The Gold Circle honors media professionals who began their careers in television at least 50 years ago, either in a performing, creative, technical, or administrative role within the industry, or in a related field such as television journalism education, advertising, promotion, or public relations, with service connected to the San Francisco / Northern California Chapter.
Over the course of their 50-year career, honorees must also have made a significant contribution to the chapter.
Steve Swatt is an award-winning political broadcast journalist who launched his TV career at Sacramento NBC affiliate KCRA in 1969 after reporting stints at the San Francisco Examiner and United Press International in Los Angeles. Fifty-five years later, he continues to provide political analysis for several media outlets in the Sacramento market.
During his TV reporting career at KCRA, Swatt covered public policy and numerous presidents and governors. With an MA Degree in Journalism from UC Berkeley, he has taught and mentored graduate journalism students at Sacramento State University.
For years, Swatt served as KCRA As a State Capitol and political correspondent, he’s reported
on ballot propositions, issues at the state legislature as well as state and national elections.
He remains actively involved with the California Conservation Corps Foundation and Friends of
California Archives boards, and has served on the Alliance for Better Campaigns board and Community Learning Advisory Board.
Swatt is author of numerous books including Game Changers: Twelve Elections That Transformed California, a political history of California. He has received an Emmy Award for his work and awards from National Health Journalism, State Bar Association, and SPJ, Association of American Political Consultants and Sacramento Public Relations Society, amongst others.
Being a woman breaking into television news in 1974, there have been many firsts for Pamela Young. Working at KPIX on the show called All Together Now with the legendary Belva Davis (SC ’89), she became the first Asian American reporter to work on that program.
Born and raised in Hawaii, Young came to the mainland to attend San Francisco State University, graduating in 1973. Those were the early days of TV and most newsrooms were packed with men. There were very few women. But that didn’t stop her.
Young stayed at KPIX for a year then moved over to PBS station KQED. Eventually,
she returned home to Hawaii, taking a job as an anchor/reporter for KHON. She’s received 12 Emmy® Awards.
In 1984, Young launched a show in Hawaii called Mixed Plate and it’s still on the air today. It’s about a little bit of everything. “Something Japanese, Chinese, Filipino.” Young has written a travel column, and a book entitled My Name Is Makia Malo about an 80-year-old person who was living with leprosy.
For 52 years, Ron Acker edited news and specials for KTVU with passion and a flare. He retired from working full-time but still can’t give it up. He now edits once a week from home and his mission to produce exceptional work continues. That includes daily news, special reports and investigative projects.
Acker’s work has earned him numerous awards. An Emmy®, Peabody, and the American Legion’s Fourth Estate Award for Excellence in Journalism.
The Peabody came in 2009 for the Bart Shootings. The Fourth Estate Award in 2017 for an investigative report entitled “Mental Hospital Hell.” The piece used
hidden cameras to reveal deplorable conditions at the John George Psychiatric Hospital. Patients were recorded sleeping and eating on the floor, moaning and crying out for help.
Acker is known as a calming, experienced force with editing precision, able to effectively and cleanly weave together powerful pieces that enhance storytelling. He’s considered a legend at KTVU – and in the television industry.
Jim Stimson‘s lifelong dedication to television began at UC Davis when he landed a spot at the campus radio station KDVS. That led to freelance work for NBC, ABC and the Associated Press. Then an internship evolved into a full-time job in the KCRA Newsroom. All of that while he was still in college.
Jim first focused on KCRA’s radio side, but soon transitioned to TV, rising from writer to producer, then senior producer, executive producer and, eventually, Assistant News Director. Altogether Jim would spend more than 47 years with KCRA.
Across five decades, Jim helped guide coverage of one major story after another – the Loma Prieta earthquake, the 1997 New Year’s flood, the Scott Peterson verdict, the Paradise wildfire, and so much more. He oversaw investigations, special projects, and thousands of newscasts.
Jim’s work also extended beyond Sacramento. He produced gubernatorial and U.S. Senate debates that were broadcast statewide and a town hall broadcast with President Clinton that included live audiences in Sacramento, San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego.
Jim Stimson is the recipient of nine Emmy® Awards in six different categories, including News Excellence. He was inducted into the NATAS Silver Circle in 2008 and honored with the NATAS Governors Citation in 2021. Now retired, Jim remains active in the television community, through his support of scholarship and mentor programs as well as judging Emmy® Award entries.
Spencer Christian joined the ABC 7 News team in January 1999 and is the weather forecaster for ABC 7 News at 6 and 9. He also co-hosted The View from the Bay. Christian moved to ABC 7 after nearly 13 years with Good Morning America, where he did national weather reports and specialized human interest stories. Prior to his years in New York, Christian was weathercaster in Baltimore, and host of the talk show, Spencer’s World. He began his television career in 1971 in Richmond, Virginia, as a news reporter, covering state and local politics. While in Richmond, he won the Better Life Award for his reports exposing abuses in Virginia’s nursing homes; and in Baltimore, an Emmy® Award for a series on declining language skills among America’s youth. A native of Charles City Virginia, Christian is also an Army veteran with a B.A. from Hampton University. He devotes a good deal of his time to the March of Dimes, Special Olympics, the American Cancer Society, Big Brothers, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of America, the United Negro College Fund, the Make-A-Wish Foundation, and others. In addition, he has served as the ABC Network’s spokesperson for children’s literacy, and authored the “Spencer Christian’s World of Wonders” children books. An avid sports fan, he is also a wine enthusiast and private collector.
