2013 Nominee List
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Demarco Morgan C/O Napoli Management Group 8844 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 100 Beverly Hills, California 90211 310.385.8222
DeMarco Morgan c/o Napoli Management Group 8844 West Olympic Boulevard, Suite 100 Beverly Hills, California 90211 310.385.8222 CAREER SUMMARY A dynamic anchor and reporter with thirteen years broadcast experience. Extensive experience with live field reporting. Excellent long form reporting skills. EDUCATION Jackson State University Columbia University Jackson, Mississippi New York, New York Bachelor of Science in Liberal Arts Master of Science in Journalism PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE Anchor/Reporter 2012 to Present WXIA-TV, Atlanta, Georgia Co-anchor of the 5pm, 6pm, and 11pm Monday through Friday broadcast. Anchor/Reporter/Host 2009 to 2011 WNBC-TV, New York, New York Weekend anchor. Also served as Cut-in anchor for MSNBC broadcasts. Anchor /Reporter 2007 to 2009 WTVJ-TV, Miami, Florida Co-anchored the 7pm and 11pm Monday through Friday broadcasts. Also served as General Assignment reporter, contributing special projects and sweeps pieces. Anchor/Reporter 2004 to 2007 WISN-TV, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Anchored the #1 rated weekend morning show in the market. Served as live reporter and fill-in anchor for weekday broadcasts. Reporter/Fill-In Anchor 2002 to 2004 WJTV-TV, Jackson, Mississippi Covered the crime and courts beat while also serving as fill-in anchor for weekend newscasts. PROFESSIONAL AFFIL I ATIONS Atlanta Association of Black Journalists A W A R D S Atlanta Business League’s “Men of Influence” Award, 2012 Thurgood Marshall Prestige Award Recipient for Community Service, 2009 South Florida Magazine’s Top 40 Most Influential Black Professionals, 2008 Ebony Magazine’s Top 30 Future Young Leaders of America, 2006 National Association of Black Journalists’ National Community Service Award, 2006 Represented by Sue McInerney 3 1 0 . -
Program Agenda (Updated 10 October 2011) National Weather
Program Agenda (Updated 10 October 2011) changes or additions from previous update in red National Weather Association 36th Annual Meeting Wynfrey Hotel, Birmingham, Alabama October 15-20, 2011 Theme: The End Game - From Research and Technology to Best Forecast and Response See the main meeting page http://www.nwas.org/meetings/nwa2011/ for information on the meeting hotel, exhibits, sponsorships and registration Authors, please inform the Program Committee at [email protected] for any corrections or changes required in the listing of your presentations or abstracts as soon as possible. This agenda will be updated periodically as changes occur. Instructions for uploading your presentation to the FTP site can be found here. All presenters please read the presentation tips which explain the AV systems, poster board sizes and provide suggestions for good presentations. All activities will be held in the Wynfrey Hotel unless otherwise noted. Please check in at the NWA Information and Registration desk at the Wynfrey Hotel earliest to receive nametags, program and the most current information. Saturday, October 15 10:00am NWA Aviation Workshop at the Southern Museum of Flight. Contact Terry Lankford [email protected] for more information. The workshop is from 10 am until 1 pm. 10:00am NWA WeatherFest at the McWane Science Center. Contact James-Paul Dice [email protected] for more information. The event is from 10 am until 2 pm. 11:00am NWA Ninth Annual Scholarship Golf Outing, Bent Brook Golf Course, sponsored by Baron Services. Contact Betsy Kling [email protected] for more information or to sign-up. -
Digital Media
