS-TV: UNI: Movies! on 12.2, MeTV on 12.3, Catchy Comedy on 12.4, Start TV on 12.5, MeTV+ on 12.6, Story on 12.7, H&I on 12.8, MeTV Toons on 12.9
The J.P. Patches Show broadcast an estimated 12,000 episodes—almost all of them totally live and unrehearsed . [8] [2] The show premiered on February 10, 1958, on KIRO-TV. The show was immensely popular in the Puget Sound area and southwestern British Columbia; at the peak of its run, the program had a daily local viewership of over 100,000.
She became the weekend news anchor, and then the weekday evening news anchor and producer. [7] After being spotted by a Seattle television executive, Hutchison was hired in January 1981 as a TV news anchor for the CBS affiliate in Seattle, KIRO-TV. [7] She worked as the evening anchor for more than 20 years, earning five Emmy Awards. [7]
[5] [7] While preparing for his seventh NFL season, Raible was offered an opportunity in June 1982 to be the color analyst for the Seahawks radio broadcasts with Pete Gross on KIRO radio; he accepted and retired from playing at age 28. [8] [9] He also became a sports reporter at KIRO-TV in Seattle, and later shared duties as one of its news ...
Later that decade his TV career took-off on the KIRO-TV program "Northwest Home and Garden Show", hosted by Jeff Probst. [3] In 2017, clips of Morris were featured in a segment on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver titled "You wish you loved anything as much as Seattle gardening expert Ciscoe Morris loves everything." [4]