Old school anchor team question
#1
Posted Wednesday, March 21, 2007 at 6:50 PM
The post in the Historic Houston section that mentioned that Jan Carson first teamed up with Dave Ward during the ammonia truck crash in 1976 got me wondering. When did the practice of co-anchors of different sexes(or co-anchors period) first start?
I presume Jan Carson was Channel 13's first female weekday evening anchor. Does anybody remember who Channel 2's first one was, and when? Was it Paula Zahn, and was it during the Big 2 News days? And was Amanda Arnold the first at Channel 11? I think she started in 1978.
Thank you for your assistance.
Bonus old-school local TV question: My mother once told me that Bill Balleza started at Channel 11, but was fired for exposing their practice of "live" reporting (they really weren't). True, false, or partly true?
#2
Posted Wednesday, March 21, 2007 at 9:25 PM
for ch13 listen to cool hand luke theme at bottom,
i remember dave ward, ed brandon, marvin zindler, dan lovett
bob allen replaced dan lovett in about 74.
jan came along from about 76 to 79. i had the question of whether there were dual anchors at both 6 or 10 or just one newscast. for some reason i'm thinking just the 6 and the 10 was still dave solo.
jan left in 79 to anchor in san francisco for 5 yrs.
shara fryer and bob boudreaux came along when jan left but was only doing live at 5 with bob boudreaux.
I believe several other stations we doing the dual anchor thing but not for all newscasts. I know 11 had steve smith and Amanda Arnold. But I don’t remember if she was on both newscasts. I know paula zahn was at ch 2 during the early 80’s too but for some reason I’m thinking it was a daytime newscast. shara may have been doing 6 or 10 but not both. i hope someone can remember.
i think in ~84 was a big yr for 13 and they went to 2 anchors for 6 and 10 mainly because of the return of jan Carson, but to ch2. ch 11 brought in chip moody and Felicia jeter (supposedly big anchors) and ch 13 finally committed to putting shara fryer on both 6 and 10. the chip and Felicia pairing didn’t go well and they left after about 3 yrs.
Their morning show had always been sylvan rodriguez, don nelson and doug brown and aired from 7 to 730. in 87, sylvan went to khou and tom koch started his morning anchoring stint which he still does today.
In the late 80’s/early 90’s is when 13 temporarily lost ed Brandon, due to his legal problems and hired, joe diaz to do the weather. He just was never popular with the fans and 13 eventually brought ed back.
Up until the early 2000’s it was dave, shara, marvin, bob and ed. 13 quietly replaced shara for gina gaston and that should bring us up to the current except for the addition of tim heller as weatherman.
Remember steve smith used to work for channel 2, ron stone used to work for ch 11 and bill balleza worked for 11 if I’m not mistaken.
This post has been edited by musicman: Wednesday, March 21, 2007 at 9:36 PM
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#3
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 8:22 AM
musicman, on Wednesday, March 21st, 2007 @ 8:25pm, said:
KTRK's first anchor team was Dave Ward and Dan Ammerman. Jan Carson came to KTRK in the early 70s as a reporter. I'm not 100 percent sure of this -- memory is the 2nd thing to go when you pass 60 -- but I think she moved into the anchor chair alongside Ward when Ammerman left to go into the media training business, which was a new and growing industry back then.
I expect to be corrected on that.
Bill Balleza did work at KHOU. I've never heard why he moved to KPRC, but I doubt it's for the reason you heard. TV and Radio people change jobs all the time around here. Most of the time it's for more money.
And while we're on the subject, I think the phenomenal number of former Houston TV reporters who now work for one of the big networks is a subject worth discussing. I sometimes think that as many as half the network correspondents you see on TV came through Houston earlier in their careers.
I'm not including Walter Cronkite in this list because he never worked in Houston TV.
Others who did include Roger O'Neill, John Quinones, Dan Molina, Bob Brown, Janet Shamlian, Janice Dean (Fox News), Paula Zahn, Dan Rather, Tom Jarriel, and this is just a short list of those I could remember off the top of my head. There are numerous others. The floor is open.
This post has been edited by dbigtex56: Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 12:19 PM
#4
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 8:55 AM
FilioScotia, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 7:22am, said:
KTRK's first anchor team was Dave Ward and Dan Ammerman. Jan Carson came to KTRK in the early 70s as a reporter. I'm not 100 percent sure of this -- memory is the 2nd thing to go when you pass 60 -- but I think she moved into the anchor chair alongside Ward when Ammerman left to go into the media training business, which was a new and growing industry back then.
I expect to be corrected on that.
Bill Balleza did work at KHOU. I've never heard why he moved to KPRC, but I doubt it's for the reason you heard. TV and Radio people change jobs all the time around here. Most of the time it's for more money.
And while we're on the subject, I think the phenomenal number of former Houston TV reporters who now work for one of the big networks is a subject worth discussing. That list would take all day to prepare. Dan Rather was just one of many.
dan left in the early 70's i believe and dave went solo til jan came along to anchor later. i guess the barbara walters anchoring abc news "helped" jan along. dan is also an actor on the side. i remember my parents telling me he was on dallas in its heyday for a few episodes.
another anchor i forgot about on ch2 was anna bond in the 80's.
as for big network people.
dan rather
jessica savitch
cronkite
tom jarrell
gina gaston (went nbc in 97 but returned to ktrk in 01)
paula zahn
david glodt was a big abc producer
bob allen replaced a guy who when on to abc news to do sports...but i can't remember his name either.
reporters i've seen recently charles hadlock, james hattori, dan molina, spencer tillman, chris wragge.
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#5
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 10:42 AM
As for as co-anchors, I remember Shara Fryer and Dave Ward on Ch 13 from about '80 or so; but I don't remember anyone w/ Ron Stone before Jan Carson in the early 80's; same w/ Steve Smith on Ch 11, I don't remember him having a co-anchor before Amanda Arnold.
Does anyone remember when it was Big 2 news w/ Ron Stone, Doug Johnson w/ weather and Ron Franklin w/ sports? When my dad would want me to change the channel he would ask to turn it to big 2 news and I didn't know what in the hell he was talking about until they showed a retrospective when Doug Johnson left the station.
I miss these good-old days as you had people with real down to earth personalities with real local knowledge doing the local news. When that gas pieline exploded near Cypress last month one of the bimbos on Ch 2 said it was not the first gas explosion in northwest Harris County and went on to compare it to the well blowout that happened near Crosby about 2 years ago. Genius.
#6
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 10:46 AM
bmil128, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 9:42am, said:
wasn't ron franklin at 11 before?
This post has been edited by musicman: Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 10:47 AM
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#7
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 10:54 AM
musicman, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 7:55am, said:
dan rather
jessica savitch
cronkite
tom jarrell
gina gaston (went nbc in 97 but returned to ktrk in 01)
paula zahn
david glodt was a big abc producer
bob allen replaced a guy who when on to abc news to do sports...but i can't remember his name either.
reporters i've seen recently charles hadlock, james hattori, dan molina, spencer tillman, chris wragge.