2017 NABJ SALUTE TO EXCELLENCE AWARDS FINALISTS (Finalists listed alphabetically by entry title) DIGITAL MEDIA DIGITAL MEDIA - Commentary/Weblog Lee Hawkins Commentary/Analysis Lee Hawkins Wall Street Journal Reflecting on Mortality: From Prince to Alton Sterling to My Black Sons Chandra Thomas Whitfield NBCBLK The Undefeated Soraya McDonald Soraya Nadia McDonald The Undefeated DIGITAL MEDIA - Interactive: Feature Historically Black The Washington Post DIGITAL MEDIA - Interactive: News Amazon Doesn’t Consider the Race of Its Customers. Should It? David Ingold, Spencer Soper Bloomberg Looking for Lead (in all the wrong places) Dan Telvock Investigative Post Settling for Misconduct Jonah Newman, Matt Kiefer, Lauren Harris, Michelle Kanaar The Chicago Reporter 2017 NABJ Salute to Excellence Awards Finalists | [email protected] | 1 DIGITAL MEDIA > Online Project: Feature The City: Prison's Grip on the Black Family Trymaine Lee NBC News Digital Under Our Skin Staff of The Seattle Times The Seattle Times Unsung Heroes of the Civil Rights Movement Eric Barrow New York Daily News DIGITAL MEDIA > Online Project: News Chicago's disappearing front porch Rosa Flores, Mallory Simon, Madeleine Stix CNN Machine Bias Julia Angwin, Jeff Larson, Surya Mattu, Lauren Kirchner, Terry Parris Jr. ProPublica Nuisance Abatement Sarah Ryley, Barry Paddock, Pia Dangelmayer, Christine Lee ProPublica and The New York Daily News DIGITAL MEDIA > Single Story: Feature Congo's Secret Web of Power Michael Kavanagh, Thomas Wilson, Franz Wild Bloomberg Migration and Separation: -
KCBS-KCAL-EEO-Public-File-Report
EEO PUBLIC FILE REPORT This Report covers full-time vacancy recruitment data for the period August 1, 2019 to July 31, 2020. Employment Unit: CBS Broadcasting, Inc. / Los Angeles Television Station KCAL LLC Unit Members (Stations and Communities of License): KCBS / KCAL Los Angeles, California EEO Contact Information for Unit Member: Mailing Address: Telephone Number: 818 655-2024 KCBS / KCAL 4200 Radford Avenue Contact Person: Studio City, CA 91604 Maggie Serrano E-mail Address: [email protected] List all Full-Time Job Vacancies (identified by Job Title) Filled by Each Station in the Employment Unit. (See Master Recruitment Source List for recruitment source data) Job Title Recruitment Source Notified of Job Vacancy 1. Account Executive 1 – 67; 72 2. Account Executive 1 – 67; 72 3. Director Research 1 – 67; 4. Account Executive 1 – 67; 72 1 II. MASTER RECRUITMENT SOURCE LIST UTILIZED DURING REPORTING PERIOD Did Recruitment Name of Organization Notified of Contact request Job Vacancy: Person Address: Submit Via: Notification Y or N 1 JVS West Hollywood Worksource Center Website Lancaster CA 93535 [email protected] No 2 El Proyecto Worksource Center- Sun No Valley Website Sun Valley CA 91352 [email protected] 3 No US VETS Initiative Website Long Beach CA 90810 [email protected] 4 No City of LA Dept of Disability Website Los Angeles CA 90012 [email protected] 5 No Career Transition Centers Website Long Beach CA 90807 [email protected] 6 No Irvine Career Center Website Irvine CA 92618 [email protected] 7 No Career -
Annual Conference. on Behalf of the Mentees and Treasurer Dr
C ON FE RE NC E G UIDE June 13 - 17, 2018 The Diplomat Beach Resort Hollywood, Fl #the100blueprint 32ND ANNUAL CONFERENCE, June 13-17, 2018 #the100blueprint 100 100 BLACK MEN BLACK MEN OF AMERICA, INC. OF AMERICA, INC. ® June 13, 2018 32ND ANNUAL CONFERENCE What They See Is What They’ll Be EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE & BOARD OF DIRECTORS Thomas W. Dortch, Jr. PRESENTING SPONSORS Chairman of the Board Greetings Attendees and Participants! Albert E. Dotson, Jr., Esq. Vice Chairman Milton H. Jones, Jr. Welcome to the 32nd Annual Conference. On behalf of the mentees and Treasurer Dr. Mark Alexander families served by all 100 chapters, the Board of Directors, partners, conference Secretary sponsors and the many members who faithfully mentor our youth I thank you Curley M. Dossman, Jr. Immediate Past Chairman for your continued support. We are honored to be back in Hollywood, Florida Dr. William H. Hayling and very happy you are here to share in the experience. South Florida is a part President Emeritus James “Mac” Hunter, Esq. of the 100’s Annual Conference history. Each previous visit was extremely General Counsel positive and we know this week will exceed expectations. Charles Griggs Southern District Representative Curtiss Jacobs Northeastern District Representative As we planned the 2018 conference, the current climate in America, and William Luster around the world, could not be ignored. The actions and inactions by those in Midwest District Representative leadership have negatively impacted the very youth we pledged to serve. Our PARTNER SPONSORS Marcellous “Mark” Reed Western District Representative nation is at a divergent crossroad and history will contain the record of those Stanley L. -
