johnintx
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Posts posted by johnintx
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11 hours ago, Nelson R. said:
Amanda Cox leaving WJZY and getting out of TV.
I used to travel for work, and would watch as much local TV news as possible. I remember her from WFMZ. She was pregnant with her first child at that time. According to her Twitter bio, she now has three children.
Best of everything to her.
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On 6/15/2022 at 10:32 PM, Weeters said:
The St. Louis Business Journal is reporting that Gray has purchased an office building in the suburbs at 77 Progress Parkway, previously the office for a company called Biomedical Systems. They expect to be moved in by late summer or fall 2023.
The brochure for the property can be found here.
I don't know St. Louis well at all, but I recognize Progress Parkway in Maryland Heights, MO. Edward Jones' headquarters is on that street. I recognize the address from their statements.
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5 hours ago, Nelson R. said:
Maureen O’Boyle leaving WBTV in July and apparently getting out of TV altogether
Just announced on the 6:00 news.
This comes just over a week after Leigh Brock left the station.
I remember when she was the host of A Current Affair.
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5 hours ago, dman748 said:
https://www.tegna.com/tegna-to-be-acquired-by-standard-general-for-24-00-per-share/
One thing to note is that what's going to Cox will be WFAA, KVUE and KHOU.
Stay tuned because the FCC and the DOJ (particularly the latter) is going to take a hard look on the merger.
WFAA, KHOU, and KVUE going from Tegna to Cox, the owner of WSB, WFTV and WSOC? That's an upgrade. It's not the old Belo, but it's pretty good for this era.
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27 minutes ago, Greggo said:
Is the long-term plan to broadcast news from Erie, using Erie News Now talent? Or is this temporary? (I suspect I know the answer.) I’m already seeing Erie residents who’ve spotted John Stehlin’s posts about Marquette and are getting confused on Facebook.
Wow.
I'm not as up to speed as a lot of the members of this board, but how many total people are watching this newscast on the #4 station in market #180?
And, this is the same station owner that for years has done a news & weather cast for the Caribbean from Erie. This is the home of the weatherman with the toucan. Doing news remotely for Marquette from Erie should be a breeze! They'll just hire a Marquette-based reporter or two, buy enough equipment to get by, and do the rest of the newscast from Erie.
That clip, for what it was, isn't half bad. They had one report on compulsive gambling in PA and a local report via Zoom on redevelopment of a park.
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Longtime lurker, first time poster...Class move indeed by KOCO...people sometimes tend to forget that people who work at these different stations have forged relationships amongst each other over time, and what happens to one can always affect others.I'm long gone from Oklahoma, but I grew up just outside OKC watching Channel 4 (WKY/KTVY/KFOR). Bob Barry Sr. or Jr. held the sports director's chair there for 49 years. As mentioned in a column in Friday's Oklahoman, the station has changed call letters more than it has changed sports directors. They were truly legendary in that market.
Relationships are tight, even among long-time competitors. Brothers Kelly (KWTV) and Kevin Ogle (KFOR) are prime-time anchors on competing stations. Their father, Jack, was an anchor on WKY (now KFOR) in the 1960's and 70's. Kevin's daughter Abigail is a morning anchor on KOCO.
KOCO is really stepping up to the plate by staffing the KFOR newsroom on Friday. This is a big loss to the market and to the community.
TEGNA Broadcasting and Digital General Discussion
in Corporate Chat
Posted · Edited by johnintx
Storm chasing. OKC and Tulsa are hotbeds of storm chasing during tornado season. KWTV, KFOR, and KOCO all have their own helicopters...not sure about KOKH. In Tulsa, KOTV has a helicopter.
On a storm night, the network affiliates pre-empt programming for wall-to-wall storm coverage. They have pilots in the air and a team of storm chasers on the ground (with cameras in their trucks). The OKC affiliates will station storm chasers on the ground throughout the market, and will track the storm on the ground and in the air from the Texas border in the west to the edge of the OKC market in the east. In the case of KWTV and KOTV, they will often share storm chasers on a big night...there was a night last spring when there were storms on both sides of OKC, and the KWTV storm chasers were in the rural western portion of the market while a storm hit Seminole, east of OKC. KWTV chief meteorologist David Payne directed KWTV's helicopter pilot and the KOTV storm chasers to provide live video of the storm.
The pilots and some of the better known storm chasers have local sponsorships. They have become local celebrities.
It's entertainment, but more importantly, it's informational. Viewers depend on the local weather personnel to keep them safe, especially with the preponderance of storms in that area.
I recommend streaming KWTV on a storm night in the spring. As long as you're not in the storm, it's entertainment. David Payne is good TV on a storm night. This is KWTV's coverage from May 4. At about 1:03:00 of this video, he tells people to call "me-ma" to get to her safe spot. Shortly afterward, he calls on the Oklahoma Highway Patrol to shut down Interstate 40. Lots of local storm coverage gold on this night.
apologies for taking over the Tegna thread for non-Tegna stations...