Marc Howard (news anchor) explained

Marc Howard
Birth Date:13 February 1937
Birth Place:Sharon, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation:Television news anchor
Nationality:American

Marc Howard (born February 13, 1937) is a retired longtime Philadelphia news anchor. He last anchored at KYW-TV beginning in 2003 when he fronted the late newscasts, but soon only anchored the 4 p.m. news.

Howard's television career began at WFMJ-TV in Youngstown, Ohio. One of Howard's duties was hosting a late afternoon movie program called Showtime. While the program initially followed a mainstream movie format, during the Monster Craze of the 1960s, the program almost exclusively featured horror and sci-fi movies Monday through Friday. As host, Howard did not appear as a horror host character but as himself. He moved to New York City in 1967 as one of the original members of WNEW-TV's Ten O'Clock News team. After a brief reporting stint at WPRI-TV in Providence, Rhode Island, Howard returned to New York as a reporter for WPIX in 1968, staying there until 1970 when he took a job as press secretary to Howard J. Samuels during his unsuccessful run for Governor of New York;[1] he later returned to WPIX as a political reporter.

Howard moved to Hartford, Connecticut, to work for WFSB as a reporter and weekend anchor, and then arrived in Philadelphia in 1977 to become the 5:30 p.m. co-anchor of WPVI's Action News;[2] the newscast would expand to an hour in 1981. Howard would work at Action News alongside Jim O'Brien and later forming a long-running partnership with Lisa Thomas-Laury beginning in 1983.

In late 2002, he left after being hired at KYW-TV to replace Larry Kane on the 11 P.M. newscast. In addition to his anchoring duties, Howard also hosted the locally produced public affairs program Newsmakers, which focuses on a variety of political issues, both local and national, and airs on KYW-TV on Sunday mornings.[3]

He retired from anchoring on November 30, 2007, ending a broadcasting career that began at WPIC 790 am in his hometown of Sharon, Pennsylvania.[4]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.americanradiohistory.com/hd2/Archive-BC-IDX/70-OCR/1970-05-11-BC-OCR-Page-0064.pdf
  2. Web site: Marc Howard, a Broadcast Pioneer . 2006-08-12 . bot: unknown . https://web.archive.org/web/20050215013806/http://www.geocities.com/broadcastpioneers/howard.html . February 15, 2005 .
  3. http://www.broadcastpioneers.com/marchoward.html Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia
  4. Web site: Marc Howard Signs Off For Good. Dan Gross. November 25, 2007. www.philly.com. December 28, 2010.