Download Convention Progra Book
TABLE OF CONTENTS Welcome ................................................................. 3 General Information ............................................... 11 Elections Information ............................................. 13 Schedule-at-a-Glance ........................................... 18 Tampa Convention Center & Marriott Waterside ... 20 Convention Sponsors ............................................ 22 Convention Highlights/Healthy NABJ ................... 24 Program ................................................................. 26 NABJ Family Day ................................................... 67 Percy Qoboza Foreign Journalist Award ............... 74 Best Practices Award ............................................ 75 Spotlight on Tampa ............................................... 76 2009 Scholarships ................................................. 78 Student Media ....................................................... 79 Exhibit Hall Map .................................................... 80 Exhibitors / Recruiters / Vendors ........................... 81 Acknowledgments ................................................. 85 Membership Invitation ........................................... 86 NABJ Premium & Lifetime Members ..................... 88 NABJ Founders ..................................................... 89 2 National Association of Black Journalists :: www.nabj.org :: Refresh. Reinvent. Reclaim. Dear NABJ Members: We welcome you to an exciting convention program, and one that will truly help -
Our Inviting Cathedral Consideration at Diocesan Convention
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE DIOCESE OF SOUTHEAST FLORIDA www.episcopalsouthflorida.org VolumeVolume 39 40 No. No. 5 5 October October 2008 2008 Six resolutions under Our Inviting Cathedral consideration at Diocesan Convention Diocesan clergy and lay delegates will gather November 7-8 at St. Thomas, Coral Gables for the Thirty- ninth Diocesan Convention, hosted by the South Dade Deanery. The convention will consider six res- olutions, which had been submitted by the September 13 deadline. (Additional resolutions may be presented from the floor.) Delegates will be asked to approve clergy compensation guidelines for 2009 and a change in the language of dioce- san Canon XX, Section 6, that would re- quire any diocesan or parish organ- ization to have the approval of the bishop, the Executive Board and the Standing Committee for any amendment to its charter. See CONVENTION,Page5 Save these dates for 2009 January 25— Celebration of the 25th anniversary of Bishop Leo Frade’s consecration, with Pre- siding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori as preacher. Photo by Rob Bannister March 13-14— Bishops’ Spring Conference, led by speaker and A RINGING WELCOME author Diana Butler Bass. Members of the North American Guild of Change Ringers begin a “peal”—a complex sequence of bell-ringing—in the tower at Trinity Cathedral, Miami, during the group’s October meeting. The sound of the bells attracted several potential Mark your calendars now and watch for new members to the Miami Guild of Change Ringers, said Trinity’s Belltower Captain, Rob Bannister. more information on these events in the coming months. Trinity reaches out with new energy By Mary W. -
NEWSLETTER National Weather Association No
