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John Beard (news anchor)

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John Beard
Born1948 (age 75–76)
NationalityAmerican
EducationB.A. East Carolina University
OccupationNews anchor

John Beard (born 1948) is an American retired news anchor and actor.

Early life and career

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Beard was born in St. Pauls, North Carolina. He served as a Navy Corpsman with the Marines and graduated from East Carolina University. After school, he worked for television stations WITN-TV in Washington, North Carolina (1972 to 1976), WXII-TV in Winston-Salem (1976 to 1977) and, WIVB-TV in Buffalo (1977 to 1981).[citation needed]

KNBC-TV (1981–1993)

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From 1981 to 1993, Beard was anchor at KNBC-TV. Beard's co-anchors at KNBC included Tritia Toyota, Kristie Wilde, Kelly Lange and Linda Alvarez. He also anchored NBC News Digest segments during primetime in the Pacific Time Zone. Beard departed KNBC in November 1993 and joined KTTV the following month. Among the reasons for Beard's departure was his refusal to read misleading news teases and celebrity stories (particularly regarding pop singer Michael Jackson).[1] Beard was the 4 PM anchor of the Channel 4 News at the time of his departure and was replaced by former KABC-TV personality Chuck Henry.[2]

Beard was present during an August 20, 1987, incident in which a man entered the news set carrying a toy gun and demanded that a manifesto be read.[3][4]

KTTV (1993–2007)

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From December 1993 until September 2007, he anchored, with Christine Devine, the 10 PM newscast at KTTV in Los Angeles. KNBC management at the time let him out of his contract to go to a "lesser" station, but would not release him to go to channel 2 (KCBS) or channel 7 (KABC), the other two network owned and operated stations in Los Angeles with 11 PM newscasts. The Fox owned-and-operated was acceptable because its 10 PM newscast would not compete against KNBC and Beard was considered a great reader by news directors and station general management.[citation needed]

Departure

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Beard left KTTV in December 2007. According to his personal website, he was fired despite the highest ratings in the station's history following years of increasing editorial disagreements with station management, whose audience market research was steering it toward ever more unsubstantial journalism and celebrity fluff.[5] Beard was replaced by former KTLA Morning News anchor Carlos Amezcua.[6]

WGRZ (2009–2018)

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In 2009, Beard returned to Buffalo and began anchoring for Channel 2 News Daybreak and Midday on WGRZ, an NBC affiliate owned by Tegna Inc. While anchor, WGRZ's morning newscast, Daybreak vaulted into first place in Buffalo's Nielsen ratings.[7] On November 1, 2016 it was announced that John Beard would be leaving WGRZ at the end of the year.[8] Beard ultimately stayed over a year longer, with his final newscast airing January 18, 2018.[9]

Acting work

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He has appeared as himself and newscaster roles in television series including the 1994 animated series Spider-Man, 24, and Arrested Development (on which he made twenty-four appearances as himself, including the fourth and fifth seasons, which were filmed after he relocated to Buffalo).[10]

References

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  1. ^ Benson, Jim (1993-12-02). "Beard blasts KNBC news in open letter". Variety. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
  2. ^ Benson, Jim (1993-12-01). "Henry tops list to replace ankling Beard at KNBC". Variety. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
  3. ^ "Man Who Held Newsman Hostage With Toy Gun Given Probation". Associated Press. June 9, 1988. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  4. ^ Rohrlich, Ted; Thackrey Jr., Ted. "Intruder With Toy Gun Puts KNBC off Air".
  5. ^ "Personal web site of John Beard: farewell to KTTV viewers". Internet Archive WaybackMachine. Dec 31, 2007. Archived from the original on January 18, 2008. Retrieved Jul 6, 2017.
  6. ^ Schneider, Michael (2007-09-04). "KTLA's Carlos Amezcua hops to KTTV". Variety. Retrieved 2021-08-13.
  7. ^ "Warm and Fuzzy Beard, Hurricane Hysteria and Overpriced Pretzels". Internet Archive WaybackMachine. Aug 29, 2011. Archived from the original on October 22, 2012. Retrieved Nov 10, 2013.
  8. ^ "John Beard to Leave WGRZ". www.adweek.com. Retrieved 2016-11-01.
  9. ^ "Beard's 'Daybreak' goodbye has some light and poignant moments".
  10. ^ TV Guide: "Meet Arrested Development's Unlikely Star: Newscaster John Beard" by Michael Schneider June 5, 2013
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