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By 1973, WLS' Eyewitness News broadcasts surpassed NBC-owned WMAQ-TV (channel 5)'s newscasts to become Chicago's top-rated news operation, a lead it held until WBBM-TV surpassed channel 7 for the top spot in 1979. For much of the 1970s and 1980s, it waged a spirited battle for second place in the Chicago news ratings between its two main ...
Cheryl Burton. Burton broadcasting the ABC 7 Eyewitness News' at 10 p.m. on June 8, 2017. Cheryl Annette Burton[citation needed] (born December 25, 1962) is an American news anchor who has been working for WLS–TV, an American Broadcasting Company-owned and operated television station in Chicago, Illinois, since 1992.
Windy City Live maintains strong viewership ratings, and has been nominated for and won numerous Chicago Emmy awards. [4] On July 21, 2021, WLS-TV cancelled Windy City Live. Production was ceased on September 3, 2021. [5] The show morphed into 'Windy City Weekend' a half-hour, weekly addition to ABC7 Eyewitness News at 11am, airing Fridays at ...
Chuck Goudie. Chuck Goudie (born January 17, 1956, in Detroit, Michigan) is an American television journalist based in Chicago. [1] He has been the chief investigative correspondent of ABC-TV owned WLS-TV, in Chicago since 1990. [1] He has been with ABC7 since April, 1980. [2]
Ryan Chiaverini. Ryan Chiaverini (born 1987) [1] is an American television personality, and Midwest Emmy Award winning co-host of Windy City Live (now Windy City Weekend) on ABC Chicago (WLS-TV). He is also the Lead Sports Anchor at ABC7 Chicago replacing Jim Rose who retired in September 2023.
Linda Yu. Linda Yu (born December 1, 1946) is a Chinese-American former news anchor and author. Yu is best known as co-anchor on the Eyewitness newscast for WLS-TV in Chicago from April 1984 until November 2016. Yu became Chicago's first Asian–American broadcast journalist when she began her news career in Chicago at WMAQ-TV in 1979.
The earliest known use of the Eyewitness News name in American television was on April 6, 1959, when KYW-TV (now WKYC-TV) – at the time, based in Cleveland and owned by Westinghouse Broadcasting – launched the nation's first 90-minute local newscast (under the title Eyewitness), which was combined with the then 15-minute national newscast. [1]
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