Born in Greece and raised in Fresno, Kopi Sotiropulos eventually traveled to San Francisco in the late ‘60s to major in broadcasting at San Francisco State University. After graduation, Sotiropulos found employment in 1971 at KMPH 26 in Visalia, first as a commercial copywriter and later as a producer, photographer, editor and talent in commercials and promos. He also hosted Dialing for Dollars. After six years, Sotiropulos moved to Hollywood, spending 10 years as an actor working on many popular programs; including, The Incredible Hulk, Three’s Company, Mickey Spillane, Perfect Strangers, Highway to Heaven, General Hospital, Days of Our Lives, and Beverly Hills Cop 2. Moving back with his family to Fresno in 1987, Sotiropulos worked with Company 3 Productions directing and producing commercials. He returned to KMPH in 1990 to be the weatherman for Fox 26 Ten O’clock News. In 2003, KMPH created Great Day, the weekday five-hour morning show Sotiropulos co-hosts with Kim Stephens. He also shoots the daily segments: 10-Day Forecast, Great Day Faces and 7th Inning Stretch for Great Day. To everyone in the San Joaquin Valley, especially the children, Sotiropulos is “Mr. Fresno.” He gives school presentations; is MC for numerous community events; recognized with several “Best of Fresno” awards, the Muscular Dystrophy Society’s Dinner of Champions; and this past June with the Governors’ Citation from NATAS.
With more than 50-years working on television in Hawaii, Anchor Joe Moore is an experienced television veteran. In fact, he’s almost an institution on the islands. Moore’s career started after a two-year stint as an Army broadcast journalist. He was then hired as a sportscaster at KGMB in 1969. That was exactly 52-years ago. He moved to the news anchor desk at KHON2 in 1980, walking viewers through major historical events including the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger, Hurricanes Iwa and Iniki, the many eruptions of Kilauea Volcano and the attempted assassination of President Ronald Regan. Moore graduated from The Defense Information School in Indianapolis, and also attended University of Maryland. When not in the newsroom or holding down the anchor desk, Moore writes for theater and acts on stage in regional theatre productions. He loves watching plays, movies, and listening to music. When it came to getting into television news as a career, Moore said that it seemed an obvious choice given his background in broadcasting during the time he spent in Vietnam. Though he also has a passion for theater, he saw TV as more reliable. “It seemed a more dependable way to make a living and provide for a family than acting or writing,” said Moore. Half a century later, sure seems that decision has paid off.
Seasoned sportscaster best describes Gold Circle inductee Barry Tompkins. Fifty-years in television, he’s a four-time Emmy® Award recipient having starting his career in 1968 at San Francisco station KPIX TV. From there, he’s worked at NBC Network, HBO, ESPN, FOX Sports and currently does the ShoBox and Championship Boxing series for Showtime. Tompkins is a powerhouse, having done play-by-play commentary for the Super Bowl, Rose Bowl, NCAA Final Four, nearly ten Olympic Games, Tour de France, Wimbledon, San Francisco Giants baseball and more than two-hundred World Championship fights. And that’s just a taste of the work he’s done. His sports broadcasting experience is vast and varied. In addition to play-by-play, he’s covered the Masters, U.S. Open, British Open and PGA golf events along with the Indy 500 and hockey Stanley Cup. If it’s sports-related, there’s a good chance Tompkins has covered it. Now, marry that extensive sports background with a little fun and you’ll find that he also writes a humor column for the Marin Independent Journal and is a contributing columnist for Comcast Sports Net Bay Area. Add to all of that, Tompkins is a mentor and teachers Storytelling for Television at Dominican University in San Rafael, CA. The message here could be – you get back ten-fold what you give.
Michel Camus has been involved in northern California television news as a photographer and technical manager for 51 years. Camus began at KOVR in 1969 before going to KPIX in 1973. He left KPIX in 1975, moving to KGO, where he has been ever since. Camus has earned three Emmy® awards for photography and four awards from the San Francisco Press Photographers Association, including “Cameraman of the Year” in 1976. Camus has covered: the Reagan inauguration, Angela Davis, Indian Alcatraz take over, anti Vietnam war demonstrations at Berkeley, the student strike at San Francisco State University, the Zodiac killer, Pope John Paul, Patti Hearst. He flew in the first helicopter to spray malathion during the medfly crisis. He has shot in Africa, Mexico, Central America and covered the 1984 Olympics in Yugoslavia. As a photographer, Camus was in charge of the first camera crew to go live from a moving bus and from a boat in the early ‘80s. He became Technical Manager at KGO 33 years ago and has been very innovative in adopting technology, designing remote vehicles and assuring his field crews had the best equipment in the San Francisco market. He introduced microwave digital technology (digital microwave and HD remote camera) for his crews to do live remotes.
