Bonds (February 23, 1932 - December 13, 2014) is an American newscaster and television reporter, best known for his work at WXYZ-TV in Detroit, Michigan. Bonds became an Action News announcer that began in the early 1970s.
Video Bill Bonds
Initial career
He was born on February 23, 1932. Originally from Detroit, Michigan and a graduate of the University of Detroit, Bond became famous initially as a reporter for Contact News at WKNR-AM, known as Keener 13. He is also a reporter for several Michigan radio stations including WCAR, WPON and WQTE.
Bonds merged with WXYZ in 1964 as a part-time booth broadcaster. He walked to the reader's desk with Barney Morris. He and WXYZ first became famous for the station coverage of the 1967 Detroit riots.
Maps Bill Bonds
News Witness, Action News
Bonds were transferred by ABC to become a newsreader at KABC-TV in Los Angeles in 1968 to help launch the Eyewitness News version. He returned to WXYZ-TV in 1971 just as the station began a major update from its news department under the flag of Action News. Two years later, it became the highest-rated newscast in Detroit, a position he held until 2011.
WXYZ-TV borrows most of the basic elements of the Eyewitness News format from fellow ABC-owned and operated stations (WXYZ is ABC O & amp O from sign-on in 1948 until ABC sold it in 1985 as part of a merger with Capital Cities Communications). However, it adopts a rather difficult approach under the influence of Bonds. Despite his duties in Los Angeles, the Bonds anchored at WABC-TV in New York from 1975 to 1976 after which he returned to Detroit. When WXYZ expanded into a 5 pm news broadcast in 1982, the Bond would anchor the news and continue as a newscaster at 11 pm. broadcast news until 1995. He is also sometimes filled as an anchor of the ABC weekend news broadcast.
Interviews and talk shows
During the 1980s and 1990s, Bonds conducted an interview segment at 5 pm. a story called "Up Front," where he faces news-makers with difficult questions. One of his frequent goals was the long-time Mayor of Detroit Coleman Young; Their match is local legend (including the boxing challenge provided by Bonds to Young in July 1989). The segment is unique because it often features national newsmakers interviewed by Bonds via satellite. (A notable incident occurred in 1991 when Senator Utah Orrin Hatch stormed to a place specially designated by the Bond.
In 1989, he launched "Bond On," a primetime format show in which he interviewed everyone from the presidents (Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton) to Michigan governors (Jim Blanchard and John Engler) to car executives (Lee Iacocca, William Clay Ford and Roger Smith) for sports figures (Detroit Tigers manager, Sparky Anderson and Detroit Pistons player Joe Dumars).
In 1991, Bonds participated in city hall meetings nationally broadcasted for Democratic presidential candidates Clinton, Jerry Brown and Paul Tsongas.
Bonds join rival WJBK-TV as host of 11 pm. talk shows, Bonds Tonight in WJBK-TV and also news broadcasts. He would return to WXYZ for several months in 1999 to read the editorial, but went on to lend his voice to radio and TV commercials, especially the Detroit Gardner-White furniture company.
Ads, radio jobs
Bonds have become the sound of several radio stations in the Detroit area, and even paired with one of its partners on the WXYZ reader table, Doris Biscoe, to throw the Better Made potato chips. In addition, one of his favorite beverages has become a local favorite. The "Bill Bonds" - (a mix of Royal Whiskey Crown and butterscotch-flavored schnapps) are usually booked around the Detroit-area location.
Bonds sparked controversy in 2001 for the Gardner-White advertisement he recorded after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Inside, a shocked and angry Bond said, according to an article in the Detroit News, "[The terrorists] think they know how to kill and fight, but America will come, bin Laden. and endlessly.... You just bought a one-way ticket to hell. "
On October 3, 2011, Bill Bonds launched the 1090 WCAR with Bellows and Fisher Show with Rachel Nevada, along with fellow Detroit reporter Rich Fisher, Rachel Nevada and meteorologist Jim Jadaus (Channel 62) Jim Madaus.
Other appearances and next life
The Bond also has a few sections as a broadcaster in the 1970s episode of Needed Thief and as himself in a brilliant acting in the 1971 film Escape from Planet of the Apes and Films 1987 < i> Robocop .
The bond also made an appearance in Eminem's music video for his hit song "Mockingbird", as a newscaster covering the imprisonment of Eminem's former wife, Kim Mathers.
To celebrate WXYZ-TV's 60th anniversary, Bond returned to the news desk once again to link a special news release with former co-workers John Kelly and Marilyn Turner on October 21, 2008.
He died at his home in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan on December 13, 2014 at the age of 82 years, due to a heart attack.
Movieography
- Needed Thief (1970, TV Series) - Newscaster â ⬠<â â¬
- Escape from Planet of the Apes (1971) - TV Newscaster (last film role)
References
External links
- YouTube clip from Bill Bonds reporting about John Lennon's death; including comments on gun control â â¬
Source of the article : Wikipedia