Bob Allen replaced Dan Lovett, who moved to WABC TV in New York. Lovett is back in town now, retired, but keeping himself busy at one of the local independent TV stations. I don't think we can include Cronkite in this category because he never worked in Houston TV. He was long gone from Houston media before TV even came to this town.
I just remembered another former Houstonian who's big with a network now. Dennis Murphy was a reporter and producer at KHOU in the late 70s and early 80s. He's now a contributing reporter on NBC's Dateline.
Chris Curl was one of CNN's first news anchors when it was created back in the 70s. She worked at KTRK in the mid 70s. I have no idea where she is now.
And oh yes, oh lord, let us not forget Linda Ellerbee. The story of how she got fired from the Associated Press and later came to work at KHOU is the stuff of legend. She called herself Linda Veselka then. If I can find my copy of it, I will share with you the embarrassing personal letter she wrote to her boyfriend one night, using the A-P's brand new computerized word processing system.
It's possible that no one would have ever heard of Linda if she hadn't hit the wrong button and sent the letter out to every A-P subscriber in five states. She was fired and out on the streets before lunch time. An A-P staffer told me it took that long because that's how long it took to find the Bureau Chief, who was out of town on business. She was the talk of the state for some time.
Six months later she applied for a job at KHOU in Houston, and the news director hired her largely because of the notoriety she created with the letter incident. She really did get her first TV job because of how she got fired from the A-P.
Ellerbee laughs about it today. She knows it launched her career in TV. She keeps a copy of the letter as it appeared on the A-P newswire framed in her office. She even autographed the copy I tore off the A-P printer at my radio station that morning. I had a feeling it was something I should keep and I was right. There's nothing scandalous in it, but she did make some pointedly personal remarks about her boss. It's very funny.
This post has been edited by dbigtex56: Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 12:21 PM
#8
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 10:57 AM
Past personalities
* David Glodt (anchor/reporter)
* Charles Harrison (meteorologist/voice announcer)
* Vann Hackett (anchor/reporter)
* Chris Adams
* Vicente Arenas (currently with KHOU)
* Alvin Van Black - entertainment/nightlife reporter (died in 2001)
* Bob Boudreaux - weekend anchor
* Jan Carson (co-anchor with Dave Ward during the 6 and 10 p.m. newscast until 1980 - replaced by Shara Fryer. She left ABC13 for a CBS affiliate in San Francisco with Doug Murphy and returned to Houston in the late 1980s as the co-anchor for KPRC.)
* Mary Ellen Conway
* John Nigel Davenport (died in 1991)
* Joe Diaz (Weekend Meteorologist 1989-1997; currently Chief Meteorologist at KOAT in Albuquerque)
* Deborah Duncan (now at KHOU. Duncan also had a locally based talk show from this station 1998-2002; plans for ABC/Disney to pick it up fell through)
* Diana Fallis (ABC13's first African American female anchor - later served as a media relations liaison with Prairie View A & M University)
* Stephen S. Gauvain (died in 1996 when a Ford Explorer SUV flipped over during the coverage of the Hilton Crawford murder trial in Huntsville, TX. The cause of the accident, a defective Firestone tire, would later lead to an investigation exposed by rival KHOU that led to numerous lawsuits and a complete recall of the tires.)
* Roland Galvan (mid-1980s meteorologist; later moved to KTLA; died December 2005)
* Alan Hemberger (current anchor for KHCW News at Nine)
* Corin Hoggard (sub-anchor/reporter, currently reporter at KFSN)
* Cynthia Hunt
* Debbie Johnson
* Nydia Han (currently at ABC affiliate WPVI/Philadelphia)
* Heidi Jones (Current weekend meteorologist at WABC)
* Dan Lovett
* Meteorologist Frank Billingsley (currently with KPRC)
* Darren Lyn (left to become a Houston-based reporter for ABC's corporate cousin ESPN)
* Doug Murphy (sportscaster - replaced by Tim Melton) (Died in 2005; Moved to KPIX-TV in 1980 and reported for Eyewitness News from 1980-2005 before his death in December in a house fire in Lafayette, California)
* Dan Rather
* Gene Norman (weekend meteorologist, presently chief meteorologist at WGCL-TV)
* Sylvan Rodriguez (died in 2000; left ABC13 for ABC News in 1987, later returning to Houston with KHOU 11. Later married dermatologist Shelley A. Sekula (who later became a Houston City Councilmember since 2002), who later went by Shelley Sekula Rodriguez, c. 2000 - June 2002. Currently goes by Shelley Sekula-Gibbs, M.D.)
For KHOU:
Former Anchors
* Steve Smith (5 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (retired 1999)
* Alma Newsome (mid to late 1970s) (then press secretary for U.S. Congressman Mickey Leland)
* Marlene McClinton (5 & 10 p.m. Anchor)
* Sylvan Rodriguez (Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor) (died in 2000)
* Amanda Arnold (6, 6:30 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (early 1980's)
* Jerome Gray (Weekend Anchor/Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor) (currently on KPRC-TV)
* Nesita Kwan (weekend Anchor) (Currently at WMAQ-TV Chicago)
* Clare Casademont (Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor)
* Felicia Jeter (5, 6 & 10 p.m. Anchor)
* Mike Dunston (weekend anchor/reporter 2000/promoted to mornings 2000-2002)
* Dan Patrick (Sports Anchor--1980s) (then to KSEV-AM; elected to Texas Senate, November 2006)
* Chip Moody (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor from 1984-87) (died in 2001)
* Dan Rather (Anchor/Reporter) (early 1960s)
* Tom Siler (weather)
* Mitch Duncan (Afternoon/Evening Anchor)
* Burt Rozell (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s)
* Michael Morgan (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s)
* Bill Balleza (Noon & 5 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s to mid 1980s) (currently on KPRC-TV)
* Bebe Burns (Morning & Noon Anchor) (mid to late 1970s)
* Ron Stone (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (1960s to 1970s then to KRPC-TV)
* Anna Werner (Investigative reporter 1999-2004 currently at KPIX-TV)
* David Grant (Chief Meteorologist 1980's)
* Lisa Foronda (Noon & 6pm (1997-1999), 5 & 10pm (1999-2006)
For KPRC:
* Kay Bailey, reporter (Channel 2's first female reporter) Currently a US Senator.
* Chris Bury, reporter in the early 1980s, currently a correspondent for the ABC News program Nightline.
* Velma Cato, a reporter who moved on to NBC News' Atlanta & New York Bureaus and later became a producer of nationally syndicated programs.
* Ron Franklin, Sports Director who came from KHOU in 1980 and left the station in 1987 for a postion at ESPN.
* Charles Hadlock, a reporter here before his lengthier assignment at KHOU, currently a correspondent for NBC News
* James Hattori, reporter who was hired in the late 1980s and later departed for CBS News and eventually CNN. Currently an NBC News Correspondent.
* Mauri Moore, reporter who moved on to NBC News' Bureau in Tel Aviv. Currently a city councilor in Edmonds, Washington.