For more than 50 years, Don Sharp has been an innovator and respected newsroom leader. He held key news management roles at two network-owned television stations in San Francisco. His broadcast career began in San Diego in 1967 where he was one of the first African Americans employed by KOHO-TV, a Time-Life station. Sharp was hired as a film processer and soon promoted to news and sports photographer. In 1969, KRON-TV in San Francisco recruited him as News Film Supervisor. He stayed at the station 36 years. During his tenure at KRON, Sharp was promoted to News Operations Manager and Associate News Director. While at the station, Sharp designed and installed the first bridge traffic cameras on the Golden Gate, Bay and San Mateo Bridges, and led KRON’s transition from film to digital editing. He also launched the first live helicopter in San Francisco. In 2005, Sharp was hired by CBS-owned station KPIX where he became a central newsroom leader responsible for technical operations. He helped produce coverage of the Bay Bridge’s new eastern span and oversaw unprecedented use of drone video in news. Sharp co-authored a book in 1985 entitled Microwaves Made Simple. It became a teaching textbook at Stanford University. Sharp is the recipient of six Emmy® Awards. In 2018, he was honored with the NATAS Governors’ Citation and inducted into Silver Circle in 2005. He also received the APTRA Broadcast Hall of Fame Award in 2009.
David has been a tireless member of the Television Academy, serving as Awards Chair for 10 years, and as a Governor and Trustee. He now holds the Academy’s highest post as Chairman of the Board. He began his television career as a youngster in Cleveland, appearing for eight years on a weekly children’s program series, later serving as a news trainee. After graduation from Northwestern University, David joined KGO TV’s news operation.In addition to serving as East Bay and Peninsula bureau chief for Channel 7, he developed a specialty as a money-and-business reporter. He has received two Emmy statuettes. David did take a brief detour in 1977, becoming Assistant News Director of ABC-Owned KXYZ-TV in Detroit-the first Asian-American in station management. He returned to San Francisco and KGO-TV two years later.
For someone who loves technology, what better job could there be than covering Silicon Valley and the innovators who keep creating new products and services?
I grew up taking photos with a Brownie Instamatic. I learned how to process black & white film. Now I use a high-end Canon DSLR, and I travel the world to take photos that I “process” in digital imaging software. I wrote term papers on a typewriter in school. Later, I built a “hacker special” a PC assembled from components I bought as they went on sale at the electronics store. It’s great to know first-hand about what’s inside the devices and software that we use.
News has been in my blood since I wrote for my high school newspaper. On second thought, maybe it was the ink that rubbed off on my hands that hooked me when I was a newspaper delivery boy. A neighbor, who produced a weekly public affairs show, put me on TV at age five. Being in front of the studio cameras for eight years got me thinking of a TV news career. The dream came true. I’m celebrating my 40th anniversary this year at ABC7.
Along the way, I’ve been on stage at Radio City Music Hall (without the Rockettes) for the Daytime Emmy Awards when I was national chairman of The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. I’ve been inducted into two halls of fame (high school and college journalism school), and I’ve received two lifetime achievement awards (Asian American Journalists Association and the City & County of San Francisco). There are four Emmy statuettes, too.
And when I’m not covering news, you can find me either in the kitchen experimenting or on the road in search of great food.
David Louie has been a reporter for ABC7 News for 43 years. He reports on technology and business around the Bay Area.
Gary Gerould is a legendary sportscaster who has traveled the world working in television and radio for 64-years now. Starting in broadcasting in his hometown of Midland, Michigan at the age of 14, Gerould has logged 1900-hundred network telecasts including covering sporting events on NBC, ABC, and ESPN.
He’s also known as the voice of the NBA’s Sacramento Kings and has been doing play-by-play for them since 1985. To date, he’s called 26-hundred games. Simultaneously, for 37 years, Gerould was a motor sports reporter for ABC and ESPN. Gerould also spent eight-years covering NFL Football.
Gerould said that he’s done a little bit of everything in the sports arena, from Sumo wrestling to the Olympics. Beginning his career in Midland, Michigan, Gerould at 18 landed a job at KHSL-TV in Chico, California. Then, it was on to KCRA-TV in Sacramento where he worked as a sports reporter/anchor from 1965 to 1977.
He went freelance after leaving KCRA, covering auto racing assignments that included Formula One and the Indianapolis 500. Along the way, he mentored his son Bobby Gerould who is now a known sportscaster and personality.
Gerould aggressively supported Northern California motor sports, donating time, energy, and money to preserve the rich history of various tracks such as the Calistoga Speedway. Gerould stepped away from calling motor sports because of the hectic schedule. He still travels with the Sacramento Kings, calling games during basketball season. At the age of 78, Gerould remains one of the NBA’s longest-tenured announcers.
Known as G-man to many, Gerould has no plans on retiring.
James Gabbert is a radio and television entrepreneur and innovator. He changed the way people listened to radio and watched tv in the Bay Area. Starting with a little FM station in Atherton which became K101, a bay area music powerhouse. He added 3 more radio stations before he sold them to create a television phenomenon. He bought KEMO-TV, channel 20, renamed it KOFY-TV, launching a new approach in creativity and viewers were hooked. There was the Dance Party show he hosted, the dogs used for station IDs, 3D movies, outrageous promotions, live coverage of parades and community events. And a news department turning out a nightly newscast. Several reporters currently on tv got their bay area starts there. Even though Gabbert achieved initial acclaim with his radio stations, he was no stranger to tv, first appearing on KCSM in the 60’s then People Are Talking on KPIX before taking up residence at the Sleepy Arms Hotel on KOFY. Gabbert sold Channel 20 in 1998, then became a radio talk show host. He is a past president of the National Radio Broadcasters Association and past Commodore of the Sausalito Yacht Club. He was inducted into the Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame in 2006.
