Chiaverini sports familiar role at ABC 7

Ryan Chiaverini

Ryan Chiaverini

Viewers of WLS-Channel 7 news may do a double-take when they see who’s anchoring sports this weekend.

With Dionne Miller ailing and both Mark Giangreco and Jim Rose out of town, the ABC-owned station has drafted Ryan Chiaverini, host of “Windy City Live,” to fill in as sports anchor on its Saturday and Sunday newscasts. It’s a return to the role Chiaverini held before he began hosting the live daily talk show with Val Warner in 2011. Continue reading

Weigel exec Bob Ramsey stepping down

Weigel BroadcastingBob Ramsey, who helped Chicago-based Weigel Broadcasting expand its brand across multiple channels and headed all broadcast operations in Chicago, Milwaukee and South Bend, is stepping down as executive vice president of local media.

Ramsey, 57, said Friday he expects to shift into a consultancy role with the company after assisting in the hiring of his replacement. Starting later this year he plans to spend more time in Palm Springs, California, where he has owned a home for eight years. Continue reading

Mike Caplan blown out of ABC 7 weather front

 

Mike Caplan

Mike Caplan

WLS-Channel 7 parted company Thursday with Mike Caplan after 21 years as meteorologist in a move that came just five weeks after the ABC-owned station added Cheryl Scott to its full-time weather staff.

Jennifer Graves, vice president and news director of ABC 7, is expected to announce new assignments Friday for the weather staff that includes Scott, chief meteorologist Jerry Taft, Tracy Butler and Phil Schwarz. Taft recently extended his contract through July 2016. Continue reading

Towers delivers ‘Strange Inheritance’ to Fox Business Network

Strange InheritanceChicago-based Towers Productions is getting down to business with “Strange Inheritance,” an original primetime series to debut next week on Fox Business Network.

Hosted by Fox News anchor Jamie Colby, the show will focus on how real families deal with the priceless legacies and bizarre treasures they inherit. Stories range from efforts to keep a 900-acre bug museum in business to discovery of a rare 1913 Liberty Head nickel. Continue reading

Long story short: Ray’s leaving Springfield beat

Ray Long and Pat Quinn

Ray Long and Pat Quinn

After more than three decades as Springfield bureau chief for the Chicago Tribune and other news organizations, the great Ray Long is moving upstate.

With the change of administrations from Pat Quinn to Bruce Rauner, Long, 56, is shifting assignments from the statehouse pressroom to a full-time position on the Tribune’s investigative watchdog team, based in Chicago. Continue reading

Rahm’s ads are fabulous fakes

Rahm Emanuel

Rahm Emanuel

Some of the latest advertising for Rahm Emanuel’s mayoral reelection campaign is cleverly audacious, deliberately misleading — and all apparently perfectly legal.

A TV commercial that looks like Emanuel is backed by the city’s most prominent news anchor and a mailing that closely resembles the cover of Chicago magazine (right down to its logo) are among paid media pieces that have turned up in recent weeks. Continue reading

Reader editor Mara Shalhoup heads for L.A.

Mara Shalhoup

Mara Shalhoup

Mara Shalhoup, who led the Chicago Reader through an ownership change while revitalizing its digital and print editions, has resigned after four years as editor of the alternative weekly.

Shalhoup told her staff Monday that she is leaving, effective February 13, to become editor of LA Weekly, a Los Angeles alternative publication owned by Voice Media Group. The announcement came three days after the Reader’s editorial employees voted to unionize through the Chicago Newspaper Guild, but Shalhoup said the two events were unrelated. Continue reading

Reporter Nesita Kwan leaves ‘well-traveled path’ at NBC 5

Nesita Kwan

Nesita Kwan

Telling colleagues it was “undoubtedly time to take this fork in the road,” Nesita Kwan has signed off after more than 20 years as a reporter at NBC-owned WMAQ-Channel 5.

“I want to thank Nesita for her many years of service to our news team,” Frank Whittaker, station manager and vice president of news at NBC 5, told staffers in a memo. Kwan’s last day on the air was Wednesday. Continue reading