* Roger O'Neil, reporter in the late 1970s and currently a correspondent for NBC News.
* Tom Jarriel, worked behind the scenes in the news department as a reporter for a number of years. Formerly of ABC News
* Dan Molina, A reporter who had moved back and forth between KPRC & NBC News throughout the 1980s and 90s eventually becoming KPRC's Austin Bureau Chief. Currently a freelancer, as well as a consultant for several broadcast relations firms.
* Janet Shamlian, Was a weekend anchor & reporter during the mid 1990s. Currently a correspondent for NBC News
* Cal Thomas, Notable syndicated newspaper columnist & commentator.
* Spencer Tillman, who began as a sports reporter/anchor during the 1987 offseason period when he was playing with the Houston Oilers. Later moved to WABC-TV in 1997 and joined CBS Sports in 1999.
* Larry Weidman, a reporter who later moved on to helm NBC News' Rome Bureau.
* Paula Zahn, anchor (now an evening show host at CNN).
-Me
***
Mr. Manhattan is a shower and not a grower.
#9
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 11:56 AM
ricco67, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 9:57am, said:
Past personalities
* David Glodt (anchor/reporter)
* Charles Harrison (meteorologist/voice announcer)
* Vann Hackett (anchor/reporter)
* Chris Adams
* Vicente Arenas (currently with KHOU)
* Alvin Van Black - entertainment/nightlife reporter (died in 2001)
* Bob Boudreaux - weekend anchor
* Jan Carson (co-anchor with Dave Ward during the 6 and 10 p.m. newscast until 1980 - replaced by Shara Fryer. She left ABC13 for a CBS affiliate in San Francisco with Doug Murphy and returned to Houston in the late 1980s as the co-anchor for KPRC.)
* Mary Ellen Conway
* John Nigel Davenport (died in 1991)
* Joe Diaz (Weekend Meteorologist 1989-1997; currently Chief Meteorologist at KOAT in Albuquerque)
* Deborah Duncan (now at KHOU. Duncan also had a locally based talk show from this station 1998-2002; plans for ABC/Disney to pick it up fell through)
* Diana Fallis (ABC13's first African American female anchor - later served as a media relations liaison with Prairie View A & M University)
* Stephen S. Gauvain (died in 1996 when a Ford Explorer SUV flipped over during the coverage of the Hilton Crawford murder trial in Huntsville, TX. The cause of the accident, a defective Firestone tire, would later lead to an investigation exposed by rival KHOU that led to numerous lawsuits and a complete recall of the tires.)
* Roland Galvan (mid-1980s meteorologist; later moved to KTLA; died December 2005)
* Alan Hemberger (current anchor for KHCW News at Nine)
* Corin Hoggard (sub-anchor/reporter, currently reporter at KFSN)
* Cynthia Hunt
* Debbie Johnson
* Nydia Han (currently at ABC affiliate WPVI/Philadelphia)
* Heidi Jones (Current weekend meteorologist at WABC)
* Dan Lovett
* Meteorologist Frank Billingsley (currently with KPRC)
* Darren Lyn (left to become a Houston-based reporter for ABC's corporate cousin ESPN)
* Doug Murphy (sportscaster - replaced by Tim Melton) (Died in 2005; Moved to KPIX-TV in 1980 and reported for Eyewitness News from 1980-2005 before his death in December in a house fire in Lafayette, California)
* Dan Rather
* Gene Norman (weekend meteorologist, presently chief meteorologist at WGCL-TV)
* Sylvan Rodriguez (died in 2000; left ABC13 for ABC News in 1987, later returning to Houston with KHOU 11. Later married dermatologist Shelley A. Sekula (who later became a Houston City Councilmember since 2002), who later went by Shelley Sekula Rodriguez, c. 2000 - June 2002. Currently goes by Shelley Sekula-Gibbs, M.D.)
to this list i would have to add jim rosenfield, lesley brinkley, thom dickerson,lesley hill. i think charles harrison was also an anchor in the 60's. i know i have an advertisement from ch13 in the 60's with him in it as an anchor.
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#10
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 12:47 PM
He was KTRK's "utility" man who did a little of every thing. Commercials, station breaks, and news, weather and even sports on weekends. He also filled in in any of those capacities during the week as needed. They could depend on Charlie to come in on short notice and do any of those jobs and he never failed them.
This was very early on in KTRK's news history, when news wasn't the major profit center it is today. Harrison was also one of the really nice guys in local TV for a long time.
This post has been edited by FilioScotia: Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 1:57 PM
#11
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 1:04 PM
ricco67, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 10:57am, said:
Ron Franklin is still with ESPN -- an amazingly long tenure with one media outlet. I see him announcing various college basketball games. He looks great.
#13
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 7:08 PM
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#15
Posted Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 9:24 PM
nativehou, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 8:58pm, said:
my mom said out of the locals there the only 3 she remembered was betty, charles harrison and garvin berry. it was nice to see jules bergman too. i always enjoyed his science reports with abc news.
This post has been edited by musicman: Thursday, March 22, 2007 at 9:25 PM
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#16
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 12:13 AM
So, where did Shara Fryer go? I always liked her, even though she sometimes seemed a little "blonde".
#17
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 8:02 AM
nativehou, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 8:58pm, said:
This photo is a stark reminder of how early TV news was "a man's world", and the only thing women did was report "women's news", host cooking shows, or, in a few cases, do the weather. KTRK had a woman -- Liz Brandt -- doing the weather, along with Tom Evans.
I remember Brandt's gimmick was a weather map drawn on a big pane of clear glass. She stood behind the glass, facing the camera, and drew the "frontal lines", rain showers and temps on the map with a big marks-alot. Her camera was set to show the reverse image of what it was seeing, so Brandt's writing was reversed and readable for viewers. An eye-catching gimmick. Liz had a great personality and she always did a great job. I hated it when she left in the mid sixties.
Incidentally, Tom Evans also left in the mid sixties to start a private weather service at Hobby Airport -- he called it Universal Weather -- and he continued doing live weathercasts for radio stations -- most notably KIKK AM and FM in the 60s and 70s. Universal Weather is now Impact Weather, and, along with providing weather information for airlines and industry, they still do weathercasts for radio stations in Houston (KUHF) and some other cities.
This post has been edited by FilioScotia: Friday, March 23, 2007 at 8:12 AM
#18
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 8:27 AM
banking214, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 11:13pm, said:
when KTRK promised gina the anchor slot, it was inevitable that shara would be leaving within a few yrs. for women, being over 50 and on tv isn't always easy. she shouldn't be having any problems since she's still married to barry silverman and is definitely in the houston social scene.
(6/08/06 - KTRK/HOUSTON) - KTRK General Manager Henry Florsheim announced that former Eyewitness News anchor Shara Fryer is leaving ABC13.
Shara was the longest serving woman news anchor in Houston history. She served with distinction in the 1980's and 90's alongside Dave Ward, Ed Brandon, Marvin Zindler and Bob Allen.