Fred LaCosse is well-known to San Francisco Bay Area television viewers as a veteran news anchor, reporter and talk show host. Since the beginning of his broadcasting career in 1956, he has worked at six television stations: WTTW, Chicago; WLWC, Columbus, Ohio; KNTV, San Jose; KRON and KGO-TV, San Francisco; and KICU, San Jose and held positions in almost every phase of the industry.
He co-hosted the daily morning talk show A.M. San Francisco on KGO-TV (ABC) from 1982 to 1987 with his wife, Terry Lowry. LaCosse also hosted the weekly syndicated program “Silicon Valley Business This Week” from 1995 to 2001.
In 1978, LaCosse received an Emmy® from the Northern California Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for his news feature reporting and was honored by UPI for the best news feature report in California and is a member of the S.F. NorCal Silver Circle (class of 1988). He has also received numerous awards for his community involvement.
Since 1981, Fred has been President of LaCosse Productions, which produces corporate videos; conducts communication seminars on handling the news media interview, making effective presentations, and performing on camera; and provides talent services.
Fred is now focusing his public speaking efforts on his presentation “Your American Freedoms: Protect Them or Lose Them.”
LaCosse has generously given of his time to community and charitable organizations such as: The Janet Pomeroy Center; The Salvation Army; Laguna Honda Volunteers, Inc.; The Community Music Center of San Francisco; St. Luke’s Hospital; Red Cross; He is also active in NATAS and the Broadcast Legends.
A native of South Bend, Indiana, he received a B.A. in Liberal Arts from Wabash College and an M.A. in Broadcasting from Northwestern University. Fred has two grown sons and lives in San Francisco with his wife, television & radio personality Terry Lowry. (Silver Circle ‘1996).
Lee Mendelson (born March 24, 1933) is an American television producer. He is best known as the executive producer of the many Peanuts animated specials. Mendelson, was born in San Francisco, California, grew up in San Mateo, and entered Stanford University in 1950, where he studied creative writing. After graduating in 1954, he spent three years in the Air Force where he served as a lieutenant. He then worked several years for his father, a vegetable grower and shipper.
Mendelson’s career in television began in 1961, when he started working at San Francisco’s KPIX television station, where he created public service announcements. A fortunate find of some antique film footage of the 1915 San Francisco World’s Fair led to Mendelson’s first production, a documentary entitled The Innocent Fair. The documentary was the first in a series on the history of the city, San Francisco Pageant, for which Mendelson won a Peabody Award. Mendelson left KPIX in 1963 to form his own production company. His first work was a documentary on Willie Mays, A Man Named Mays. Shortly after the documentary aired, Mendelson came across a Peanuts comic strip that revolved around Charlie Brown’s baseball team. Mendelson thought that since he’d just “done the world’s greatest baseball player, now [he] should do the world’s worst baseball player, Charlie Brown.” Mendelson approached Peanuts creator Charles Schulz with the idea of producing a documentary on Schulz and his strip. Schulz, who had enjoyed the Mays documentary, readily agreed. The 1965 documentary, Charlie Brown & Charles Schulz, was the beginning of a 30-year collaboration between Schulz and Mendelson. While Mendelson was attempting to find a market for the Schulz documentary, he was approached by The Coca-Cola Company, who asked him if he was interested in producing an animated Christmas special for television. Mendelson was, and he immediately contacted Schulz in regards to using the Peanuts characters. Schulz in turn suggested hiring animator and director Bill Meléndez, whom Schulz had worked with while creating a Peanuts-themed advertising campaign for the Ford Motor Company. Mendelson also hired jazz composer Vince Guaraldi after hearing a Guaraldi-composed song while driving across the Golden Gate Bridge.
A native New Yorker and graduate of San Francisco’s Galileo HS and San Francisco State College, Jim Scalem first came to KQED in 1958 as a volunteer apprentice Floor Director and, at the age of 16, started his long career in public television.
After doing such other ladder-climbing jobs as KQED Auction Warehouse Supervisor, Assistant Bookeeper , and night switchboard operator, where he answered viewer calls-mostly complaints!!, Jim then rose thru the usual lower-level production jobs to be a full-time Producer-Director by 1973. He was already the station’s On-Air Fundraising and Promotion Producer, and began directing national series such as World Press and David Littlejohn-Critic at Large.
One of Jim’s most memorable Production Assistant and AD jobs was working on KQED’s pioneering nitely one hour local news program NEWSROOM.
During KQED’s March fundraising drive in 1974, Bay Area resident Joan Baez asked if she could be a volunteer Pledge Nite host. Joan joined Newsroom reporter Bill Schechner and SANG her appeals for contributions from viewers.This lead to Joan agreeing to tape a one-hour studio concert that was used by KQED for... what else? – fundraising!
Jim co-produced and directed AN HOUR WITH JOAN BAEZ with his KQED colleague Leslie Miner and they were thrilled and proud to win a local Bay Area Emmy® for it.
