Call letters | KCBS-TV |
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Station logo | |
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Station slogan | Only CBS 2 (general) News That's Central to Your Life (newscasts) |
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Station branding | CBS 2 (general) CBS 2 News (newscasts) |
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Digital | 43 (UHF) Virtual: 2 (PSIP) |
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Subchannels | 2.1 CBS |
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Other chs | (see article) |
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Affiliations | CBS Television Network |
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Founded | | |
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Airdate | May 6, 1948 |
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Location | Los Angeles, California |
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Callsign meaning | K Columbia Broadcasting System (former legal name of CBS) |
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Former callsigns | KTSL (1948-1951) KNXT (1951-1984) |
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Owner | CBS Corporation |
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Licensee | CBS Broadcasting, Inc. |
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Sister stations | KAMP-FM, KCAL-TV, KCBS-FM, KFWB, KNX, KROQ-FM, KRTH, KTWV |
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Former affiliations | DuMont (1948-1951) |
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Former channel numbers | Analog 1 (VHF, 1933-1946) 2 (VHF, 1946-2009) Digital 60 (UHF, 1998-2009) |
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Effective radiated power | 1000 kW |
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Haat | 950.9 m |
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Facility id | 9628 |
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Coordinates | |
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Homepage | www.cbslosangeles.com/ |
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KCBS-TV, channel 2, is an owned-and-operated television station of the CBS Television Network, located in Los Angeles, California. KCBS-TV shares its offices and studio facilities with sister station KCAL-TV (channel 9) inside CBS Studio Center in the Studio City section of Los Angeles, and its transmitter located atop Mount Wilson.
History
Early years
Experimental origins
KCBS-TV is one of the oldest television stations in the world. It was created by
Don Lee Broadcasting, which owned a chain of radio stations on the
Pacific Coast, and was first licensed by the
Federal Radio Commission, forerunner of the
Federal Communications Commission as experimental television station
W6XAO in June 1931. On December 23, 1931 it went on the air, and by March 1933 was broadcasting one hour daily except Sundays. The station used a mechanical camera which broadcast only film footage in an 80-line image, but demonstrated all-electronic receivers as early as 1932. It went off the air in 1935, and then reappeared using an improved mechanical camera producing a 300-line image for a month-long demonstration in June 1936. By August 1937, W6XAO had programming on the air six days per week. Live programming started in April 1938.
By 1939, with the image improved to 441 lines, an optimistic estimate of the station's viewership was 1,500 people in a few hundred homes. Many of the receiver sets were built by television hobbyists, though commercially made sets were available in Los Angeles. The station's six-day weekly schedule consisted of live talent four nights, and film two nights. During World War II, programming was reduced to three hours, every other Monday. The station's frequency was switched from Channel 1 to Channel 2 in 1945 when the FCC decided to reserve Channel 1 for low-wattage community television stations.
The station was granted a commercial license (the second in California, behind KTLA) as KTSL on May 6, 1948, and was named for Thomas S. Lee, the son of Don Lee. The station became affiliated with the DuMont Television Network later that year.
CBS acquisition
Since 1949 the CBS television network had been affiliated with
KTTV (channel 11), a station in which the network held a minority (49 percent) ownership stake. After an attempt to buy out that station's remaining shares were rebuffed by the majority partner, the
Los Angeles Times, CBS and Don Lee struck a deal for the transfer of KTSL. CBS sold its stake in KTTV to the
Times, and on January 1, 1951 all CBS programming moved to KTSL. On November 1, 1951, KTSL changed its call letters to
KNXT to coincide with CBS' Los Angeles radio outlet,
KNX (1070 AM).