In September 2004, Shara was reassigned from the anchor desk to be the station's first senior correspondent and host of "In Focus." Her assignments took her to Israel, Italy, England and across the United States. Shara has received numerous awards and she will be honored this November by receiving the Julie and Ben Rogers Ecumenism award from the Anti-Defamation League.
This post has been edited by musicman: Friday, March 23, 2007 at 8:27 AM
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#19
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 8:57 AM
musicman, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 7:08pm, said:

Great clipping, musicman. The bottom row is all ABC personnel who may have never set foot in Houston; makes it look like they had a bigger newstaff that they actually had.
Ray Conaway (top left) was the first 13 anchor I think. I didn't remember he was still on as late as 64. He had worked at both the Press and Chronicle and KTRH and KPRC, I think. He wore a bow tie and fairly barked out the news. I loved watching him but nobody else in my family did. 13's newscast was still just 15 minutes after 2 and 11 had gone to a half hour I believe. I don't recognize the 2nd or 4th guys. Garvin Berry was mostly a newspaper man as I recall. Bob Stephenson -- was that the guy who had the long running fishing show on KILT?
Guy Savage (top right) was 13s first Sports Director, from 1960 to 1969. One evening in 1969, just after the 6pm news, he went home to rest as he wasn't feeling well. He was dead by 9pm of a heart attack at the age of 59. The obits said he had been Sports Director of KXYZ radio for 11 years prior to KTRK and had started in radio in Illinois but there was a Guy Savage on KTRH in the 30s or 40s - perhaps a father? The obits didn't mention KTRH. I liked him; he was a lot like Mark Berman on 26 as I recall. (I have a photocopy of the obit around here somewhere but can't find it, so this is from memory).
This post has been edited by brucesw: Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:14 AM
#20
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:11 AM
ricco67, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 10:57am, said:
Former Anchors
* Steve Smith (5 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (retired 1999)
* Alma Newsome (mid to late 1970s) (then press secretary for U.S. Congressman Mickey Leland)
* Marlene McClinton (5 & 10 p.m. Anchor)
* Sylvan Rodriguez (Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor) (died in 2000)
* Amanda Arnold (6, 6:30 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (early 1980's)
* Jerome Gray (Weekend Anchor/Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor) (currently on KPRC-TV)
* Nesita Kwan (weekend Anchor) (Currently at WMAQ-TV Chicago)
* Clare Casademont (Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor)
* Felicia Jeter (5, 6 & 10 p.m. Anchor)
* Mike Dunston (weekend anchor/reporter 2000/promoted to mornings 2000-2002)
* Dan Patrick (Sports Anchor--1980s) (then to KSEV-AM; elected to Texas Senate, November 2006)
* Chip Moody (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor from 1984-87) (died in 2001)
* Dan Rather (Anchor/Reporter) (early 1960s)
* Tom Siler (weather)
* Mitch Duncan (Afternoon/Evening Anchor)
* Burt Rozell (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s)
* Michael Morgan (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s)
* Bill Balleza (Noon & 5 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s to mid 1980s) (currently on KPRC-TV)
* Bebe Burns (Morning & Noon Anchor) (mid to late 1970s)
* Ron Stone (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (1960s to 1970s then to KRPC-TV)
* Anna Werner (Investigative reporter 1999-2004 currently at KPIX-TV)
* David Grant (Chief Meteorologist 1980's)
* Lisa Foronda (Noon & 6pm (1997-1999), 5 & 10pm (1999-2006)
There were many who worked for 11 who made the move to 2 over the years; as I understood it, Corinthian, which owned 11 for many year, was very cheap. Ron Stone did a stint at NBC radio news in NY before coming back to town to join Ray Miller's excellent staff at 2. Steve Smith started at 2, left for an anchor job in Philly, then came back to anchor at 11, as I recall. I always liked him until I saw him in a grocery store being quite rude to some viewer who had recognized him and just wanted to say hi. Chris Chandler was another crossover; he was on 2 during the 'Happy Talk News' days, standing in front of the news desk he would go up to each of the anchors and introduce them and chat with them about what they had to report. Awful stuff. Chandler had a role as a Houston TV reporter in Hellfighters, the John Wayne movie about Red Adair. Another big one was Larry Rasco who started on 11, either replacing or being replaced by Dan Rather. He made the transition to 2 and was a long time anchor there.
By the way, excellent list.
This post has been edited by brucesw: Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:20 AM
#21
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:20 AM
ricco67, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 9:57am, said:
Past personalities
* Joe Diaz (Weekend Meteorologist 1989-1997; currently Chief Meteorologist at KOAT in Albuquerque)
i just didn't believe the dates here. i was thinking 2 yrs max so i emailed him.
Hi,
1989-1991
Thanks
Joe
* * * * * *
Joe Diaz
Chief Meteorologist KOAT-TV
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#22
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:50 AM
Someone mentioned Charlie Harrison... I swear, I'd always wondered who that voice belonged to growing up. Over the past year I'd actually gotten to see what he looked like thanks to an old newscast I have somewhere around in the boxes. Anyone know if he's still around?
Al Janis, who was someone I'd forgotten until he appeared on an old KTRK newscast from '79 or so I had on tape. He seems to be a real estate agent these days. Looks pretty much the same, save for a few gray hairs.
Thom Dickerson I think went over to HISD to work for their media department. HISD produces a weekly "update" (or they have over the past few years) that airs on Ch. 8 & Ch. 49 at odd hours and he always showed up as a reporter for them. Ben Wilson, another former KTRK reporter also ended up working as a press liason for the district and I think Norm Uhl of KHOU ended up there in a similar capacity at one point.
The Joe Diaz entry on wikipedia seems a bit off... I met him a few years ago at KOAT. We hung out and he gave me some decent advice about getting things together career-wise. Kinda missed a lot about living in Sugar Land it sounded like as well. One of the nicest guys ever. Period.
H Texas Magazine seems to be a collection of a few old media personalities from various places around town. Fran Fawcett-Peterson, Lynn Ashby, Warner Roberts...
Jim Rosenfield is a big anchor WCBS in New York, although his bio is noticeably absent of his KTRK era work. Kinda curious as to what happened to his weekend co-anchor Debbi Johnson now. She was there for a decent amount of time... Last I'd heard she ended up in Austin but that was ages ago.
Space Reporters seemed to be all the rage a few years back. We all know, unfortunately, what happened to Stephen Gauvain. I know that KHOU's John Getter was around Houston for a while and ended up working in a Space-related news service. Actually saw him on Fox News once or twice during coverage of the shuttle program maybe a year or two ago. Catherine Smith, who was KPRC's equivalent (and part of the Florida influx from then sister station WESH in the mid 80's) I think ended up going back to Florida at some point in the 90's to raise a family. Ironically enough, she wasn't one of the finalists from the station from the "Journalist in Space" competition of that time. Dan O'Rourke (aka that guy who hosts the Miss Texas USA Pageants) and Terry Anzur (Who seems to have fallen off the face of the earth recently) were however.
