abc
- Health issues continue to force Fred Manfra to scale back schedule. He will broadcast just 11 home Orioles games in 2017.
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- A little over three years after the launch of "The Kelly File," here she is in a league by herself as a TV news personality. There is no one even close. That's an incredible ascent, and I do not claim to have expected that.
- One contestant with Maryland roots competes on the 21st season of ABC’s dating reality TV show “The Bachelor” for a chance at love.
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The following programs will be offered through Carroll County Public Library. Registration is required only where noted. For more information, call 410-386-
- David Zurawik reflects on some recent media mistakes that don't predict such a happy year ahead for the press.
- One survey found that college students could more readily identify Kim Kardashian than Joe Biden. No college may be able to change that, but it is possible to better equip Marylanders for citizenship. As Thomas Jefferson argued, a functioning democracy needs an electorate thinking clearly about public issues. The Every Student Succeeds Act that replaced the No Child Left Behind law gives Maryland the power to reexamine its adherence to the Common Core and the tests that they spawned. The states
- New network series like NBC's "This Is Us" and Fox's "Star," which debuts Wednesday show how much more complex depictions of racial identity have become since the '80s.
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The following programs will be offered through Carroll County Public Library. Registration is required only where noted. For more information, call 410-386-
- The Times has assembled 25 days of holiday movies to tide you over until December is through.
- Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake will join a national speakers group and fight to keep her leadership position in the national Democratic Party as she leaves elected office early next month for the first time in her adult life.
- Meriel Colglazier and Garrett Wilson met on a ski trip when they were elementary students at St. Paul's School. They were married in August at the bride's childhood home.
- You guys. ABC announced today the premiere date of Nick Viall’s season of “The Bachelor,” and it’s only 63 days away.
- On Sunday, I wrote about the dangers of mixing politicos with journalists in a piece about ABC News adding Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake to its
- Stephanie Rawlings-Blake, who recently banned a journalist from her weekly press briefings, will be joining the world of journalism election night as an analyst
- TV networks haven't covered Benghazi like they've covered Donald Trump's personal life
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The following programs will be offered through Carroll County Public Library. Registration is required only where noted. For more information, call 410-386-
- Town halls today have almost nothing to do with the real meaning of the term. Instead, they have become another instance of TV taking a staple of American life and shaping it to fit its commercial imperatives while trying to create the appearance that the institution is still doing the righteous, public-minded work it was originally intended to.
- The Soviets of the cold war were formidable in a way that our more amorphous all-out enemies today — a shifting amalgam of unstable regimes and loosely affiliated transnational terrorist groups — can never be. Extremist Islamist groups aren't competing head-to-head with our best and brightest to explore space, to cure cancer, to win over hearts and minds in Western Europe, East Asia and Latin America.
- Brothers Osborne, natives of Deale, Maryland, earned two Country Music Association Awards on Wednesday.
- Jonah Goldberg: No one is above the law, not even journalists or their corporations, as Gawker has learned.
- The following programs will be offered through Carroll County Public Library. Registration is required only where noted. For more information, call
- The following programs will be offered through Carroll County Public Library. Registration is required only where noted. For more information, call
- Cal Thomas says Snoop Dogg is right: 'Roots' won't help African-Americans succeed.
- Television network Investigation Discovery will premiere ¿Adnan Syed: Innocent or Guilty¿ this June with ABC News correspondent Ryan Smith as the host.
- Alex Haley's "Roots" is one of the most powerful and profound narratives ever written or told about the American experience.
- JoJo meets the guys on the season premiere of "The Bachelorette."
- The following programs will be offered through Carroll County Public Library. Registration is required only where noted. For more information, call
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- Facing a genuine crisis-Baltimore's homeless population is approximately 30,000 a year-the city has constructed a patchwork of more than 60 homeless service providers that it oversees, creating a privately-contracted homeless services ecosystem that is chaotic, ill-managed, poorly monitored, and badly integrated with state and federal agencies.
- Hugs, kisses, contributions and flat-out shilling - what's going on between TV anchors and politicians in this crazed election season? And why does so much of this kissing up involve the Clintons?
- The new PBS series "Finding Your Roots" is among the best and most compelling television you will ever see, says Cal Thomas.
- A coalition of local and national media outlets has intervened in court to call for broader transparency and increased access to legal documents in the prosecution of the Baltimore police officers in the arrest and death of Freddie Gray.
- As you may recall, this seasons new Bachelor is Ben Higgins from the most recent season of "The Bachelorette."
- Amy Schumer, Tracy Morgan and ballerina Misty Copeland are on Barbara Walters' list of the most fascinating people of the year.
- Taking a look at the role of the Christmas movie in film history.
- CNN's audience Tuesday night was the largest ever for a Democratic TV debate.
- In just 12 months, a seeming novelty has become the norm. Last year, new-season buzz centered on the number of network series that featured ethnically and racially diverse casts: "Black-ish," "Fresh Off the Boat," "Jane The Virgin," "How to Get Away with Murder" and "Empire." They have all survived. They have been joined by more new series featuring diverse casts. And networks are moving beyond casting: On new series such as "Truth Be Told" and "Rosewood," characters from very different
- From an elementary school student on the ABC sitcom "Black-ish," to Whoopi Goldberg on "The View," the n-word has been getting a workout on TV this fall. And there's more prime-time use of it to come in the weeks ahead on sitcoms like the new NBC entry "Truth Be Told" debuting Oct. 16.
- Trump's ratings muscle, Twitter attack capability form a potent combination to intimidate networks, cable channels
- "I'm no stranger to controversy, and I'm not afraid of it," Maher says.
- With spots like Honey Maid's '4 de Julio,' advertisers seize an opportunity
- PBS Frontline film expands TV lineup of transgender identity
- Now that summer is officially upon us, we're taking a look at the definitive summer songs of all time, based on their seasonal popularity on Billboard's Hot 100 charts. Today, we count down the summer jams of the 1990s.