Bill Burns (anchor)
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Bill Burns (1913 - September 16, 1997) was an American journalist and news anchor.
Burns anchored the news for over three decades in Pittsburgh, where he worked for KDKA, which was, at that time, the largest station in the market.
[edit] Career
Burns was a native of Philadelphia. After serving in World War II and earning a Purple Heart, Burns came to Pittsburgh in 1946 to work for radio station KQV. He settled in Pittsburgh with his wife, and the couple subsequently had two children, Michael and Patti.
He worked for KQV until 1953, when he went to work for what was then WDTV, Channel 3. (WDTV became a CBS affiliate and changed its call letters to KDKA in 1955.)
Burns was a familiar face to Pittsburghers; for much of the time he was at KDKA, he anchored the noon and 11 p.m. newscasts. Burns became a part of journalism history when in 1976, he began to share anchoring duties with daughter Patti Burns, who had become an anchor in her own right. Their pairing, initially derided as "The Patti and Daddy Show" garnered high ratings. [1]
Burns was noted for being a driven reporter who would often inject his personal opinion into a news story. He was also prone to making jokes and off-the-cuff comments; he once introduced the soap opera that followed his newscast as "The Young and the Breastless".
Burns died on September 17, 1997, at the age of 84.