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Esteemed for her professionalism by viewers, listeners, and her colleagues, the versatile Pat Miles became one of the Minneapolis region's premier television news anchors and radio talk hosts. After earning her master's degree in journalism at the University of Missouri, Miles worked in both radio and television news in Colorado before joining WCCO TV in 1978 as a reporter and weekend anchor. Her intelligent reporting and authoritative delivery soon brought her to the anchor desk of WCCO's 5:00 PM and 10:00 PM newscasts. She covered every major news event for WCCO TV but was most proud of A Time to Weep, her documentary on the famine in Africa. In 1990, she moved to KARE TV, where she anchored the 5:00 PM and 6:00 PM newscasts and developed A Pat Miles Special, using her writing and interviewing prowess to tell the stories of notable Minnesotans. When she left TV news in 2001, she fulfilled a lifelong dream by becoming the host of The Pat Miles Show weekday mornings on WCCO Radio. A role model for women in the industry, she has received numerous honors for her work in broadcasting and in the community, including the National Television Academy's Silver Circle Award.
fWotD Episode 2770: KARE (TV) Welcome to Featured Wiki of the Day, your daily dose of knowledge from Wikipedia’s finest articles.The featured article for Wednesday, 4 December 2024 is KARE (TV).KARE (channel 11) is a television station licensed to Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States, serving as the Twin Cities area's NBC affiliate. Owned by Tegna Inc., the station maintains studios on Olson Memorial Highway (MN 55) in Golden Valley and a transmitter at the Telefarm site in Shoreview, Minnesota.Channel 11 began broadcasting on September 1, 1953. It was originally shared by WMIN-TV in St. Paul and WTCN-TV in Minneapolis; the two stations shared an affiliation with ABC and alternated presenting local programs. In 1955, Consolidated Television and Radio bought both stations and merged them as WTCN-TV from the Minneapolis studios in the Calhoun Beach Hotel. The station presented several regionally and nationally notable children's shows in its early years as well as local cooking, news, and sports programs. Time Inc. purchased the station in 1957. Under its ownership, ABC switched its affiliation to KMSP-TV (channel 9), leaving channel 11 to become an independent station that broadcast games of the Minnesota Twins baseball team, movies, and syndicated programs. This continued under two successive owners: Chris-Craft Industries and Metromedia. By the late 1970s, WTCN was one of the nation's most financially successful independent stations.In 1978, ABC announced it would move its Twin Cities affiliation to KSTP-TV. This forced NBC to select between KMSP and WTCN for its new local outlet. It chose WTCN on the strength of its facilities, ownership, and promise to build a first-class news operation, for which KMSP had never been known as an ABC station. On March 5, 1979, channel 11 became an NBC affiliate and began broadcasting NewsCenter 11 newscasts. In spite of a major promotional campaign, the news product was a high-profile commercial failure, beaten by entertainment shows on KMSP in the ratings, as viewers rejected the new news team and continued to prefer market leaders WCCO-TV and KSTP-TV.Metromedia agreed to buy Chicago independent station WFLD in 1982 and sold WTCN to Gannett to raise capital and make room in its station group. Gannett engineered a comprehensive overhaul of the station's news programming. Between 1983 and 1987, the station moved from last to first in late news ratings, battling WCCO for two decades. It changed call signs twice in that period, to WUSA in 1985 and KARE in 1986, when Gannett moved the WUSA call sign to its Washington, D. C., station. More recently, as of 2022, the station has been a second-place finisher in local news.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 01:16 UTC on Wednesday, 4 December 2024.For the full current version of the article, see KARE (TV) on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Mastodon at @wikioftheday@masto.ai.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm neural Olivia.