In 1960, KNXT created the nation's first one-hour local newscast, The Big News, which featured Jerry Dunphy, one of Southern California's most beloved news icons, along with legendary weatherman Bill Keene and sportscaster Gil Stratton. Also featured were Special Assignment reporter Maury Green and "Human Predicament" essayist Ralph Story. This helped make KNXT the number-one news station in Los Angeles. At times, a quarter of Los Angeles televisions were tuned into The Big News, the highest ratings ever for a television newscast in the area. The station eventually added such reporters as Howard Gingold and Saul Halpert, among others, and added news bureaus in Sacramento, San Francisco and Orange County, each with full-time correspondents and camera crews. Eventually, KNXT expanded to two-and-a-half hours of live local news, as well as a late-night newscast. However, in the mid 1970s, rival KABC-TV began gaining ratings at KNXT's expense. In 1975, KNXT fired Dunphy (who was quickly hired by KABC) and adopted a format similar to KABC-TV's Eyewitness News with its "happy talk" between anchors. However, the change went nowhere. Just as most of its fellow CBS O&Os; were dominating their cities' ratings, KNXT rapidly fell into last place.
As KCBS-TV
On April 2, 1984, at noon, KNXT changed its call letters to the present
KCBS-TV. In 1997, it adopted the "CBS2" moniker for its on-air image, following the lead of its Chicago and New York sisters. In 2002, KCBS-TV became a sister station to
KCAL-TV after the latter was purchased by
CBS Corporation.
For a time during the 1980s and 1990s, KNXT/KCBS-TV had several locally produced programs such as "2 on the Town," a local show similar to Evening Magazine and KABC-TV's Eye on L.A., and Kid Quiz, a Saturday morning children's game show hosted by longtime weathercaster Maclovio Perez. For a time in the mid-2000s, its sister station KCAL-TV did a show called 9 on the Town.
For most of the period from 1975 to 2006, KNXT/KCBS-TV was not a factor in the Los Angeles television ratings. The exceptions were a brief surge to first place in the early 1980s and another in the mid-1990s.
During the period, Channel 2 had frequently changed formats to styles that often became unsuccessful and even controversial. In September 1986, Channel 2 implemented a news-wheel format with each half-hour of news devoted to certain topics and themes. For example, there was Entertainment and Lifestyle news early on and harder news later on. This format was heavily panned by critics and audiences alike, and cancelled after only a month.
The late 1980s and early 1990s brought in the Action News format, which featured a tabloid-type newscast; the style grated on the news staff, which circulated a memo that resulted in the eventual firing of news director John Lippmann. Lippmann was heavily criticized by many, and reportedly had many confrontations with news staff, notably a shoving match between him and anchor Michael Tuck. The station's ratings quickly declined.
CBS management, highly embarrassed at KCBS' subpar performance, responded by bringing in Bill Applegate as general manager. Applegate had previously been general manager at WBBM-TV, and ironically been a reporter there in the early 1970s. While Applegate had been criticized for making WBBM's newscasts flashier than they had previously been, he set about toning down KCBS's newscasts. One of his strategies involved bringing in popular news anchors and reporters from other stations including the return of Jerry Dunphy, 20 years after he was fired from the station. Dunphy went on to anchor at KABC-TV and KCAL-TV achieving high ratings at both stops. Also joining Dunphy were colleagues Ann Martin, Dr. George Fischbeck, Paul Dandridge and Marc Coogan from KABC-TV, and Larry Carroll who worked with Dunphy at KABC and KCAL. Linda Alvarez of KNBC-TV also joined the team.
The station's ratings improved, but Applegate was eventually a casualty of CBS' merger with the Westinghouse corporation in 1996; he'd bickered with Westinghouse over syndicated programming not long after he'd arrived. Westinghouse executives never forgot this, and Applegate was one of the first executives to be let go. Channel 2's momentum ground to a halt, and it soon dropped into last place. The Action News branding was dropped in 1997 and renamed CBS 2 News. That year, Dunphy returned to KCAL.
KCBS began making another attempt to get out of the ratings basement at the start of the 21st century. In 2000, former KNBC Today in L.A. anchor Kent Shocknek joined KCBS to become its morning co-anchor. Then in 2001 the station hired Harold Greene, longtime anchor at KABC, as its 5 and 11 p.m. anchor. A year later, he was joined by his former partner at KABC, Laura Diaz. In 2004, Paul Magers, longtime anchor at KARE in the Twin Cities, replaced Greene on the 5 p.m. and 11 p.m. news, bumping Greene to the 4 p.m. and 6 p.m. newscasts. The 4 p.m. newscast moved to KCAL-TV with the arrival of Dr. Phil on KCBS. At the beginning of 2005, longtime KABC weatherman Johnny Mountain moved to KCBS, surprising many since it appeared that he was going to retire.
