Sixty-seven years ago this week, on Oct. 30, 1947, Baltimore's first television station, WMAR, went on the air.
Sixty-seven years ago this week, on Oct. 30, 1947, Baltimore's first television station, WMAR, went on the air.
There have been times the last few years when it has felt like "Frontline" was the last, hard-hitting journalistic outfit left on American television.
Piper Kerman, author of "Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women's Prison," will be one of the featured speakers at the Big Change Baltimore forum from 3:30 to 7 p.m. today at Center Stage, 700 North Calvert St. Her book has been adapted into a Netflix series for which...
I keep waiting for something good to say about Greg Gumbel, but I’m starting to think it’s never going to happen.
WBFF will launch a 4 p.m. weekday newscast starting Jan. 12, Bill Fanshawe, the station's general manager, confirmed today.
I thought I was pretty hard on Fox Sports in my Monday column headlined "Fox hits bottom with Sunday telecast of Ravens."
Ron Eyester is upset.
It’s a story night after the Tribal Council where Kelley was sent home. Dale, obviously, is upset, but I think he’s taking it a little far when he says that she was "slaughtered" in front of him. He says he’s not going to give up until he can’t talk...
After a goofy and spooky opening of "Off With Their Heads" by Florence + the Machine, Len Goodman emerges from an upright coffin. Yay, Len! Oh, and Erin Andrews is back, too. The gang's all here.
Gotham is a place for crooks and cynics, but certainly no heroes.
The latest episode of "The Walking Dead," "Four Walls and a Roof," was very much a transitional episode. The climax occurred midway through, with the final wrap-up of the Terminus storyline, but what lies ahead looks every bit as grim as what came before.