In the 1970’s, Jim and Leslie again teamed to create and produce a series of about 150 one-minute biographies of famous people. These SPACES BETWEEN PROGRAMS were presented on the Birthdays of the people profiled, and again won Leslie and Jim a Bay Area local Emmy®.
Jim became Executive Producer of KQED Local & National Cultural Programming in the late 1970’s. With Roi Peers,Jim produced the yearly live telecasts of the San Francisco Conservatory of Music’s Sing It Yourself Messiah, as well as the San Francisco Opera in the Park concerts.
In the early 1980’s, Jim took over as KQED’s Third Program Manager in the station’s 30-year history, following in the footsteps of Nat Katzman and The Legendary co-Founder of KQED–Jonathan Rice. During Jim’s tenure KQED consistently had one of the largest viewerships of any public television station in the country. KQED’s local on-air fund raising drives averaged well-over one million dollars a drive.
Jim also found time in the late seventies and early eighties to produce some 50 national PTV telecasts of first class tennis tournaments in this country and in Italy, Germany, and even Dubai. These telecasts came as a result of Jim and KQED locally televising the San Francisco stop on the ATP Grand Prix tour, with the late Barry MacKay as Tournament Director.
Deciding to leave KQED in 1990 after 32 years, Jim and his wife Linda Cohen moved to Washington, DC where for 8 years he headed the Fundraising Programming Department at PBS. During that period, he was responsible for creating, funding, managing, and acquiring more than 350 national “pledge” programs for affiliates like KQED to program their on-air fundraising drives.These programs included: the Three Tenors Concerts from Los Angeles and Riverdance, Les Miserables in Concert, two Peter, Paul and Mary specials, three Victor Borge Then and Now shows, The Eagles Reunion Concert, Yanni at the Acropolis, Andre Rieu–the Vienna I Love, various classic commercial television specials with Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin, Perry Como’s Irish Christmas, and five Lawrence Welk specials. Jim also pioneered the highly successful “self-help” genre of fundraising programming by commissioning and acquiring programs; featuring, John Bradshaw,mmenopause expert Dr. Judith Reichman and many others.
In 1998 Jim went independent, co-producing with the talented JoAnn Young national public television fund-raising specials ranging from Bobby Darin–Beyond the Song to Robert Mirabal-Music from a Painted Cave -a Native American concert/dance performance show – from a performance-driven tribute to The Legendary Liberace, to music-filled biographical tributes to The Mamas and the Papas, and The Kingston Trio. In addition, he produced an Ice Skating Special for NBC SPORTS entitled Divas on Ice, starring Katerina Witt.
Now at the age of 72, Jim is teaming with his old KQED Newsroom colleague Henry Kroll to produce an Indy documentary on 93-year old Bert Steinberg, a lifetime New York and San Francisco baseball fan who this year attended ALL 81 road games of the NL Champion San Francisco Giants, who named Bert and his wife Le Anne their Fans of The Year.
A GIANTS FAN himself for 65 years, jim,still attends most all of their home games and celebrates their Three National League Pennants in the last five years!
Since 2006, Don Knapp has been a general assignment reporter at KPIX CBS 5 Eyewitness News. He is the first San Francisco Bay Area television reporter to shoot, write and edit a “VJ” internet video story for the New York Times website, along with print article for the New York Times.
Knapp’s first paid job in broadcasting was in 1962 as morning show host at WLKR-FM radio in Norwalk Ohio. As a small town radio station, WLKR required their employees to multi-task and work many jobs. So, in addition to being the morning host and combo board operator, Knapp also was ad copy writer, music puller, transmitter operator, and restroom cleaner. One day, when his radio shift was ending, news of a Dallas shooting came over the news wires. For the next several hours, Knapp, seated next to the teletype with a microphone, reported the news. The next day, he went into the field to report on a breaking news story at the Fitchville Ohio Golden Age nursing home. As a result of these two news events, it was clear to Knapp that he preferred a career in broadcast news, so he applied to the Ohio State University’s Journalism school. While attending graduate school in 1964, he was hired at WBNS, Ohio, where he perfected his video journalism skills by working as a reporter, shooter, writer, editor and film processor. By 1969, he had moved to San Francisco.
Prior to his current job at KPIX CBS 5, Knapp worked at KRON 4 for five years as a general assignment reporter for daily news, major stories and special projects including primary coverage of the murder trials of Scott Peterson, Susan Polk and Scott Dyleski. He was one of the first KRON VJs (trained by Michael Rosenblum) to be reviewed and approved by KRON management. He produced and aired over 120 VJ stories.
Prior to KRON 4, Knapp worked for 13 years as a CNN West Coast Regional Network Correspondent based in San Francisco. His top assignments included: Kuwait oil field fires, Persian Gulf mine sweeping and Iraqi refugee crisis following Desert Storm, the Yellowstone forest fires, San Francisco earthquake, Mississippi and Missouri River floods, Rodney King riots, Hurricane Iniki on Kauai, Oklahoma City bombing, Los Angeles Northridge earthquake, O. J. Simpson trial, Northern California floods, Unabomber trial, Montana Freeman standoff, Oklahoma Monster Tornado, Columbine school shootings, Montana Bitterroot Valley Wildfires and Seattle World Trade Organization protests. Prior to CNN, he spent two decades reporting for major San Francisco Bay Area broadcast news operations including KGO ABC 7 and Radio News, KPIX 5 (again), and KTVU Channel 2.