At first, it seemed that none of these changes brought KCBS any closer to becoming a factor in the Los Angeles news race. However, in April 2006, KCBS grabbed the #2 spot at 5 PM from KABC due to a strong lead-in from Dr. Phil. More importantly, KCBS shot past both KABC and KNBC to take first place at 11 p.m. for the first time in 30 years.
On April 21, 2007, KCBS and KCAL-TV moved from historic CBS Columbia Square in Hollywood to an all-digital facility at the CBS Studio Center in Studio City. The move marks many changes at KCBS and KCAL-TV. Several news personalities have departed, including David Jackson, a respected news anchor who returned to the duopoly after fronting KCAL's Prime 9 News in the early 1990s, Kerry Kilbride, reporter Jay Jackson, Paul Dandridge, Dilva Henry, Linda Alvarez, sports anchor Alan Massengale, and Dave Clark, who left for KTVU. Both stations began broadcasting all their newscasts, sports shows, and public affairs programming in high definition, becoming the third and fourth station in Los Angeles to do so; the other being KABC-TV in February 2006, and KTLA in January 2007. In addition, KCBS and KCAL-TV now operate in a completely tapeless newsroom. This newsroom is named in honor of Jerry Dunphy, who previously worked at both stations in the past.
With the move, KTLA and KCET are the only stations (either in radio or television) in Los Angeles to broadcast from Hollywood.
On April 1, 2008, CBS's owned-and-operated television stations division ordered widespread budget cuts and staff layoffs from its stations, among the largest budget cuts in television history. CBS O&Os; across the country have laid off numerous staff members with KCBS and KCAL-TV being no exception. As a result of the budget cuts, roughly 10-15 staffers were released by the duopoly. The 6pm anchor team, Harold Greene and Ann Martin, decided to retire from television news after many years in the business. Greene and Martin (who both also anchored KCAL-TV's 4 p.m. newscast) were slated to have their contracts expire in June, and both were considered for layoffs. Additionally, longtime KCBS reporter Jennifer Sabih, and reporters Greg Phillips and Jennifer Davis were let go by the station.
NewsCentral era
On September 19, 2009, KCBS and KCAL rebranded to the
NewsCentral brand (unrelated to
Sinclair Broadcasting Group's former "
News Central" brand). The slogan was changed to
News that's central to your life and was refocused to cover on more community news, including news from outlying communities. Local news headlines from the
Los Angeles Newspaper Group and other
MediaNews Group newspapers were displayed on the ticker, "street team" submissions of video and photos from viewers were featured, reporters ended stories with
NewsCentral rather than the individual station names, and mic flags and news vehicles were branded to show both stations at once (previously the KCBS logo was displayed on half the sides and the KCAL logo on the other half).
NewsCentral claimed that it produced more local news than any other television station in the country, with reporters in
Ventura County, the
Inland Empire, and
Orange County, and the only Los Angeles television station with two helicopters (subcontracted to Angel City Air, owned by reporter Larry Welk).
Ed Asner was used to introduce the new newscast. CBS denied that the move was made in response to other stations pooling newsgathering resources.
On December 10, 2009, CBS brought in Steve Mauldin to replace Patrick McClenahan as president and general manager of the duopoly. That week, the duopoly ultimately rescinded the NewsCentral branding, reverting to the "CBS2 News" and "KCAL9 News" identities. The NewsCentral graphics, mic flags and logos remained in the interim, though on-air talent no longer used the NewsCentral identity.
Digital programming
The station's digital channel is multiplexed. KCBS-TV broadcasts on digital channel 43.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Channel (virtual/physical)
! Programming
|-
| 2.1/43.1 || main KCBS-TV programming / CBS HD
|-
|}
Analog-to-digital conversion
KCBS-TV ended programming on its analog signal, on
VHF channel 2, and switched to
analog nightlight at 1:10 P.M. on June 12, 2009 , as part of the
DTV transition in the United States. KCBS-TV moved its digital broadcasts from channel 60 to channel 43 using
PSIP to display KCBS-TV's
virtual channel as 2. KCBS broadcasts in
1080i high definition on virtual channel 2.1, since CBS Network programming uses that HD format.