Actually found Dan Ammerman's Firm website. Nice surprise to find one of my favorite other reporters working for them, Rosa Linda Perez from KPRC.
Larry Audas, who was another of my favorite reporters from KPRC did immensely well in the world of Newsroom/Station administration. He's currently the General Manager of KTHV, the CBS affiliate in Little Rock.
This post has been edited by ChannelTwoNews: Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:51 AM

Greetings From Vacationland... Portland, ME
#23
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 11:34 AM
[/quote]
I'm not 100 percent sure of this, but I think Charlie Harrison has passed away. If he's still living he's very elderly now. Liz Brandt -- Houston's first lady TV weathercaster -- at KTRK -- died two years ago at the age of 79.
Debbi Johnson now does media relations for the Texas Historical Commission over in Austin.
Thom Dickerson is now with HISD in their media department.
Ben Wilson is now Deputy Superintendent for Public Information for the Aldine School District. A high falutin' title for a guy who's essentially a PIO. John Getter -- last time I heard -- was an executive with an outfit called SpaceHab, a company that's working to design and build habitats for living in space. Good luck with that.
Nancy Holland came through KPRC Radio as an intern in the mid 70s, and now, after years of first class reporting at KHOU, she's leaving for NYC where she will be an executive producer for an independent news service that provides video for the TV networks. Her husband already lives in NYC, where he's a high level TV news photographer, and she's been commuting up there on weekends to spend time with him. Now she's going to join him full time. Houston will miss Nancy Holland because she's just one of the best TV reporters this town has ever had.
#24
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 12:09 PM
[/quote]
This is the story of the day KTRK News Director and Anchor Ray Conaway colored Houston's air blue with profanities and obscenities on TV. Sometime in 1964 Conaway was going to NYC to film some stories on the New York World's Fair for local consumption. He had to catch a plane around midnight, so after the 10pm news that night, he was in a hurry to record his "Conaway Comments" piece for use on the news the next day.
There were carpenters working in the studio building sets for a live production of Romeo and Juliet KTRK was producing, so Conaway asked them to take a break while he video-taped his commentary.
So there he is, rocking right along doing his thing, when a carpenter in the rafters accidentally started up his power saw. Conaway's famous angry reaction was unprintable -- but it went something like "g-dm that m----------ing saw", or something very close to that. Exasperated, he told the director he didn't have time to start over so he picked up where he left off and finished the commentary.
When he was done, he personally took the big videotape reel off the recorder, wrote "Edit Before Airing" in big red letters on a big piece of paper he wrapped and taped around the reel, put it into a videotape box, gave it to the director and left for the airport to catch his plane.
For reasons never explained, the note was ignored and the tape was not edited before it went on the air the next day. It was the talk of the town for weeks. I believe KTRK ended up getting a stiff fine from the FCC, and Conaway retired not too long after that. I missed him because he always had strong and intelligent opinions, and a firm way of expressing them. He really was one of the good guys.
This post has been edited by FilioScotia: Friday, March 23, 2007 at 12:10 PM
#25
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 12:40 PM
FilioScotia, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 10:34am, said:
I'm not 100 percent sure of this, but I think Charlie Harrison has passed away. If he's still living he's very elderly now. Liz Brandt -- Houston's first lady TV weathercaster -- at KTRK -- died two years ago at the age of 79.
Debbi Johnson now does media relations for the Texas Historical Commission over in Austin.
i'm glad you found something on Debbi johnson and alexis south. i always liked both of them and wondered why i could never find anything about them. and nancy will be missed.
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#27
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 5:58 PM
I have an interest in logos, and I once looked through old TV Guides at the downtown public library to find out when the local stations adopted their previous logos. I found some amusing ads.
-Channel 13's ads from the late 60s-early 70s reeked of desperation. They were basically saying "Please watch us!" I believe that 13 was a distant third to 2 and 11 until Marvin Zindler showed up and they became number one in 1977. I'm sure the "Eyewitness News" concept of happy talk probably helped.
-Speaking of 13, one ad had Dave Ward and Dan Ammerman(I think) wearing blazers with the then-13 logo (a hideous, bloated 13 that the circle 13 replaced in 1971) on the pockets. I always wondered why Ted Baxter wore a blazer with the WJM-TV logo on it.
-Channel 2 used at least 5 logos in the 1960s. There's a picture on the internet of the station in 1960. I saw a different logo during archived footage of Hurricane Carla (I think it was Larry Rasco reporting). A mid-60s logo had a thin, vertically elongated 2 with the word Channel in spaced letters in front of it. From 1968 to 1969, they used a logo in a TV screen that said "Channel 2". It was as boring as dry toast. The classic(IMO) "Big 2" logo debuted in 1969 with a splash-numerous vertical half-page ads that loudly announced "Big 2 News with Steve Smith" (or Larry Rasco). The 2 took up most of the ad, and there was a photo of the anchor inside the 2. Later ads had the letters tv (in lowercase) inside the 2. The station's tower had the NBC Snake inside the 2. I've always wondered if Channel 2 ever changed their logo on the tower before 1985, when the shiny silver 2 was introduced as "new 2" (I remember the ads). One ad had sports anchor Bill Enis (Bart's dad, I presume) wearing a football jersey with the 2 on it. You don't see that anymore. Oh, and the 2 was modified in 1976, but they still used the old one for a while in on-air graphics.
-I'm curious about Alexis South. All I know about her is a picture of the Newscenter 11 team on the air that appeared in the 1980 book "Houston". She appeared to be at least in her 50s. Was she that old?
I think I'll start a thread of old local TV ads that I've culled from the Internet. Please contribute!
#28
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 9:16 PM
TheShadow, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 5:58pm, said:
i don't remember her that old but i remember her as popular! scan it in if you can. i guess tom siler "the weather wizard" replaced her. i remember seeing him working in orlando now.
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#29
Posted Friday, March 23, 2007 at 11:36 PM
TheShadow, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 6:58pm, said:
OMG, someone else has that book! I had to look around ebay for that a few years back. Definitely a classic pic. If memory serves there's a vintage exterior shot of the KPRC studios & some odd set that KUHT was using during the period as well.
Tom Siler 's in Pensacola at WEAR, the ABC affiliate there. The story of his dismissal from WTXL is rumored to be one that smacks of ageism, but regardless he seems to have landed somewhere there's a decent audience.
I saw a mention of the late Bill Ennis... The account from one of my friends that worked there during the period is the night they all learned about his death, Ron Stone and the other personalities could barely keep it together, and the newscast ended with the darkened studio with spotlights focused on the chair Bill sat in each night.
Gail Anderson. There's someone I remember clear as day. Very distinct style... from serious reporting & consumer issues to getting down on the ground and pounding fists on the concrete begging for more items during a food drive during the late 80's. Won a bunch of awards during her time there, but I also remember reading through an item about her "On Your Side" phone banks being protested by the ADL for something at one point.
