TV Anchor For WNEW In New York Was 96

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TV Anchor For WNEW In New York Was 96


Veteran New York City broadcast information anchor Bill Jorgensen, remembered for his present’s nightly admonishment, “It’s 10 o’clock — do you know where your children are?” died on Wednesday at age 96.

Jorgensen was the founding anchor of the Ten O’Clock News on WNEW, now Fox 5 New York, which he hosted for over 12 years. He was recruited from Cleveland’s KYW-TV in 1967 to fill the slot. He signed off nightly with “Thanking you for your time this time, until next time.”

The “10 o’clock” message was learn on Jorgensen’s solid by the late Tom Gregory. It aired from the late Sixties via the Nineteen Eighties.

Jorgensen’s daughter remembered him in a Facebook put up.

“His ‘never-give-up’ spirit lasted until his end of life, and I just hope to be able to follow his example as long as possible,” his daughter, Rebekah Jorgensen, wrote in a Facebook put up on Thursday. She didn’t give the reason for demise or location.

“I grew up knowing him, behind the scenes, as a man deeply committed to finding the story that put people and their rights in danger, intent on finding innovative ways of telling it,” she stated.

His daughter recalled his protection of environmental tales together with Cleveland air pollution, in addition to the story of Robert Manry, a duplicate editor from Ohio who sailed throughout the Atlantic Ocean in 1965 in a 13-foot sailboat.

He additionally reported on the well-known case of Dr. Sam Sheppard, who was accused after which acquitted of his pregnant spouse’s 1954 homicide.

Jorgensen moved from WNEW to WPIX-TV in 1979, the place he anchored nationwide and native segments. He later was one of many co-founders and first anchors of the Independent Network News, which was produced at WPIX.

The nightly broadcast was helmed by Jorgensen, Pat Harper, and Steve Bosh. He retired in 1987.

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