Knapp was inducted into the Silver Circle in 2009. His work has been recognized with a National Emmy®, award for CNN Team Coverage of the Oklahoma City Bombing; Cable Ace award; the 2003 Lifetime Career Achievement from the Society of Professional Journalists; RTNDA, and Peninsula Press Club awards.
Belva Davis has spent more than 50 years in Bay Area journalism (print, radio and television). Among Belva’s accomplishments, she was the Bay Area’s first African-American female television news anchor and first on the West Coast. She has worked at KTVU, KPIX , KRON, and KQED. As a reporter, Davis covered many important events of the day, including issues of race, gender, and politics. In a career spanning half a century, she has reported many of the most explosive stories of the era, including the Berkeley student protests, the birth of the Black Panthers, the Peoples Temple cult that ended in the mass suicides at Jonestown, the assassinations of San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, the onset of the AIDS epidemic, and from Africa, the terrorist attacks that first put Osama bin Laden on the FBI’s Most Wanted List. Among Belva’s many honors, in addition to the Silver Circle and seven Emmy® statuettes, has been as a recipient of the 1995 NATAS Governors’ Award and many other Bay Area, regional, statewide and national honors; including numerous accolades from AFTRA, RTNDA, PBS, and BABJA. She was the host of KQED-PBS This Week in Northern California for almost twenty years and co-author of Never in My Wildest Dreams. Belva retired from KQED in November of 2012. Belva is married to former KTVU photographer Bill Moore (Silver Circle 1989).
Stuart Hyde’s fascination with drama, theatre, film and radio began in Fresno during high school and college days. Following his U.S. Navy service in the Pacific during World War II, Hyde received an AB from UCLA and an M.A. and PhD from Stanford in Speech and Drama. He taught at Stanford and USC before becoming Chair in 1958 of the Department now known as Broadcast and Electronic Communications Arts (BECA) at San Francisco State University. Hyde has taught and inspired thousands of students to pursue careers in broadcasting. His book, Television and Radio Announcing, was written in 1959. Its twelve revisions and 150,000 copies have made it the industry’s standard authoritative text on the subject. He hired San Francisco State’s first African-American broadcast faculty member, Buzz Anderson, during the racially heated political climate of the 1960s. In 1969, Hyde answered the call of students protesting social injustices in America by teaching a class in media performance at San Quentin State Prison for eleven years. He formally retired from San Francisco State in 2007. He was inducted into the Silver Circle (Class of 1996) and Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame (Class of 2011) and is a member of the Bay Area Broadcast Legends.
Herb Zettl earned his B.A. and M.A. degrees at Stanford University in Speech and Drama, with minors in art and journalism, and his Ph.D. at UC Berkeley. While at Stanford, he interned at KPIX San Francisco and was subsequently hired by KPIX. He left to work at KOVR when it first opened but returned to KPIX in 1958 as producer-director. On the urging of his long-time friend Stuart Hyde, who had become the Chair of the Radio-TV Department at S F State, Zettl moved from the control room to the classroom. At San Francisco State, he helped conceive and design new broadcast teaching facilities with three television studios, audio studios, and support areas that are still in full use today. He also introduced new curricular fields, such as applied media aesthetics and experimental television production. His books, Television Production Handbook and Television Production Workbook, 12th edition; Video Basics and Video Basics Workbook, 6th edition; and Sight Sound Motion: Applied Media Aesthetic, 6th edition have been translated into several languages and are used in TV production centers and universities around the world. His interactive DVD Zettl’s VideoLab is in its 4th edition. Zettl has received several honors through the years, including the California State Legislature Distinguished Teaching Award in 1966; Distinguished Education Service Award of the Broadcast EducationAssociation in 2004; and inducted into the Silver Circle in 1996.
One of broadcasting’s pioneers, Dick started his career after graduating from Stanford in 1953. He was on hand to witness and help launch (in different capacities) many television stations in Northern California. In 1955 Dick worked at KCRA Sacramento where he was the Promotions Director. Two years later, he joined KRON in San Francisco, as its Promotions Manager. In short order, his reputation as a “young man who could get things done,” earned Dick a General Manager’s position at KHVH Hawaii. During his long and successful tenure with Kaiser Broadcasting, he was quickly promoted to Vice President and General Manager of its Broadcast Corporation headquartered in Oakland. As President of Kaiser Broadcasting, he conceived and executed a plan to build independent TV stations in seven of the top ten markets and was at the forefront of the establishment and expansion of Kaiser Broadcasting’s UHF division, including the startup of San Francisco’s own KBHK as well as WKBD (Detroit), WKBS (Philadelphia), WKBG (Boston), WKBF (Cleveland), KBSC (Los Angeles) and WFLD (Chicago). He left Kaiser Broadcasting in the mid 1970s. Block was the Executive Vice President of Metromedia, which was ultimately bought out by FOX. He was also instrumental in the creation and launching of The Travel Channel for Westinghouse and Game Show Network for Sony. Dick lives in Southern California and is President of his own consulting business based in Santa Monica, Block Communications Group, Inc. The firm’s expertise is focused on domestic and international projects in broadcasting and cable with an emphasis on distribution, marketing, management, programming, production and new ventures. Clients include major broadcast and cable networks and systems, new technology companies, TV stations, major studios, publishers, producers and trade associations. In 2002 The Tournament of Roses, which brings the annual Rose Parade to worldwide audiences, appointed Block to the position of Director/Rose Parade International TV Services, to focus on worldwide distribution of the annual New Year’s Day event. Block has taught at Stanford, UCLA and, since 2007 “TV Station Management” at USC. Over the years, Block has also testified before numerous congressional committees and served as an expert witness. Board memberships include the National Association of Broadcasters, the Association of Independent TV Stations, the TV Bureau of Advertising, the Broadcast Education Association, the National Committee for Employer Support of the Guard & Reserve, the Stanford Alumni Association and Easter Seals of Southern California.