We are excited to share today's wonderful guest, Pat Miles, who was one of the Minneapolis region's premier television news anchors and radio talk hosts. Pat's intelligent reporting and authoritative delivery brought her to the anchor desk of WCCO's 5:00 PM and 10:00 PM newscasts. She covered every major news event for WCCO TV but was most proud of A Time to Weep, her documentary on the famine in Africa. In 1990, she moved to KARE TV, where she anchored the 5:00 PM and 6:00 PM newscasts and developed A Pat Miles Special, using her writing and interviewing prowess to tell the stories of notable Minnesotans. When she left TV news in 2001, she fulfilled a lifelong dream by becoming the host of The Pat Miles Show weekday mornings on WCCO Radio. A role model for women in the industry, she has received numerous honors for her work in broadcasting and in the community, including the National Television Academy's Silver Circle Award. She is the author of Before All is Said and Done. In today's episode we discuss: The shock of loss and what to expect Planning for a sudden death or a long illness Facing potential cognitive decline Finding support and healthy grieving during a complex time Connecting with ethical and morally sound attorneys/lawyers Caring for yourself after the loss This was such a thought provoking conversation and although we may initially shirk away from the notion of our life's transience, it is powerfully beneficial to ready ourselves and our loved ones for every stage of life — and death. Before All Is Said and Done weaves the definitive path on how to be set for both. Helpful links and resources: Learn about Pat: FB: @beforeallissaidanddone IG: @beforeallissaidanddone www.beforeallissaidanddone.com Buy her book: www.beforeallissaidanddone.com ----------------------------------------------------------- Thanks to our amazing Sponsor, Good Health Saunas. Good Health Saunas is proud to provide top-of-the-line infrared saunas that deliver the most impactful results for overall health and wellness. For more information and for your special discount please visit, Www.goodhealthsaunas.com and mention The Art of Living Well Podcast. ----------------------------------------------------------- Thanks to our amazing sponsor, Organifi. Organifi is a line of organic superfood blends that offer plant-based nutrition with high quality ingredients and less than 3g of sugar. As a listener of The Art of Living Well Podcast you get 20% off ALL Organifi products. To take advantage of your Organifi discount, use the link below and the code LIVINGWELL at checkout for 20% off your order. Order Organifi products now! ----------------------------------------------------------- Sign-up for our upcoming 7-Day Summer Functional Medicine Liver Detox here . We kick-off on June 11th but you can adjust your start date depending on your schedule. ----------------------------------------------------------- Ask us a question/make a recommentation We'd love to hear from you! Click here to share your feedback and suggestions. ----------------------------------------------------------- Sign-up for your 15 minute Health Transformation Audit - Click here. ----------------------------------------------------------- Need more protein in your day? Check out these amazing, high quality products from Kion, especially their essential amino acids, which we both use daily. Use code 'ARTOFLIVING' for a discount off your purchase. ----------------------------------------------------------- Can't make our Summer group 7 Day Functional Liver Detox? We now have a program where you can do it on your own schedule but still receive all the wonderful support and recipes of the full program. Register here! ----------------------------------------------------------- Let us help you get to the root cause of your unwanted symptoms. Schedule a 15 minute consultation to discuss at-home functional medicine lab testing here. ----------------------------------------------------------- How can you support our podcast? Apple users, please subscribe and review our show on Apple Podcasts,we make sure to read them all. Android users, please be sure to subscribe to our show on Google Podcasts so that you don't miss any of the action. Tell a friend about The Art of Living Well Podcast® and our community programs. Share your favorite episode on social media and don't forget to tag us @theartofliving_well. Shop our Favorite Products: https://www.theartoflivingwell.us/products Connect with us on social media: IG: @theartofliving_well FB: theartoflivingwell Get on our list so you don't miss out on announcements, programs and events. You can download our guests' favorite reads here. Learn more about your hosts: Marnie Dachis Marmet Stephanie May Potter
As we take this month to celebrate Asian-Ameicans and Pacific Islanders, there are still hurdles that need to be cleared for this population of people to receive the respect they deserve. Very Asian Foundation co-founder and former KARE-TV morning news anchor Gia Vang explains the work that the group is doing to educate about the contributions that people AAPI descent have made and are making to our society.