One piece of footage I'd kill to see is from around 1987 or so. I've only heard bits about it over the years, but essentially Ron Stone was alone and left to do the 10 PM news and weather on his own, with crew audibly laughing throughout much of the show. I recall reading through a Post account of it, and a clip of the weather portion has been used in several of the retrospective clip reels over the years.
"Well, you know your maps... There's California... In the desert? Oh, probably a lot of sand I'd say"

Greetings From Vacationland... Portland, ME
#30
Posted Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 7:23 AM
ChannelTwoNews, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 11:36pm, said:
"Well, you know your maps... There's California... In the desert? Oh, probably a lot of sand I'd say"
there was a similar incident with marvin zindler doing the weather on good morning houston. let's just say the percent chance of rain was changed from 20 to 100 because "it is raining right now" he did the forecast in his zindler persona which made it even funnier.
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#31
Posted Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 9:00 AM
ChannelTwoNews, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 11:36pm, said:
I saw this LIVE. It was hysterical. That was back in the day with Ron Stone and Doug Johnson at 5 p.m. I usually watched it after school -- they were always so funny and you could tell (at least to me) they were friends and enjoyed doing the show together.
But it had to have been earlier than '87. I'm guessing late 70s-early 80s. And it must have been at the 5 p.m. news time because we virtually never stayed up past 9:30 in my household growing up!
This post has been edited by nativehou: Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 9:37 AM
#32
Posted Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 9:49 AM
ChannelTwoNews, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 11:36pm, said:
The KUHT picture was from a show called "Potpourri". The desk was very weird.
I'd be happy to scan the pictures, but I don't own one. Sorry.
#33
Posted Monday, April 2, 2007 at 6:26 PM
TheShadow, on Wednesday, March 21st, 2007 @ 6:50pm, said:
The post in the Historic Houston section that mentioned that Jan Carson first teamed up with Dave Ward during the ammonia truck crash in 1976 got me wondering. When did the practice of co-anchors of different sexes(or co-anchors period) first start?
I presume Jan Carson was Channel 13's first female weekday evening anchor. Does anybody remember who Channel 2's first one was, and when? Was it Paula Zahn, and was it during the Big 2 News days? And was Amanda Arnold the first at Channel 11? I think she started in 1978.
Thank you for your assistance.
Bonus old-school local TV question: My mother once told me that Bill Balleza started at Channel 11, but was fired for exposing their practice of "live" reporting (they really weren't). True, false, or partly true?
#34
Posted Monday, April 2, 2007 at 7:21 PM
Before that Channel 2 had a couple of woman anchors in the 70s including Anita Martini who anchored sports, and the lady who later appeared on all the Fiesta commercials, and I'll remember her name just as soon as I post this! Paula Zahn arrived in 1981 and was replaced after one contract by Jan Carson, who had moved to San Francisco and had left the business for a while. Terry Anzur and Anna Bond were also in the early-to-mid 80's anchor mix for KPRC.
Sorry that I repeated your original post above with my own name as author, I just hit a wrong button and cant erase it.
#35
Posted Monday, April 2, 2007 at 7:43 PM
sunburst, on Monday, April 2nd, 2007 @ 8:21pm, said:
Before that Channel 2 had a couple of woman anchors in the 70s including Anita Martini who anchored sports, and the lady who later appeared on all the Fiesta commercials, and I'll remember her name just as soon as I post this! Paula Zahn arrived in 1981 and was replaced after one contract by Jan Carson, who had moved to San Francisco and had left the business for a while. Terry Anzur and Anna Bond were also in the early-to-mid 80's anchor mix for KPRC.
Sorry that I repeated your original post above with my own name as author, I just hit a wrong button and cant erase it.
Roberta DeFranceso would be the woman from the Fiesta commercials, though I wasn't aware she was an anchor in the past.
I haven't spoken to Terry in years, though she was among the nicest people I've met in television. Even provided me a copy of her demo tape during her time at KPRC to look over for ideas on how to compile mine whenever the time came. Last I'd heard she was in West Palm Beach at the CBS station there, but she's disappeared from there over the last year it seems. Might have to call around to find out where she ended up.
When KPRC was doing news updates in the middle of the night in the early 90s, I was always curious in what capacity the "anchors" worked in other than that. Two names that come to mind are Alice Wolf and Ginger Morgan. Were they producers, freelancers, etc?
This post has been edited by ChannelTwoNews: Monday, April 2, 2007 at 7:44 PM

Greetings From Vacationland... Portland, ME
#36
Posted Monday, April 2, 2007 at 8:26 PM
ChannelTwoNews, on Monday, April 2nd, 2007 @ 7:43pm, said:
I haven't spoken to Terry in years, though she was among the nicest people I've met in television. Even provided me a copy of her demo tape during her time at KPRC to look over for ideas on how to compile mine whenever the time came. Last I'd heard she was in West Palm Beach at the CBS station there, but she's disappeared from there over the last year it seems. Might have to call around to find out where she ended up.
When KPRC was doing news updates in the middle of the night in the early 90s, I was always curious in what capacity the "anchors" worked in other than that. Two names that come to mind are Alice Wolf and Ginger Morgan. Were they producers, freelancers, etc?
\
Yes, Ginger Morgan and Alice Wolke were producers who worked the night shift and anchored short updates until the morning anchors came in. It worked fine until another producer in that role, Alvin Wright, the single nicest man ever, became frustrated in tripping over a sentence and lived to regret the next few seconds of his life. He said he was just not cut out to be on-air, and the news director agreed . But Alvin would become an HPD spokesman who often appeared on Houston newscasts--including Channel 2 in the middle of the night.
#38
Posted Friday, April 6, 2007 at 10:28 PM
Ruminations:
-Channel 13 ran Dragnet reruns instead of the ABC evening news in 1963? I know that ABC News was a distant third to CBS News and NBC News back then, but that was a surprise. I wonder if any stations still do that. Probably not.
-Speaking of ABC News, the Jarriel at Channel 2 is Tom Jarriel, future ABC News correspondent.
-Was Larry Rasco Channel 2's first anchor of note?
-And now for something completely different. Wasn't Doug Brown Channel 11's head weatherman in the early 70s?
#39
Posted Tuesday, June 12, 2007 at 2:13 PM
ricco67, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 10:57am, said:
Past personalities
* David Glodt (anchor/reporter)
* Charles Harrison (meteorologist/voice announcer)
* Vann Hackett (anchor/reporter)
* Chris Adams
* Vicente Arenas (currently with KHOU)
* Alvin Van Black - entertainment/nightlife reporter (died in 2001)
* Bob Boudreaux - weekend anchor
* Jan Carson (co-anchor with Dave Ward during the 6 and 10 p.m. newscast until 1980 - replaced by Shara Fryer. She left ABC13 for a CBS affiliate in San Francisco with Doug Murphy and returned to Houston in the late 1980s as the co-anchor for KPRC.)
