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News anchor dies on air
News anchor dies on air




news anchor dies on air

When Greg left, her elder brother Tim moved in.

news anchor dies on air

After Chubbuck's parents were divorced, her mother Peg and younger brother Greg came to live in the Florida home. Sally Quinn of The Washington Post later reported that she had painted the bedroom and canopied bed to look like that of a young teenager.

news anchor dies on air

Several years before her death, Chubbuck had moved into her family's summer cottage on Siesta Key. Immediately before joining ABC affiliate WXLT-TV (now WWSB), she worked in the traffic department of WTOG in St. In 1968, Chubbuck left WQED to spend four years as a hospital computer operator and two years with a cable television firm in Sarasota, Florida. That same year, she worked in Canton, Ohio, and, for three months, at WQED-TV in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as an assistant producer for two local shows, Women's World and Keys to the City. Career Early workĬhubbuck worked for WVIZ in Cleveland between 19, and attended a summer workshop in radio and television at New York University in 1967. Chubbuck attended Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, for one year, majoring in theater arts, then attended Endicott College in Beverly, Massachusetts, before earning a degree in broadcasting at Boston University in 1965. During her years at Laurel, she jokingly formed a "Dateless Wonder Club" with other "rejected" girls who did not have dates on Saturday nights. Chubbuck attended the Laurel School for Girls in Shaker Heights, a suburb of Cleveland. Christine Chubbuck was born in Hudson, Ohio, the daughter of Margaretha D.






News anchor dies on air