Programming
KCBS airs
The Young and the Restless at 11:30 a.m. instead of 11 a.m. Most CBS affiliates and stations air it at 11 a.m. in the Pacific, Mountain and Central Time Zones, owing to newscasts that air at 12 noon. But 11:30 a.m. is CBS' recommended time slot to air it. This reflects off the fact that most affiliates in the Eastern Time Zone air it at 12:30 p.m., following the midday news. This is also the case at KCBS, in lieu of sister station KCAL-TV's newscast schedule. CBS began offering its affiliates two feeds of the show in 1981 so stations in the Central time zone wouldn't have to tape delay
Y&R; to air before their midday newscasts.
In Los Angeles, national news from the major networks air at 6:30 p.m., an hour later than most West Coast affiliates. This includes the CBS Evening News on KCBS. During the 1980s, the CBS Evening News and ABC World News Tonight (broadcast by KABC-TV) aired on their respective stations at 7 p.m. From 1988 to 1999 KCBS aired the CBS Evening News at 5:30 p.m. (the timeslot the newscast typically airs in the Mountain and Central time zones).
KCBS carried Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy! at 7:00 and 7:30 PST from 1989 until 1992, when rival KABC-TV added it to its lineup. Before 1989, both Wheel and Jeopardy! were shown on KCOP-TV. Today the 7 p.m. hour carries Entertainment Tonight and The Insider. Jeopardy! initially aired during the afternoon hours on KCBS in 1984, before KCOP picked it up a year later.
News operation
KCBS had 4 p.m. newscasts from time to time. It was the first in the Southland with a 4:30 pm newscast, that was later expanded to an hour. KCBS dropped its 4 p.m. newscasts in 1998 in favor of the short-lived
Howie Mandel Show, which was canceled after only one season, then in 1999, the
Woman 2 Woman public affairs show. After the acquisition of now-sister station KCAL-TV, KCBS reintroduced the 4 pm newscast, but now airing exclusively on KCAL-TV.
Dr. Phil now airs in the 4 p.m. slot on KCBS.
From 1986 to 1987, KCBS had a 7 p.m. newscast, airing CBS Evening News immediately beforehand at 6:30 p.m. KCBS was also the last station in the Los Angeles area to offer a 6:30 p.m. local newscast, when its 6 p.m. newscast ran for an hour, until KTLA launched one in January 2009.
News/station presentation
Newscast titles
World News (1938–1948)
Telenews (1948–1949)
Fleetwood Lawton & The News (1950–1951)
World News and KNXT News (1951–1960)
The Big News (1960–1976, 6:15 p.m. newscast until September 1, 1963; 6 p.m. newscast from September 2, 1963 to 1976)
24 Hours (1960–1976, 11 p.m. newscast)
2LA Newsroom (1976–1979)
Channel 2 News (1979–1988)
Channel 2 Action News (1988–1997)
CBS 2 News (1997-September 2009 and December 2009–present)
CBS 2 NewsCentral (September 2009-January 2010)
Entertainment titles
Panorama Pacific (1952-1964?), 7-9 a.m. Monday through Friday morning show
Station slogans
Here's 2LA (1976–1978)
We're Looking Out for You (1978–1982)
We're Got The Touch on Channel 2 (1985–1986; localized version of CBS ad campaign)
The Team to Watch (1981–1984; also used by Network Ten in Australia from 1982–1988)
LA Watches 2 (1987–1988)
You're Watching Channel 2, Home of Action News (1988–1991)
Get Ready for Channel 2 (1989–1990; localized version of CBS ad campaign)
Stand Up and Tell 'em You're From LA (1985–1994; based on Frank Gari's "Turn To" series)
Bringing Balance Back to Local News (1997–1999)
The Station of the People (2000–2001)
CBS 2 is Always On (2005–2009)
News That's Central to Your Life (September–December 2009)
Only CBS 2 (2010–present; localized version of CBS ad campaign)
On-air staff
The station's former anchors include
Connie Chung,
Ann Curry,
Jerry Dunphy,
Ken Jones,
Steve Kmetko,
Dan Miller,
Brent Musburger,
Pat O'Brien,
Keith Olbermann,
Maury Povich,
Bree Walker, and
Paula Zahn. Ken Jones anchored for KTTV and KCBS Weekends, Jerry Dunphy anchored for KNXT/KCBS and KCAL-TV.