Susie Jones is back to fill in for Jearlyn on a snowy Sunday night. Ramsey County Attorney John Choi discusses his role in trying to get more funding for DNA testing at the state's crime lab. KARE-TV investigative reporter Lou Raguse takes us through the long-standing cold case that led to his new book.
More than 50 years ago, the disappearance of two South Dakota teenagers led to a mystery that took more than 30 years to solve. Now, KARE-TV investigative reporter Lou Raguse has encapsulated the process to solve this case in his new book, "Vanished in Vermillion". He joins the show to talk about some of the details.
KARE-TV reporter Danny Spewak can now add the title of author to his resume. He discusses his new effort, "From the Gridiron to the Battlefield: Minnesota's March to a College Football Title and into World War II." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Rogers native and former KARE TV reporter, Joe Fryer anchors Morning News Now on NBC News Now online and is a correspondent for The Today Show, NBC Nightly News, and MSNBC. A longtime friend of Roshini's since both worked as reporters at WTVF in Nashville, Joe previews 9-11 Anniversary coverage and Broadway reopening. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
KARE-TV anchor Rena Sarigianopoulos shares what it’s like inside the newsroom during this volatile election year. Plus, her own battle with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis led her to advocate for kids with the disease today. She wants you to check out a 30-second gala to help the cause. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Best Documentary. Best National Feature Documentary. Best Minnesota Made Documentary. Audience Award. Audience Choice. Best Production Design. Best Director. Film festivals nationwide last year piled accolades on "Love Them First: Lessons From Lucy Laney Elementary," a feature-length documentary produced primarily by two journalists from one Twin Cities TV station. Lindsey Seavert and Ben Garvin had each worked at KARE-TV in Minneapolis/St. Paul for several years when they embarked on a series of stories about a local elementary school. That series quickly became the foundation for a documentary, and that documentary has since left an extraordinary mark on the education world. Its main character, Lucy Laney principal Mauri Melander Friestleben, has even appeared on the Today Show. You can watch "Love Them First" right here. Seavert and Garvin are my guests on Episode 75 of the Telling the Story podcast. "With a flicker and another flicker, you can set the world on fire and create systemic change," Seavert told me. "That's really my hope: that we've sparked a national conversation about how we measure children." They've sparked it. And last month, Seavert and Garvin were honored at Columbia University with a DuPont Award - or, as one colleague of mine called it, "the Pulitzer of video." → The post PODCAST EPISODE #75: Lindsey Seavert & Ben Garvin, “Love Them First” appeared first on Telling The Story.
It's nearing the end of 2018. Roshini invites in her annual Media roundtable to discuss the stories of the year. In this edition, we hear from Star Tribune business reporter/columnist Neal St. Anthony, KARE-TV anchor/reporter Rena Sarigianopoulos, and KSTP-TV sports director Joe Schmit.
"See the invisible." Adrienne Broaddus used this phrase early during our interview, and I instantly got it and loved it. She was discussing her approach to covering Hurricane Florence, which she did for a sister station in the Carolinas instead of her home station, KARE-TV in the Twin Cities. The award-winning reporter spoke of the people she met at a homeless shelter and said, "The people who were there, I wanted their voices to be heard. That's one of the foundations of great journalism." She used her time in North Carolina to find individual stories and unique details that weren't getting covered amidst the macro focus of the storm. It defines her approach in general, and it indicates a reporter who is confident in her voice and how to utilize it. Broaddus is my guest on Episode 67 of the Telling the Story podcast. I reached out to her weeks before Florence, intending to discuss different topics. Broaddus had just captured a pair of Salute to Excellence awards from the NABJ. She had also just spoken at the Sound of Life Storytelling Workshop, where we crossed paths on the presenting circuit. We weaved around each other's busy schedules for weeks - and then postponed the interview further once Florence arrived - before finally getting to chat. It was more than worth it. I have known Broaddus for several years and have always been a fan of her clarity of purpose. She showed it in our interview. She spoke about how her faith guides her reporting and why she proudly carries the mantle of "hope dealer." I think it's a worthy listen for any storytelling trying to find his or her voice. → The post PODCAST EPISODE #67: Adrienne Broaddus, reporter, KARE-TV appeared first on Telling The Story.
