wbal tv
- The veteran sports broadcaster's coping skills have drawn him closer to his public, said colleagues who point out that this is no run-of-the-Mills broadcaster.
- Dave Durian, former WBAL anchor and radio show host, dies.
- WBAL-TV today named veteran in-house anchor-reporter Deborah Weiner and newcomer Ashley Hinson as replacements for Donna Hamilton, whose last newscast was Wednesday night after 22 years at the station.
- After 22 years at WBAL-TV, Donna Hamilton will step down from the anchor desk on May 23, the station announced today. Hamilton is retiring from broadcasting, according to Dan Joerres, station president and general manager.
- Former Ravens coach Brian Billick and CBS Sports sideline reporter Evan Washburn will join WBAL's Gerry Sandusky to call the Baltimore team's four preseason games, the station announced today.
- After 15 years at WBAL-TV, Sarah Caldwell is leaving the station.
- Subscribers to DISH will not be abe to see WBAL-TV (Channel 11) in Baltimore until the broadcast company that owns the channel and the satelllite TV provider
- DirecTV dropped Baltimore's WBAL (Channel 11) as of midnight Dec. 31 in a dispute over carriage fees with the channel's corporate parent, Hearts Television.
- James Sydney King, 91, a retired WBAL television executive active on numerous charitable and civic boards, died of Parkinson's disease complications Nov. 4 at the Pickersgill Retirement Community.
- WBAL-TV has hired former Al Jazeera America correpsondent Adam May as weekend anchor and weekday reporter, the Hearst-owned station announced today.
- WBAL-TV is feeling the Bern with the first presidential ad set to debut tomorrow morning.
- WBAL-TV made the first mistake in covering the trial of Baltimore City Police Officer William Porter today before jury selection in the trial even began.
- WBAL-TV meteorologist Ava Marie welcomes her first child, son Easton Michael
- WBAL-TV's 'big story' Friday night omitted Miller's role in FOP seeking dismissal of the case and recusal by Baltimore States Attorney Marilyn Mosby.
- WBAL-TV anchorman Rod Daniels is retiring after more than 30 years on the Baltimore airwaves, the station announced Friday.
- Tim Tunison has been named news director at WBAL-TV, according to Dan Joerres, president and general manger of the Hearst-owned station.
- Michelle Butt, news director at WBAL-TV and radio station WBAL-AM, is leaving to be president and general manager at WXII-TV, an NBC affiliate in North Carolina.
- Starting Monday, WBAL-TV's morning news will begin at 4:30 instead of 5 a.m. each weekday, station manager Dan Joerres announced today.
- Democratic gubernatorial candidate Anthony G. Brown and Republican rival Larry Hogan have agreed to meet in a third televised TV debate next month, WBAL-TV in Baltimore confirmed Tuesday.
- Robert I. "Bob" Callahan, a veteran Baltimore broadcaster who worked in both radio and television and in early June was honored with a star on Maryland Public Television's Walk of Fame, died Aug. 28 at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Miami, Fla. He was 76.
- Megan Pringle is leaving a job as dirctor of news and multimedia at Maroon PR, to become part of the WBAL-TV morning team, the station announced today.
- After 45 years in the radio business, Ed Kiernan Friday told the staff at WBAL that he will be retiring this summer as head of radio stations WBAL-AM and WIYY-FM.
- In the wake of Howard County Police saying definitively Wednesday that there was no "domestic" motive for the Columbia Mall shooting in January that left three persons dead, WBAL apologized for its reporting of the story.
- WBAL, NBC report shooting was 'domestic,' but so far, police disagree
- WBAL, WJZ, CNN strongest in coverage at Columbia mall shooting
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- Miri Marshall, a weathercaster at KCEN-TV in central Texas, will join WBAL-TV Aug. 22, as part of the station's weather team, general manager Dan Joerres said Tuesday.
- There was no doubt about which Baltimore station was the one to turn to in the immediate wake of CSX train derailment Tuesday afternoon in Baltimore County. For the first 10 minutes or so, WBAL-TV, the Hearst-owned NBC affiliate, was the only station with live overhead helicopter shots of the wreckage along the tracks and the fires sending plumes of smoke into the air.
- One of the biggest changes will be on the sidelines where Lisa Salters will debut as the new sideline reporter for the storied franchise.
- Dave Durian, a fixture on Baltimore radio for more than two decades, is stepping down as anchor of WBAL's morning drive-time news program effective Aug. 31, he told listeners Wednesday during his show. He has been with the 50,000-watt station since 1988.
- A look at how Baltimore TV news performed in a week of big news
- Weeknight program will air on station's digital channel
- Heartfelt restaurant is aswirl with great grapes, but food feels uninspired
- The Baltimore media community offered a public farewell to WBAL radio show host Ron Smith Tuesday at Goucher College.
- Property records show that an Abingdon home that was the site of a fatal fire Saturday belonged to a man named John Youngblood.
- Colleagues, friends to speak at service for Baltimore radio's 'voice of reason.'