Dick continues to be involved in Northern California television and the Academy. He has several clients in Northern California and Hawaii and has been involved in various NATAS events including: Silver Circle Luncheons; the NATAS 50th anniversary celebration and the NATAS / NAPTE student career workshop events. In fact, Dick’s major community involvement has been with the NAPTE (National Association of Program Television Executives) Educational Foundation which offers student career workshops around the country. For each workshop Dick contacts the local NATAS chapter to be a co-sponsor (at no cost) of the event. The San Francisco workshop was in 2008 at KPIX. Dick has also been a regular contributor to the TV Academy Scholarship Fund and is a member of the Silver Circle Class of 1999.
Jan Moellering began her broadcast career as the producer/host of a 15-minute weekly show about her high school. She attended San Jose State College (now University) as one of only a handful of women majoring in Radio & TV Production. In her junior year (1959) Jan began her television career at KNTV working the phone banks for a new contest show. She soon became show coordinator for Record Hop. The show ended in 1964 and Jan spent the next decades in the Production Department keeping track of, among other things, all of the tapes that came and went out of the studio. She is now in Programming, managing the program schedules. Jan has seen the transition from black and white film in the 50’s… to color cameras and color tape in the late 60’s… to today’s all-digital technology. “I’ve seen KNTV grow from a tiny station in San Jose to an NBC O&O in the San Francisco Bay Area without getting out of my chair.” By all accounts, in her 50 years at KNTV she has had an amazing and impactful career.
Luis started his career on the stage as an actor at the age of 13 in his native El Salvador. His first television job was in 1956 at YSEB-TV, San Salvador, El Salvador. In 1962, he moved to San Francisco and stints at KOFY, KBRG, KLOK, KIQI radio, KEMO-TV and KQED-TV, and even hosted a national game show. He joined KDTV in 1975 and became a mainstay on the station’s evening Spanish-Language newscasts until his retirement in March of 2006. An Emmy® award winner himself, Luis is a former member of the NATAS Board of Governors and founder of the KDTV/NATAS’ “Exito Escolar” broadcasting and journalism scholarship program for Latino students. A member of the “Silver Circle” class of 1994, Luis received the TV Academy’s highest honor, “The Governors’ Award,” in May, 2001. He has been instrumental in the founding of a public park and a senior citizens center, organized numerous relief drives to benefit Latin American countries during disasters and lead campaigns for various cultural and arts groups. Luis is still very active in countless non-profit organizations that help Bay Area Latinos, a sought-after speaker and master of ceremonies at community events, a freelance actor, announcer, director and producer of commercials for non-broadcast educational productions and the Principal/Owner of “Hispanic Multimedia,” a Public Relations & Advertising Consultant company for the Hispanic Market.
Jack Hanson began his broadcast career in the KPIX mailroom after serving in the U.S. Air Force and graduating from San Francisco State. Since then, Jack has brought his dry wit to KRON, KPIX, KTVU, KGO-TV and the Cable Health Network. Currently, Jack is the Host of Comcast Newsmakers, a news interview program on CNN Headline News on Comcast. In 1957, the third generation San Franciscan landed a Stage Manager’s job at KRON working on live shows such as NBC’s Wide Wide World. In 1961, he started doing regular on-camera fill-in work. Then came a 13-week stint as the Host on Watch and Win, a live quiz show on KTVU-TV. By the mid-1960’s, he was hosting his own regular program six days a week on KPIX. Jack’s Place featured Jack interviewing local celebrities and drawing cartoons. Those cartoons ultimately became his trademark. As the weatherman on KGO-TV, he drew cartoons on the weather map – such as one of a shivering dog at the coldest spot in the country. He also co-hosted KGO’s morning talk show A.M. San Francisco for 5 years with former Miss America, Nancy Fleming. Jack is a published cartoonist; has done artwork for the Sierra Club’s publication; appeared on television, movies, commercials, industrial television programs; hosted award shows; and served as emcee for many charities such as Juvenile Diabetes and the S.F. Youth Guidance Center.
During his colorful 56 years in the Northern California sports broadcast industry, Franklin Mieuli has been a remarkable pioneer, bringing major sporting events to Bay Area fans.
The Bay Area native graduated from college in 1949 and went to work in the advertising department of the San Francisco Brewing Company, sponsors of the 49ers radio broadcasts. In 1954, Franklin produced the first 49’ers telecasts and in 1956 he formed Franklin Mieuli & Associates (FM&A). He acquired radio and TV production rights to the Giants and Warriors, engineered games for the A’s and Raiders and produced the radio coverage of the 1960 Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley. In 1962, he became the first sportsman with ownership in three major sports franchises in one area: the 49’ers, Warriors and Giants. In 1987 he became the first and only sportsman to own an NBA team for 25 consecutive years. He also owned radio stations KPUP & KTMX.