Mind Matters examines recent mass shootings perpetrated by gifted or highly intelligent individuals. Noted author and expert Dr. James Delisle, Ph.D., helps us dig deeper into the backgrounds and motivations of the perpetrators of Newtown, Columbine, and other notable mass shootings, and we discuss the inspiring activism of the kids of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, FL. Dr. James Delisle, Ph.D., was a professor of education at Kent State University (Ohio) for 25 years and was selected by faculty and students there as a "Distinguished Professor", the University's most prestigious teaching award. Host Emily Kircher-Morris, LPC, has dual Masters degrees in Counseling and Education, and specializes in the area of giftedness throughout the lifespan. She founded the non-profit organization The Gifted Support Network, is the owner of Unlimited Potential Counseling & Education Center, and is the mother of three gifted children. Special thanks: CNN, NBC News, ABC News, The New York Times, CBS News, KARE TV
Last June I flew to Cleveland to cover the championship parade for the NBA's Cavaliers. I stood in a swarm of a million Clevelanders and witnessed one of the most stellar scenes in sports. I also witnessed one of the most stellar sights in photojournalism: the editing of Chad Nelson. The photographer from KARE-TV in the Twin Cities was, like myself, called to help our sister station in Cleveland. We worked on separate stories, and after I completed mine, I stopped by Chad's desk to say hello. Within minutes, I was receiving a master class in color and composition. I had always admired the care with which Nelson treats his video, but in Cleveland I gained a deeper appreciation. Nelson works at a station that prides itself on its storytelling culture, and he carries that culture in every story he shoots. Last month, it paid off. Nelson received three pieces of extraordinary news: He was named the NPPA's Central Top Region's Photographer of the Year. He was named a finalist for the NPPA's Ernie Crisp Photographer of the Year award. He was also named a finalist for the NPPA's Editor of the Year award. Now he is my guest on Episode #53 of the Telling the Story podcast. → The post PODCAST EPISODE #53: Chad Nelson, photojournalist, KARE-TV appeared first on Telling The Story.
This is a special podcast. Normally I have one special guest from the news industry, offering insights about his or her career and advice for young journalists and storytellers. This time, I have four. Episode #48 is a compilation of some of my favorite clips from the past year's episodes of the Telling the Story podcast. I chose snippets that specifically focused on advice for those just getting into the business -- all from some of the best in the business at their respective positions. You'll hear from Jed Gamber and Catherine Steward, two photojournalists who in 2016 were named the NPPA's Regional Photographers of the Year for the East and Central regions, respectively. (Listen to the full episode.) You'll hear from Boyd Huppert, the 100-Emmy-winning, world-renowned feature reporter for KARE-TV in the Twin Cities. (Listen to the full episode.) And you'll hear from Joe Little, who provided great insight for both the podcast and my book, The Solo Video Journalist, which is a how-to guide for young MMJs like Little and myself. (Listen to the full episode.) → The post PODCAST EPISODE #48: Best of 2016 edition appeared first on Telling The Story.
I'll always remember the first time I was asked to speak at a major storytelling conference. I flew to Minneapolis/St. Paul in 2014 to talk about solo video journalism at the Ignite Your Passion workshop. It immediately became one of the most joyous and fulfilling experiences of my career, and it sparked an evolution that led to me co-directing a similar workshop two years later. This past fall, Heidi Wigdahl received that same opportunity. The KARE-TV MMJ discussed the do-it-all process with Twin Cities colleague Adrienne Broaddus and WITI-TV's Jonathon Gregg. She cherished the opportunity to reach a regional audience of solo video journalists, many of whom are -- like her -- in their 20s. Wigdahl has a pretty impressive story to tell. She has risen up the ranks from Rochester, Minn. to Knoxville, Tenn. to her current location, Minneapolis/St. Paul. She now works at a station that is widely respected for the storytelling acumen of its reporters, photojournalists, and MMJs. Wigdahl is my guest on Episode #47 of the Telling the Story podcast. We discuss a wide range of topics but focus on one of the biggest logistical struggles for many MMJs: how to dress for the twin challenges of appearing on-air and shooting quality video. I interviewed Wigdahl about that topic for my new book, The Solo Video Journalist, available now through Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and the publisher's web site. → The post PODCAST EPISODE #47: Heidi Wigdahl, solo video journalist, KARE-TV appeared first on Telling The Story.