NEWSLETTER National Weather Association No. 11 – 8 August 2011 NWA 36th Annual Meeting: Oct. 15-20, Birmingham, Ala. “The End Game - From Research and Technology to Best Forecast and Response” Saturday, October 15 10 am - 1 p.m. NWA Aviation Workshop at the Southern 1 - 7 pm Registration and Information Desk Open Museum of Flight. Contact Terry Lankford [email protected] for more information. 1 pm Exhibit Room Setup: Riverchase Ballroom 10 am - 2 p.m. NWA WeatherFest at the McWane Science Center. Contact James-Paul Dice [email protected] for more information. 11 am NWA 9th Annual Scholarship Golf Outing at Bent Brook Golf Course - sponsored by Baron Services. For more information or to sign up, Proud sponsor of the contact Betsy Kling ([email protected]). Tee times at 11:30 am and 12:30 pm. 9th Annual Scholarship Golf Outing Sunday, October 16: Broadcasters Workshop ~ Wynfrey ABC 8:30 am Welcoming Remarks Dr. Patrick S. Market, NWA President, University of 10 am Shelter Seeking Behavior of Tuscaloosa Residents Missouri at Columbia, Columbia, MO for a Future Tornado Event Jason C. Senkbeil, University of Alabama, 8:35 am Opening Remarks Tuscaloosa, AL Nick Walker, The Weather Channel and NWA Broadcast Meteorology Committee Chair, Atlanta, GA and 10:15 am Coffee Break; Exhibits Open Mike Goldberg, WSET-TV Lynchburg, VA and NWA 10:45 am Restoring Power After the Tornadoes: Broadcast Meteorology Workshop Chair Understanding Outages and That Confusing 8:45 am Welcome to Birmingham Electric-Utility Jargon James Spann, Chief Meteorologist, Pam Boyd, Storm Center Director, Alabama Power WBMA-TV, Birmingham, AL Company, Birmingham, AL 9 am Introduction to Tornado Session 11 am Social Media and its Role in Saving Lives in the Dr. -
Five Years After an EF-4 Tornado Devastated Tuscaloosa, the Crimson White Refl Ects on That Day and How Far This Community Has Come
VOLUME 122 | ISSUE 63 APRIL 27, 2016 Five years after an EF-4 tornado devastated Tuscaloosa, The Crimson White refl ects on that day and how far this community has come. The Forest Lake area after the April 27 storm, overlaid with today’s recovery. CW / Drew Hoover and Layton Dudley. Photo Illustration by Melanie Viering WEDNESDAY 2 April 27, 2016 VISIT US ONLINE cw.ua.edu facebook The Crimson White instagram thecrimsonwhite twitter @TheCrimsonWhite CONTENTS cw.ua.edu P.O. Box 870170 Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 Newsroom: 348-6144 People helping people Fax: 348-8036 Advertising: 348-7845 Emergency workers and volunteers worked for months to clean up the aftermath of the April SERVING THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA SINCE 1894 27, 2011 tornado. Additional assistance, both in EDITORIAL the form of donations and volunteers, poured editor-in-chief Sean Landry in from across the country. [email protected] print managing editor Peyton Shepard digital managing editor Kelly Ward 3 features editor Alyx Chandler visuals editor Melanie Viering opinions editor Leigh Terry chief copy editor Alexis Faire Rebuilding businesses news editor Elizabeth Elkin culture editor Matthew Wilson Many businesses in the path of the April 27, sports editor Tyler Waldrep 2011 tornado had to rebuild after the storms, photo editor Layton Dudley still an ongoing process fi ve years later. multimedia editor Patrick Maddox community manager Dominique Taylor social media editor Collin Burwinkel lead designer Kylie Cowden ADVERTISING 8 advertising manager Emanuel Adelson (205) 223-5578 [email protected] territory manager Dee Griffin (334) 349-2473 [email protected] A magnolia tree in the wind special projects manager Michael Lollar (205) 317-7992 [email protected] From students to parents to University faculty creative services manager Mille Eiborg (205) 614-1457 to emergency responders, people who were [email protected] affected by the April 27, 2011 tornado shared is the community newspaper of The University their stories from that day and how it changed of Alabama. -
2014 Southeast Emmy Award Nominations
2014 SOUTHEAST EMMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Outstanding Achievement: Television News Programming Excellence Category: 1A Newscast – Daily Markets (1-25) WGCL CBS ATLANTA NEWS AT 11:00 SUZANNE GUNN, ELIZABETH TAYLOR, STEPHANY FISHER, MARKIINA BROWN, MIKE PALUSKA, GREG ROBERTS TELEMUNDO ATLANTA TELEMUNDO ATLANTA: NEWSCAST JUDITH MARTINEZ, JORGE BUZO, JENNIFER OLMEDILLO, ANDREA DIAZ, JUAN ZAYAS, LUIS ESTRADA UNIVISION NOTICIAS 34 ATLANTA EDICION NOCTURNA 11 PM GIANNCARLO CIFUENTES, AMANDA RAMIREZ, JULIO BARRIGA, KIARINNA PARISI, ANDRES QUINONES, FERNANDO ORDAZ UNIVISION NOTICIAS 34 ATLANTA EDICION 6 PM GIANNCARLO CIFUENTES, AMANDA RAMIREZ, JULIO BARRIGA, KIARINNA PARISI, ANDRES QUINONES, FERNANDO