* Mary Ellen Conway
* John Nigel Davenport (died in 1991)
* Joe Diaz (Weekend Meteorologist 1989-1997; currently Chief Meteorologist at KOAT in Albuquerque)
* Deborah Duncan (now at KHOU. Duncan also had a locally based talk show from this station 1998-2002; plans for ABC/Disney to pick it up fell through)
* Diana Fallis (ABC13's first African American female anchor - later served as a media relations liaison with Prairie View A & M University)
* Stephen S. Gauvain (died in 1996 when a Ford Explorer SUV flipped over during the coverage of the Hilton Crawford murder trial in Huntsville, TX. The cause of the accident, a defective Firestone tire, would later lead to an investigation exposed by rival KHOU that led to numerous lawsuits and a complete recall of the tires.)
* Roland Galvan (mid-1980s meteorologist; later moved to KTLA; died December 2005)
* Alan Hemberger (current anchor for KHCW News at Nine)
* Corin Hoggard (sub-anchor/reporter, currently reporter at KFSN)
* Cynthia Hunt
* Debbie Johnson
* Nydia Han (currently at ABC affiliate WPVI/Philadelphia)
* Heidi Jones (Current weekend meteorologist at WABC)
* Dan Lovett
* Meteorologist Frank Billingsley (currently with KPRC)
* Darren Lyn (left to become a Houston-based reporter for ABC's corporate cousin ESPN)
* Doug Murphy (sportscaster - replaced by Tim Melton) (Died in 2005; Moved to KPIX-TV in 1980 and reported for Eyewitness News from 1980-2005 before his death in December in a house fire in Lafayette, California)
* Dan Rather
* Gene Norman (weekend meteorologist, presently chief meteorologist at WGCL-TV)
* Sylvan Rodriguez (died in 2000; left ABC13 for ABC News in 1987, later returning to Houston with KHOU 11. Later married dermatologist Shelley A. Sekula (who later became a Houston City Councilmember since 2002), who later went by Shelley Sekula Rodriguez, c. 2000 - June 2002. Currently goes by Shelley Sekula-Gibbs, M.D.)
For KHOU:
Former Anchors
* Steve Smith (5 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (retired 1999)
* Alma Newsome (mid to late 1970s) (then press secretary for U.S. Congressman Mickey Leland)
* Marlene McClinton (5 & 10 p.m. Anchor)
* Sylvan Rodriguez (Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor) (died in 2000)
* Amanda Arnold (6, 6:30 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (early 1980's)
* Jerome Gray (Weekend Anchor/Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor) (currently on KPRC-TV)
* Nesita Kwan (weekend Anchor) (Currently at WMAQ-TV Chicago)
* Clare Casademont (Noon & 6 p.m. Anchor)
* Felicia Jeter (5, 6 & 10 p.m. Anchor)
* Mike Dunston (weekend anchor/reporter 2000/promoted to mornings 2000-2002)
* Dan Patrick (Sports Anchor--1980s) (then to KSEV-AM; elected to Texas Senate, November 2006)
* Chip Moody (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor from 1984-87) (died in 2001)
* Dan Rather (Anchor/Reporter) (early 1960s)
* Tom Siler (weather)
* Mitch Duncan (Afternoon/Evening Anchor)
* Burt Rozell (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s)
* Michael Morgan (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s)
* Bill Balleza (Noon & 5 p.m. Anchor) (mid 1970s to mid 1980s) (currently on KPRC-TV)
* Bebe Burns (Morning & Noon Anchor) (mid to late 1970s)
* Ron Stone (6 & 10 p.m. Anchor) (1960s to 1970s then to KRPC-TV)
* Anna Werner (Investigative reporter 1999-2004 currently at KPIX-TV)
* David Grant (Chief Meteorologist 1980's)
* Lisa Foronda (Noon & 6pm (1997-1999), 5 & 10pm (1999-2006)
For KPRC:
* Kay Bailey, reporter (Channel 2's first female reporter) Currently a US Senator.
* Chris Bury, reporter in the early 1980s, currently a correspondent for the ABC News program Nightline.
* Velma Cato, a reporter who moved on to NBC News' Atlanta & New York Bureaus and later became a producer of nationally syndicated programs.
* Ron Franklin, Sports Director who came from KHOU in 1980 and left the station in 1987 for a postion at ESPN.
* Charles Hadlock, a reporter here before his lengthier assignment at KHOU, currently a correspondent for NBC News
* James Hattori, reporter who was hired in the late 1980s and later departed for CBS News and eventually CNN. Currently an NBC News Correspondent.
* Mauri Moore, reporter who moved on to NBC News' Bureau in Tel Aviv. Currently a city councilor in Edmonds, Washington.
* Roger O'Neil, reporter in the late 1970s and currently a correspondent for NBC News.
* Tom Jarriel, worked behind the scenes in the news department as a reporter for a number of years. Formerly of ABC News
* Dan Molina, A reporter who had moved back and forth between KPRC & NBC News throughout the 1980s and 90s eventually becoming KPRC's Austin Bureau Chief. Currently a freelancer, as well as a consultant for several broadcast relations firms.
* Janet Shamlian, Was a weekend anchor & reporter during the mid 1990s. Currently a correspondent for NBC News
* Cal Thomas, Notable syndicated newspaper columnist & commentator.
* Spencer Tillman, who began as a sports reporter/anchor during the 1987 offseason period when he was playing with the Houston Oilers. Later moved to WABC-TV in 1997 and joined CBS Sports in 1999.
* Larry Weidman, a reporter who later moved on to helm NBC News' Rome Bureau.
* Paula Zahn, anchor (now an evening show host at CNN).
Good list, thanks. Others you can find on Wikipedia.
notes on this list
KTRK:
Had a good young anchior Tim Ryan who went to Chicago early 80's
Don't think Dan Rather ever worked at KTRK
Jan Carson came back to Houston not late 80's but in 1983 replacing Paula Zahn who was dropped after one contract
KPRC:
Notable anchor/reporters not on this list: Terry Anzur and Anna Bond mid-80's then both faded away but Anzur has a website. Tim Lake late 80's went to Philadelphia and is still working as anchor there. Dan O'Rourke 80-95 runs media company in Houston and freelances for networks. Larry Audas 85-90's went to Little Rock now in station management.
Listed as KPRC reporters: Velma Cato worked the assignment desk and sometimes produced shows. Mauri Moore was a special assignments producer/show producer. Larry Weidman was the news director who succeeded Ray Miller in 1979. If any of these three was ever on air it wasnt often enough to be called a reporter.
Craig Roberts sports 1980-2004 still in Houston was working at the Tube 55 and other jobs.
KHOU:
Shern-Minh Chow who scores the rare trifecta of working several years each at 11, 13 and 2 in a single long career.
#40
Posted Tuesday, October 7, 2008 at 10:47 PM
musicman, on Thursday, March 22nd, 2007 @ 10:46am, said:
wasn't ron franklin at 11 before?
I am suprised that no one has mentioned Jan Glenn, I know the story of her and Bob, then she "Tried" a come back and it went splat, where did she go?
