Roger Grimsby

Roger Grimsby
Born (1928-09-23)September 23, 1928
Butte, Montana
Died June 23, 1995(1995-06-23) (aged 66)
New York, New York
Education St. Olaf College, Columbia University
Occupation Journalist, Television News Anchor, and Actor
Spouse(s)
  • Dorthi Frost Grimsby
  • Maria Grimsby
Children Daughter, Karen

Roger Grimsby (September 23, 1928 June 23, 1995) was an American journalist, television news anchor and actor. Grimsby, who for 18 years was seen on the ABC Television Network flagship station WABC in New York City, is known as one of the pioneers of local television broadcast news.

Early life

Roger Grimsby was an orphan who was born in Butte, Montana and raised in Duluth, Minnesota, by a Lutheran minister. After graduating from Denfeld High School in 1946, he attended St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minnesota, before studying history at Columbia University in New York. Grimsby was a U.S. Army veteran who was stationed in Germany before serving in the Korean War. It was during his stint in the Army that the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS) sparked his interest in news broadcasting.

Career

Grimsby returned to his native Duluth, Minnesota, where he began his anchoring career in 1954, serving as an announcer for WEBC Radio. Shortly thereafter, he decided to switch to the growing medium of television, working as a correspondent and news director at various television stations around Minnesota and Wisconsin, including WEAU-TV Eau Claire, WISC-TV Madison, and WXIX-TV (now WVTV) Milwaukee. He then spent two years (1959–1961) at KMOX (now KMOV) in St. Louis, before becoming the anchor and news director at ABC-owned KGO-TV in San Francisco, in 1961.

In 1968 Grimsby was brought to WABC-TV in New York City. Grimsby started as anchor of WABC's 11:00 p.m. news broadcast on June 3, 1968. Just two days later, Grimsby was thrust into the national spotlight as anchor of ABC's coverage of the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.[1]

In April 1969, WABC dropped John Schubeck from the anchor slot on their 6:00 p.m. broadcast, replacing him with Grimsby, who also continued in the 11:00 p.m. slot.[2]

Grimsby's initial co-anchor on the 6:00 newscast was former WCBS-TV newsman Tom Dunn, but the man who was most closely identified with him was Bill Beutel, who replaced Dunn in September 1970 and co-anchored the news with Grimsby until 1986.

A six-time Emmy Winner, Grimsby was fired from WABC in April 1986 and, in an incident recounted by several of his colleagues, including Tom Snyder (who reported the incident on The Late Late Show soon after Grimsby's death[3]), ABC further punished Grimsby by buying a building on Columbus Avenue across from WABC's Lincoln Square studios where three bars Grimsby often frequented stood and evicting the bar owners from the building.

A year after his WABC departure, Grimsby was hired by WNBC-TV in May 1987.[4] Beginning in June, his role was almost exclusively as a commentator, as Grimsby would be featured as part of the station's daily Live at Five newscast in a brief segment where he offered his take on a news story of the day with his usual deadpan style. He also worked as an assignment reporter. When WNBC's corporate sibling, WNBC (AM), signed off the air in 1988, Grimsby was dispatched to the radio station's studio to cover the closure live. As it turned out, a late transmitter switch to WFAN (AM) meant that Grimsby's voice was the very last to be heard on WNBC AM as he declared live to TV viewers: You heard the countdown. It's over. Grimsby left WNBC in May 1989 when his contract was not renewed.[5]

In 1990, he relocated to California where he and George Reading of KMST became the first anchor team on San Diego television station KUSI's newly-launched 10:00 p.m. newscast.[6] After only a few months, Grimsby resigned from KUSI in February 1991.[7]

Death

After his retirement, Grimsby returned to New York City and lived on Manhattan's Upper West Side with his wife Maria, whom he had married in 1989.

On June 23, 1995, Grimsby died in Lenox Hill Hospital from complications due to advanced lung cancer.

Filmography

Footnotes

    References

    1. Laurent, Lawrence (6 June 1968). "TV Responds To Tragedy". The Washington Post. Retrieved 5 July 2018 via Proquest. (Subscription required (help)).
    2. "Johh Schubeck Out Of WABC-TV Program". The New York Times. 16 April 1969. Retrieved 5 July 2018 via Proquest. (Subscription required (help)).
    3. Roger Grimsby RIP pt. 4 - Tom Snyder on Roger Grimsby on YouTube
    4. Kubasik, Ben (29 May 1987). "TV Spots". Newsday. Retrieved 5 July 2018 via Proquest. (Subscription required (help)).
    5. Goldman, Kevin (18 May 1989). "Ch. 4 News Dropping Grimsby". Newsday. Retrieved 5 July 2018 via Proquest. (Subscription required (help)).
    6. Brass, Kevin (15 October 1990). "New Channel 51 Newscast Is Like Return to the Old Days". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 5 July 2018 via Proquest. (Subscription required (help)).
    7. Brass, Kevin (31 December 1991). "Tough Economics Create Year of the Blatant Plug Television". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 5 July 2018 via Proquest. (Subscription required (help)).
    • Roger Grimsby on IMDb
    • UHF Nocturne - print ads for KGO featuring Roger Grimsby
    • Broadcast legends - Roger Grimsby Biography
    • Carter, Bill (June 24, 1995). "Obituary: Roger Grimsby, 66, Anchor And Initiator of 'Happy Talk'". The New York Times.
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