ORDAZ WSB-TV CHANNEL 2 ACTION NEWS AT 6 MIKE DREADEN, MISTI TURNBULL, JOE COWAN, LUCAS JOHNSON, JUSTIN FARMER, JOVITA MOORE WSB-TV CHANNEL 2 ACTION NEWS NIGHTBEAT AT 11 MIKE DREADEN, MISTI TURNBULL, CHERYL NTAB, SHEILA SCHUTT, DAVE SCHREIN WXIA/WATL-TV 11 ALIVE NEWS TONIGHT ELLEN CROOKE, MELISSA MACK, BRENDA WOOD, MATTHEW PEARL, MIKE NAVIN, JON SHIREK WXIA/WATL-TV 11 ALIVE NEWS TONIGHT – DFCS MELISSA MACK, BRENDA WOOD, DEVIN FEHELY, JON SHIREK, MIKE NAVIN, ELLEN CROOKE 2014 SOUTHEAST EMMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Outstanding Achievement: Television News Programming Excellence Category: 1B Newscast – Daily Markets (26-75) WBRC FOX6 NEWS AT 10 SHANNON MAZE, JAMES FINCH, KENNETH SMITH, ROB DAVIS WLOS NEWS 13 AT 11PM JULIE FRIES, BRYAN OVERSTREET WVTM ALABAMA'S 13 NEWS AT 10 ROBYN SIRMANS, PHILLIP DUMORNAY, ANDREA LINDENBERG, JERRY TRACEY, DON HAWES, KALISHA WHITMAN -
Channel Lineup
Basic $21.95 Basic Extended (cont.) HD Channels $9.99 Digital $14.00 Digital Cinemax $12.45 2 TBN 55 FXX 203 WTTO HD 74 James Spann 24/7 600 Cinemax 3 WTTO 21 56 BET 204 WABM HD 75 GRIT 602 More Max 4 WABM 68 57 WSFG 206 WBRC HD 76 APT World 604 ActionMax 5 WMTY 58 ESPNU 207 WIAT HD 77 APT Create 6 WBRC FOX 59 NBC Sports 209 WVUA HD 78 GET TV Digital HBO $14.45 7 WIAT (CBS42) 60 QVC 212 WCFT HD 82 MeTV 630 HBO 8 Super 8 TV 61 BRAVO 213 WVTM HD 99 BOUNCE 632 HBO Family 9 WVUA 62 NatGeo 320 Nat Geo WILD 216 ESPN HD 634 HBO2 10 WBIQ PBS 63 Disney Junior 217 ESPN2 HD 321 WETV 636 HBO Signature 11 WGN 64 Syfy 227 FNC HD 322 IFC 12 WBMA (ABC 33/40) 65 Animal Planet 229 FX HD 323 DIY 13 WVTM (NBC) 66 The Sportsman Channel 230 USA HD 328 Destination America Digital Showtime $12.95 14 The Weather Channel 67 Fox Sports 1 232 A&E HD 330 American Heroes Channel 650 Showtime 68 truTV 233 SEC HD 331 ID (Investigation Discovery) 652 Showtime 2 654 Showtime Showcase 656 Basic Extended $54.95 69 Home Shopping Network 236 Lifetime HD 332 Discovery Science 70 Comedy Central 241 HGTV HD 340 FYI Showtime Extreme 657 15 HLN 71 VH1 246 The History Channel HD 341 VICE Showtime beyond 16 ESPN 72 The Travel Channel 249 Sports South HD 342 BBC America 658 Showtime Next 17 ESPN2 73 FREEFORM 250 The Golf Channel HD 372 Lifetime Movie Network 659 Showtime Family 27 Fox News Channel 90 Escape 251 E! Entertainment HD 408 Nicktoons 660 Showtime Women 661 28 TBS 100 OWN 252 Food Network HD 409 TeenNick Flix 29 FX 101 CSPAN 255 FXX HD 410 Nick Jr 680 The Movie Channel 682 -
Operation Report 2019
2019 ANNUAL SUMMARY After many years of working toward strengthening Alabama’s Underground Damage Prevention Legislation, on June 6, 2019, Governor Kay Ivey signed the Senate Bill 315, which updated the Alabama Underground Damage Prevention Law. The purpose of the Underground Damage Prevention Law is to safeguard against injury and loss of life due to excavation or demolition and to protect underground facilities from costly damage and the interruption of utility or other services to the general public. In order to more effectively achieve the purpose of this act, Senate Bill 315 was enacted to strengthen membership requirements in the state’s One-Call Notification System and strengthen enforcement of and penalties for violations of the Underground Damage Prevention Act. The following are the highlights of changes that went into effect with the passage of this bill. Membership: • This bill requires all underground utility owners to become a member of the state wide One-Call Notification System for receiving excavation and demolition notifications, and removes option for utility owner to operate their own in-house notification system. There is a seven-year sunset on the membership requirement. • Increases Public Service Commission regulatory oversight of the One-Call Notification System through additional annual reporting requirements. Alabama 811 is currently certified by the PSC and serves as the One-Call Notification System. • Provides for phased-in membership of new members over a two-year period based on their size. • Grants relief to excavators for damages to underground facility should the owner of the underground facility failed to join the One-Call Notification System.