At the end of this podcast, I joke, "I can retire the podcast now!" Don't worry ... I don't plan to retire it. But I probably could, now that I have interviewed one of the most revered and decorated storytellers ever. My guest for Episode #40 is Boyd Huppert. The feature reporter for KARE-TV in the Twin Cities is widely known nationwide for his absorbing and touching stories, which regularly find their way to NBC Nightly News and the Today Show. For many in local TV, Huppert is an idol -- the man whose career and talents we all dream of having. I can't think of a single storyteller who does it better. In recent years, Huppert has also become well known as a teacher. He works with stations worldwide, speaks at conferences, and last year even gave a TED Talk. Huppert will also, I'm proud to announce, be the keynote speaker at this year's NPPA Southeast Storytelling Workshop, being held in Atlanta June 10th and 11th. I am organizing and co-hosting the conference with photojournalist (and one-time podcast guest) John Kirtley of WLOS-TV in Asheville. We welcome anyone looking to improve as a storyteller and receive inspiration from some of the best in the country, particularly our keynote speaker. Click here to learn more and register for the conference, Feel free to e-mail me with questions at the address below. In the meantime, enjoy this podcast with a legendary storyteller who speaks about his background, offers advice for getting the most out of workshops, and gives his insights and tips for young journalists. → The post PODCAST EPISODE #40: Boyd Huppert, reporter, KARE-TV appeared first on Telling The Story.
When I first started this blog, many newspaper photographers were staring into a future of cutbacks, layoffs, and competition with everyone's iPhones. Ben Garvin surveyed the landscape from his perch at the St. Paul Pioneer Press. In 2007 he was named Minnesota Photographer of the Year. In 2011 he was named Journalist of the Year by the Minnesota chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. Despite the accolades, Garvin knew he was not immune from the large-scale changes occurring across the industry. But this past year, he found refuge by switching lanes. Garvin still works as a still photographer, but now he does it for a TV station: KARE-TV in Minneapolis/St. Paul. And he does it with an innovator's spirit. Last week I shouted out Garvin in my 3 Great Stories segment for a sweetly touching piece about a grandfather and grandson spending the day together at Vikings training camp. Technically Garvin produced a video, but it consisted strictly of still photos with audio weaved in from Garvin's interviews. Garvin is my guest on Episode #34 of the Telling The Story podcast. Speaking to me from a swing on his porch (!), Garvin discusses a variety of subjects: the ability to be a hybrid in today's media world; the importance of photographs in social media; and the versatility required to succeed on a higher level. → The post PODCAST EPISODE #34: Ben Garvin, photographer, KARE-TV appeared first on Telling The Story.
Tom Linder has served as News director at KARE for 15 years. Today we talk with him about his career and his experience in the news industry. 4-18-2015
“What is it like to cover the Olympics?” I have heard this question from virtually everyone I know since I came back from Russia three weeks ago. But before I answer, I generally need to ask a question of my own: “Which part?” Reporting from the Olympics combines an array of unique experiences for any → The post PODCAST EPISODE #14: Dave Schwartz, sports anchor, KARE-TV appeared first on Telling The Story.
Steve Carroll is a well loved and remembered KARE-TV anchor, his time spent representing the station in the 80's helped establish KARE as an institution in Minnesota news. Tune in as Tom talks with Steve about his career and his current interests. September 7, 2013