Sports director Jim Hill may well be the station's most notable current personality. Hill, a former San Diego Charger was a sportscaster for CBS Sports during his first stint at KNXT/KCBS-TV, from 1976 to 1987. Hill then left to become sports director at KABC-TV, but returned to KCBS-TV in 1992 and has remained sports director at the station since. Other ex-athletes who are also sportscasters for KCBS and KCAL-TV are Eric Dickerson, James Worthy and Eric Karros.
Current on-air staff
Anchors
Serene Branson - Sundays at 5, 6 and 11 p.m.; also weekday reporter
Laura Diaz - weeknights at 6 p.m.
Juan Fernández - weekends at 5, 6 and 11 p.m.; also weekday reporter
Pat Harvey - weeknights at 5 and 11 p.m.
Paul Magers - weeknights at 5 and 11 p.m.
Sibila Vargas - weekday mornings (4:30-7 a.m.) and 11 a.m.
Kent Shocknek - weekday mornings (4:30-7 a.m.) and 11 a.m.
Suzie Suh - Saturdays 5, 6 and 11 p.m.; also weekday reporter
2View Weather
Jackie Johnson - weather anchor; weeknights at 5, 6 and 11 p.m.
Josh Rubinstein (AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologist and NWA Seals of Approval) - chief meteorologist; weekday mornings (4:30-7 a.m.) and 11 a.m.
Kaj Goldberg - weather anchor; weekends at 5, 6 and 11 p.m.
Rich Fields - meteorologist; fill-in
Evelyn Taft - weather anchor; weeknights at 8, 9 and 10 p.m.
Sports team
Gary Miller - Sports Anchor; weekends at 6 and 11 p.m.; also Sports Central co-host
Jim Hill - Sports Director; weeknights at 6 and 11 p.m., also Sports Central host
Timesaver Traffic
Whitney Drolen - morning traffic reporter
Reporters
Stephanie Abrams - general assignment reporter
Serene Branson - general assignment reporter
Dave Bryan - political reporter
Stacey Butler - general assignment reporter
Whitney Drolen - general assignment reporter
Suraya Fadel - general assignment reporter
Juan Fernández - general assignment reporter
Kara Finnstrom - general assignment reporter
Michele Gile - Orange County reporter
David Goldstein - investigative reporter
Kirk Hawkins - general assignment reporter
Amy Johnson - Ventura County reporter
Rachel Kim - freelance reporter
Edward Lawrence - general assignment reporter
Kristine Lazar - freelance reporter
Dave Lopez - Orange County reporter
Melissa Maynarich - general assignment reporter
Suzanne Marques - general assignment reporter
Greg Mills - Inland Empire reporter
Melissa McCarty - freelance reporter
Christina McLarty - entertainment reporter
Amy Murphy - general assignment reporter
Randy Paige - consumer/investigative reporter
Lisa Sigell - general assignment reporter/fill-in anchor (former morning anchor)
Suzie Suh - general assignment reporter
CBS2.com
Erik Oginski - managing editor
Mark Liu - webcaster/assignment editor/blogger
Jenn McBride - webcaster/web producer
Sky 2
Derek Bell - pilot/reporter
Mike Case
Aaron Fitzgerald - fill-in pilot/reporter
Justin Jager - photographer/reporter
Gary Lineberry - pilot/reporter
Larry Welk - pilot/reporter/helicopter owner
Notable former on-air staff
Linda Alvarez - anchor (1994-2007)
Catherine Anaya - morning anchor (1998-2002) - now with KPHO-TV in Phoenix
Terry Anzur - morning anchor (1990-1994)
Ross Becker - reporter (1980–1990, now at KUSI in San Diego)
Gretchen Carr - anchor (1998-2003)
