Back when it became fashionable for local TV news broadcasts to include a brief editorial segment, they were usually delivered by the owner or station manager. Thing is, these gentlemen (and I'm not being sexist, as such execs were almost universally male back then, and still are to a great extent) were not primarily trained as on-camera talent, and sometimes their uncomfortable, stiff demeanor or personal quirks could tend to undermine the seriousness of the position they were espousing.
In Central Florida, I recall a couple of examples. WFTV (channel 9) had station manager Walter Windsor. A genuinely nice guy, according to those who knew him, but on-camera he displayed all the personality of a dead fish. Interesting, due to the fact that Windsor was also active acting in local theater productions. Of course, the fact that his roles were mostly in productions by a local theater group that he bankrolled (*ahem*) lead one to believe that it wasn't his talent as a thespian that got him those parts in the first place.
WESH (channel 2) had station manager John E. Evans deliver its editorials. A pleasant enough chap, but one could hardly avoid being distracted by the fact that his speaking voice was almost a dead ringer for Reggie Van Gleason. :
How about your own locals? Any good examples of editorializers who should have stayed behind the camera?
(And, BTW, do local stations even DO editorials anymore? I don't watch enough local news to know...)
In Central Florida, I recall a couple of examples. WFTV (channel 9) had station manager Walter Windsor. A genuinely nice guy, according to those who knew him, but on-camera he displayed all the personality of a dead fish. Interesting, due to the fact that Windsor was also active acting in local theater productions. Of course, the fact that his roles were mostly in productions by a local theater group that he bankrolled (*ahem*) lead one to believe that it wasn't his talent as a thespian that got him those parts in the first place.
WESH (channel 2) had station manager John E. Evans deliver its editorials. A pleasant enough chap, but one could hardly avoid being distracted by the fact that his speaking voice was almost a dead ringer for Reggie Van Gleason. :
How about your own locals? Any good examples of editorializers who should have stayed behind the camera?
(And, BTW, do local stations even DO editorials anymore? I don't watch enough local news to know...)