His company still handles engineering for over 30 professional and collegiate sporting teams throughout the U.S. and Canada. Franklin also owns Hi*Speed Duplication and Franklin Mieuli Sports Enterprises. His love of sports has brought him five Super Bowl championship rings and one NBA World Championship.
A. Richard (Dick) Robertson began his broadcasting career at KSL-TV in Salt Lake City in 1951. He remained there until 1956, when he took a job as the Advertising Manager for Television Age Magazine in New York City. In 1958 he became the Promotion Manager for KTVU in Oakland. A year later, KRON stole him away, and he remained at 4 for 18 years, until 1977.
That’s when he followed his wife, LaNore, to Flagstaff, Arizona, where she had obtained a professorship at the Northern Arizona University School of Dentistry. Dick became a professor in the university’s communications program, teaching journalism and public relations courses.
In 1979 Dick returned to the Bay Area, and worked for three years as KQED’s Director of Corporate Communications, before starting his own firm, Mother Lode Communications. For fourteen years he and his second wife Rose produced the Comedy Day Celebration in Golden Gate Park.
When he “retired” in 1996 he moved to Gold Country, and subsequently became the marketing manager for the Tuolumne County Film Commission, attracting film, TV commercials, and documentaries to the scenic foothills. Even now, in his second “retirement,” he did publicity work for his homeowners association in Henderson, Nevada.
Dick has served as the NATAS Chapter President, Executive Director, and represented us as Chair of the San Francisco Ballot Simplification Committee. He’s a past president of the Broadcast Promotion Association, the Sales Promotion Executives Association (NorCal), and has served on the boards of too many organizations to list here.
As well as in Arizona, Dick has taught at Golden Gate University, and at San Francisco and San Jose State.
Vic started his broadcasting career in 1952 as a radio disc jockey but moved quickly into television joining KJEO Fresno in 1956 as on-camera talent doing news and hosting movies. In 1962 he joined KCRL in Reno as their first announcer-director. He moved from that to news anchor, sports director and ultimately program director. Vic then moved on to what became a 20-year run at KRON-TV in San Francisco as announcer-director. While at KRON-TV he worked as a stage manager and associate director for NBC Sports on West Coast telecasts of the World Series, Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, and numerous football and basketball games. In 1986 Vic joined the staff of KOVR-TV in Sacramento as an an nouncer and director.
Jack La Lanne just turned 88, and got his Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He started in 1936 with a health studio in Oakland. He developed the first models of the exercise equipment that is standard in health spas today. By the early 1950s, he had taken to the new medium of television in order to reach more people. Live shows at KGO-TV, then on to LA and syndication. Ever the innovator, Jack used television to reach out to millions of Americans everywhere with his gospel message of get up, work out and feel better. At the present, Jack La Lanne is still coming up with incredible new ideas and exercise programs. Together with his wife, Elaine, he travels throughout the world, lecturing and inspiring people to greater heights through exercise and nutrition.
ELAINE LA LANNE was a junk food junkie, living on chocolate doughnuts, candy, soft drinks, hot dogs, and ice cream. That was when she was 27. Elaine Doyle was working at KGO, the ABC-TV station in San Francisco, where she appeared on and was the talent booker for The Les Malloy Show. She would sit in for Les and ended up hosting the show on Mondays with Freddie Jorgenson. It was there that she first met Jack La Lanne. Elaine, who claims she feels 19, has just turned 71. She has written five books. She is also a lecturer, civic leader and businesswoman (in fact, she runs Befit Enterprises).
LUCILLE BLISS, the “Lady of 1,000 voices,” was born in Manhattan and came to San Francisco at the age of 12. Her first national radio show was Professor Puzzlewit on NBC followed by such national shows as: Are These Our Children?, ABC; Pat Novak, ABC; Candy Matson, NBC; Morey Amsterdan, CBS; The Edger Bergen Show, NBC. Lucille went to Hollywood in 1950 to play Anastasia in Walt Disney’s Cinderella. She returned to San Francisco as the voice of Crusader Rabbit. She had her own children’s TV show, Happy Birthday to You, which ran for five years. She has done many Hanna-Barbera parts. She was Smurffette on the Smurffs. She still commutes each week to Los Angeles for work and does local voiceovers and voice coaching. Lucille has been active in the Broadcast Legends.
DAVID MEBLIN is a true television pioneer in the areas of advertising, sales and syndication. He joined KPIX in March 1948, working in the morning for the Army debarking troop ships and the TV station in the afternoon, where he handled the station’s first advertising contract – Sterling Furniture in the test pattern! He then affiliated with KGO-TV Sales in January 1950, later becoming a national sales representative with Avery-Knodel in March 1952 and remained for 23 years. Retired for two weeks in 1975 he formed Mighty Minute Programs. Mighty Minute is a company that pioneered the development of and syndication of television news features. He launched Dr. Dean Edell and Joe Carcione (The Green Grocer) into national syndication. Dave took Caltran from his home in Palo Alto to his office in San Francisco each day until he recently retired, at the age of 91. He is currently living in Menlo Park.