Chris Coalinga - anchor/reporter
Joel Connable - reporter (now at WTVJ in Miami)
Linda Douglass - Political reporter (1983–85) (Later with
KNBC, CBS News and ABC News before becoming senior strategist and spokeswoman for the
Barack Obama presidential campaign
Jerry Dunphy - anchor The Big News Team and KCBS (1960–1975 and 1995–1997), KCAL-TV 9 Original Anchor of Prime 9 News (1990–1994) and returned to KCAL-TV from 1997–2002, deceased 2002)
Sophia Choi - (now with KSNV-DT in Las Vegas)
Connie Chung - anchor/reporter (1976–1983)
Ann Curry - reporter (1984–1990, now at NBC News)
Paul Dandridge - anchor/reporter (1996-2007)
Henry Di Carlo - weather anchor (2002-2010; now with KTLA)
Steve Edwards - talk show host/reporter (1978–1984; now with KTTV's "Good Day LA")
Jonathan Elias - anchor (1998-2002; now at WBZ in Boston)
John Elliot - weather anchor (2004-2006; now at WCBS in New York)
Roy Firestone - sports anchor/reporter (1978–1985)
David Garcia - anchor/reporter (1983–1986; deceased)
Harold Greene - (2001–2008)
Drew Griffin - reporter (1994–2004, now at CNN)
Joel Grover - reporter (1996–2002, now at KNBC)
Steve Hartman - feature reporter (1994–1998, now at CBS News)
Chick Hearn - Lakers games (died in 2002)
Lester Holt - reporter (1982–1983, now at NBC News)
David Horowitz - consumer reporter (1993–1998)
Huell Howser - features reporter (1981–1987)
Rex Hudler - Angels games (1999–2005)
Bob Jimenez - anchor/reporter
Ken Jones - anchor/reporter (1976–1982; deceased 1993)
Lisa Joyner - entertainment reporter (2002–2006; now at TV Guide Network)
Bill Keene - weather anchor/traffic reporter (1954–1974 and 1980's-1993; was part of "The Big News" team and also worked at KNX-AM, died in 2000)
Steve Kmetko - entertainment reporter (1987–1998; now reporter for KTTV/KCOP-TV)
Jim Lampley - news and sports anchor (1987–1992)
Kelly Lange - "Women 2 Women" host (2000–2001)
Harvey Levin - legal analyst (1987–1997; now with TMZ.com, TMZ on TV and The People's Court)
Dorothy Lucey - anchor/reporter (1987–1992; now at KTTV)
Mario Machado - consumer affairs reporter (1969–1977)
Rory Markas - sports anchor (1990–1996)- deceased
Jess Marlow - anchor (1980–1986)
Ann Martin - (1994–2008)
Dan Miller - anchor/reporter (1986–1987; was at WSMV-TV in Nashville from 1969–1986 and from 1995 until his death on April 8, 2009 at age 67)
Byron Miranda - weather anchor (2002-2005, now with KGTV in San Diego)
Jim Moret - entertainment reporter/anchor (1984–1987; now with Inside Edition)
José Mota - Angels games
Johnny Mountain - weather anchor (2005-2010), retired
Terry Murphy - anchor/reporter (1980–1984 and 1987–1989)
Brent Musburger - anchor/reporter (1971–1977, now with ABC Sports/ESPN)
Pat O'Brien - reporter (1978–1981)
Keith Olbermann - sports anchor (1988–1991), now at MSNBC
Warren Olney - anchor/reporter (1969–1975 and 1986–1989)
Ross Palombo - reporter (2006), now at CBS News
Kyra Phillips - reporter/anchor (1995–2000, now at CNN Headline News)
Steve Physioc - Angels games (1996–2005)
Maury Povich - anchor (1977–1978)
Steve Rambo - weather anchor (1988-2000)
Jerry Reuss - Angels games (1996–1998; now a color analyst for the Dodgers Radio Network)
Suzanne Rico - morning anchor (2002-2010)
Clete Roberts - anchor/reporter (1966–1977; died in 1984)
