Sharon Tay

Sharon Tay (born October 15, 1966) is an American journalist and former host of two programs on the MSNBC network and formerly a news reporter for KCBS-TV and KCAL-TV in Los Angeles before getting laid off in 2020 after 13 years with the duopoly networks.[2][3][4]

Sharon Tay
Born (1966-10-15) October 15, 1966
EducationBoston University
OccupationNews anchor
EmployerBNN (1986–1992)
KMST-TV (1992)
KTLA-TV (1992–2004)
MSNBC (2005)
KCBS-TV/KCAL-TV (2007–2020)
AwardsEmmy Award (5 times)
Associated Press Award (3 times)[1]

Life and career

Tay was born in Singapore and immigrated to the United States at the age of seven. Her family settled in Connecticut for several years before relocating to the Philippines. She spent her sophomore year at the International School Manila and then returned to the United States to complete her high-school education at a boarding school in Massachusetts. Tay attended Boston University, where she obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in Broadcast Journalism, with a minor in International Relations.[3]

Tay's first big break came in Boston, where she anchored, wrote and produced a weekend news show for a local cable station. In 1993, KCCN-TV, now KION in Salinas, California, hired her as a general assignment reporter / consumer investigative reporter. Soon thereafter, Tribune Broadcasting recruited Tay for its KTLA-5 Los Angeles staff as a general assignment reporter. She went on to become a weekend anchor and, ultimately, an anchor for the early morning edition of the news.[3]

Tay left KTLA in December 2004 in order to pursue opportunities at MSNBC. Her hosting duties at MSNBC included stints at "MSNBC at the Movies" and "MSNBC Entertainment Hot List", where she hosted the show.[4] Tay subsequently returned to Los Angeles local news at CBS 2 and KCAL9, the #1 prime newscast in the Los Angeles market.[3] In November 2013, Tay was moved to KCBS-TV's morning newscast from 4:30-7:00 a.m. and the midday newscast from 11:00-11:30 a.m. In October 2018 Tay moved to KCAL9’s 4pm and 9pm newscasts.[5]

On May 27, 2020, KCBS layed Tay off. The cuts were part of a company-wide cost-cutting that comes nearly six months after the merger of Viacom and CBS, a corporate union that executives said would bring $750 million in savings.[6]

gollark: Probably nobody wants to have to deal with primitives which might randomly not work fully or reason about all the underlying weirdness continuously, and with 2/3 of the nodes not doing anything you'll be wasting a lot of space.
gollark: !esowiki Macron
gollark: Just name it something else?
gollark: The new osmarks.net one?
gollark: <@!224379582785126401> I feel like the robust-first computing thing is operating at the wrong level of abstraction.

References

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