#41
Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 1:38 AM
marcusfb, on Tuesday, October 7th, 2008 @ 10:47pm, said:
You can still see Jan Glenn on a channel 55 show called Wild About Houston
Man, Larry Rasco had a great voice. Wish I could hear it again. What about another golden throat, Dick Gottleib? Wasn't he an anchor in Houston? I remember him primarily from the Jerry Lewis telethons (back when they were a big deal). He was often a candidate for local office as well. I remember he died sometime back in the 1980s or 90s. I would love to hear his voice again as well.
Amanda Arnold grew up in Houston, anyone know where she lived/attended high school?
#42
Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 2:49 AM
Retama, on Wednesday, October 8th, 2008 @ 1:38am, said:
Gottlieb went to A&M and worked at WTAW in B/CS before getting into Houston radio in the 40s. Accounts differ about who hired him first; one account says he was hired by W. Albert Lee to do play-by-play of high school games on KLEE (AM-610) for $25 a game, another account has him being hired originally by Roy Hofheinz for his KTHT (AM-1230). Whichever is true he was working for KLEE when their TV station went on the air and handled announcing chores for both AM and TV. Then when Lee sold Channel 2 to KPRC and the Post, he stayed with the TV side and went on to be known as Mr. Television in Houston. He handled just about everything - games shows, talk shows, play-by-play of the Buffs. He may have anchored news on occasion but I don't remember it.
Although his voice had become known to early TV viewers on KLEE-TV he was never seen on camera until just before the change of ownership.
He served on City Council and ran a small advertising firm after getting out of TV. I think he's been mentioned in other threads here on HAIF regarding his political career. Along the way he acquired the unfortunate nickname of Deep Throat.
Another old timer who's been overlooked is Sid Lasher, weathercaster for 11 in the late 50s. He was a very folksy sort who drew his weather maps on a big tablet with a marksalot or maybe it was a charcoal pencil back then.
I think Chris Chandler replaced him at 11 before going over to 2 to host the Happy Talk news format. I don't remember Chandler ever doing weather on 2 but maybe so.
KLEE-TV had news briefs but I don't know who hosted them or if the person was ever seen on camera or was a journalist in any sense or just read news copy off the wires. KPRC-TVs first news anchor was Pat Flaherty who was news director of KPRC-AM when it took over Channel 2.
This post has been edited by brucesw: Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 2:53 AM
#43
Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 12:34 PM
TheShadow, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 5:58pm, said:
I have an interest in logos, and I once looked through old TV Guides at the downtown public library to find out when the local stations adopted their previous logos. I found some amusing ads.
-Channel 13's ads from the late 60s-early 70s reeked of desperation. They were basically saying "Please watch us!" I believe that 13 was a distant third to 2 and 11 until Marvin Zindler showed up and they became number one in 1977. I'm sure the "Eyewitness News" concept of happy talk probably helped.
-Speaking of 13, one ad had Dave Ward and Dan Ammerman(I think) wearing blazers with the then-13 logo (a hideous, bloated 13 that the circle 13 replaced in 1971) on the pockets. I always wondered why Ted Baxter wore a blazer with the WJM-TV logo on it.
-Channel 2 used at least 5 logos in the 1960s. There's a picture on the internet of the station in 1960. I saw a different logo during archived footage of Hurricane Carla (I think it was Larry Rasco reporting). A mid-60s logo had a thin, vertically elongated 2 with the word Channel in spaced letters in front of it. From 1968 to 1969, they used a logo in a TV screen that said "Channel 2". It was as boring as dry toast. The classic(IMO) "Big 2" logo debuted in 1969 with a splash-numerous vertical half-page ads that loudly announced "Big 2 News with Steve Smith" (or Larry Rasco). The 2 took up most of the ad, and there was a photo of the anchor inside the 2. Later ads had the letters tv (in lowercase) inside the 2. The station's tower had the NBC Snake inside the 2. I've always wondered if Channel 2 ever changed their logo on the tower before 1985, when the shiny silver 2 was introduced as "new 2" (I remember the ads). One ad had sports anchor Bill Enis (Bart's dad, I presume) wearing a football jersey with the 2 on it. You don't see that anymore. Oh, and the 2 was modified in 1976, but they still used the old one for a while in on-air graphics.
-I'm curious about Alexis South. All I know about her is a picture of the Newscenter 11 team on the air that appeared in the 1980 book "Houston". She appeared to be at least in her 50s. Was she that old?
I think I'll start a thread of old local TV ads that I've culled from the Internet. Please contribute!
About as far back as I can remember which is about the early 70s that big silver 2 sat on the side of the KPRC tower until about the mid 90s. Everytime I passed through that area I made it a point to look at that tower. I used to wonder if that 2 was still up there under the current logo.
#44
Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 12:41 PM
musicman, on Friday, March 23rd, 2007 @ 12:40pm, said:
I remember Debbi Johnson. She co-anchored with someone I want to say Tom Abrahams (mid to late 80s). Both fairly young at the time. There was an April Fool bit done in the Post by Ken Hoffman about them supposedly there had been a quiet thing between for sometime, they decided to make it known and were now engaged to be married. The day after both were dismissing any truth to it in the next days article. I think she had no knowledge of the article and had people asking her if it was true. She was a pretty good sport about it.
This post has been edited by djrage: Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 12:51 PM
#45
Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 1:33 PM
djrage, on Wednesday, October 8th, 2008 @ 12:41pm, said:
I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle. -- Winston Churchill
Willomena Slater goin ghetto on Betty Suarez..."come on girl, i'm black and you're mexican. let's not talk around it like a couple of dull white people"
#46
Posted Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 4:54 PM
brucesw, on Wednesday, October 8th, 2008 @ 2:49am, said:
Chris Chandler did the weather on KPRC for a couple of years in the mid 60s, till he talked GM Jack Harris into letting him do a personality show as a lead-in to the NBC Nightly News at 5:30. Huntley and Brinkley were still vertical and working then.
When Chandler gave up the weather duties sometime around 1965 or 66, Harris gave that job to one of the DJ's from KPRC Radio. A young fresh-faced and smiling guy named Doug Johnson. Doug would also occasionally fill in for Chandler in the personality show.
Sid Lasher was one of the most popular TV personalities Houston has ever had. He wasn't a meteorologist. Never pretended to be one. He just explained the weather and the forecast in words we ordinary folk could understand. His warm and cordial on-air style endeared him to everybody. He died one night between the 6pm and 10pm news.
Ron Stone told me an interesting story about the guy who replaced Lasher. Stone was anchoring at KHOU then, and a guy named Jerry Dale was the backup and weekend weather guy. When Lasher died, Dale was promoted into the weeknight job. Stone told me that Dale really loved Lasher as a friend and father-figure, and he was so grief-stricken by his death he fell into a deep depression. Worse, he believed with all his heart, mind and soul that Lasher's spirit was still roaming the halls and studios at KHOU. He ended up taking a long hiatus from work to get psychiatric treatment and a lot of rest
This post has been edited by FilioScotia: Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 4:55 PM
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