Hosea Sanders - reporter (1986-1994; now with WLS-TV in Chicago)
Willa Sandmeyer - reporter (1991–1993)
Bill Seward - sports anchor (1992–1997, now at KNBC as fill-in)
John Schubeck - anchor (1983–1988) (died in 1997)
David Sheehan - entertainment reporter (1971–1981 and 1994–2003)
Ralph Story - anchor/features reporter/host of Ralph Story's Los Angeles (1959–1970 and 1974–1986 ("The Big News" team); died in 2006)
Bill Stout - anchor/reporter/"Perspective" commentator (1954–1960 and 1972–1989 ("The Big News" team); died in 1989)
Gil Stratton - sports anchor (1954–1976, "The Big News" team; died in 2008)
Paul Sunderland - Lakers games (2002–2005)
Ruth Ashton Taylor - anchor/reporter (1951–1958 and 1962–1989)
Tritia Toyota - anchor (1985–2000)
Michael Tuck - anchor (1990-1999)
Bree Walker - anchor/reporter (1988–1994; now with KTLK-AM)
Colleen Williams - anchor/reporter (1983–1986, now with KNBC)
Tony Williams - weather anchor (1995-2002)
Alex Witt - (1990–1992, now with MSNBC)
Pamela Wright - morning weather anchor (1998-2002)
Paula Zahn - anchor/reporter (1986–1987)
News personnel
Station general managers
Merle Jones - January 1-July 16, 1951
Wilbur Edwards - September 3, 1951-October 22, 1952
James Aubrey - October 22, 1952-July 15, 1956
Clark B. George - June 25, 1956-December 31, 1959
Robert D. Wood - January 1, 1960-December 3, 1966
Ray L. Beindorf - December 5, 1966-July 9, 1971
William C. O'Donnell - July 12, 1971-January 3, 1973
W. Russell Barry - January 15, 1973-March 5, 1976
Christopher P. Desmond - March 8, 1976-November 25, 1977
Van Gordon Sauter - November 28, 1977-July 11, 1980
Edward M. Joyce - July 21, 1980-February 9, 1981
James S. Bennett - February 9, 1981-March 15, 1985
Paul Franklin Gardner - March 18, 1985-October 6, 1986
Thomas Van Amburg - October 13, 1986-April 22, 1987
Robert Hyland, III - April 22, 1987-May 24, 1991
Steven Gigliotti - May 24, 1991-June 18, 1993
Bill Applegate - June 18, 1993-December 4, 1995
John McKay - December 4, 1995–June 1996 (acting GM, around time CBS was acquired by Westinghouse)
John Culliton - June 1996-September 23, 1998
Larry Perret and Jerry Eaton - September 23, 1998-July 6, 1999 (acting GM's, around time Westinghouse was acquired by Viacom)
John Severino - July 6, 1999-August 12, 2001 (served as president of CBS Television Stations)
David Woodcock - August 13, 2001-May 15, 2002
Don Corsini - May 15, 2002-December 10, 20082
Patrick McClenahan - December 10, 2008-December 10, 2009 2
Steve Mauldin - December 10, 2009 – present 2
2 Denotes general manager for both KCBS and KCAL
Rebroadcasters
KCBS is rebroadcast on the following translator stations:
* K07IH Baker
K02HY Ridgecrest
K33ID-D Ridgecrest
K15CA Lucerne Valley
K49DC Twentynine Palms
K16AA Morongo Valley
K17GJ Joshua Tree
K21AC Victorville
K10IX Newberry Springs
See also
KNX (AM)
KCBS-FM
KCBS-TV/FM Tower
References
External links
KCBS-TV website at CBS Los Angeles
Photos of KCBS's news set
KCBS-TV logos and screenshots from 1950s to the present day
Category:CBS network affiliates
Category:CBS Corporation television stations
Category:Channel 43 digital TV stations in the United States
Category:Channel 2 virtual TV stations in the United States
Category:Television channels and stations established in 1948