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  1. May 1, 2024 · Warren A. Bell Jr. is a New Orleans native with a long-established presence in broadcast media as a TV & Radio news anchor, news manager and talk show host, in addition to producing numerous documentaries on critical topics over those years. Bell anchored his first radio news broadcast in 1968 at WYLD-AM while still attending St. Augustine High ...

  2. Feb 29, 2024 · Categories: Louisiana Insider. As a former TV news anchor, Warren Bell reported news of the day. Now in retirement, Bell is discovering news from the past and his sources are archives and cemeteries. Bell joins Louisiana Life Executive Editor Errol Laborde, along with producer Kelly Massicot, to discuss his new documentary “Buried History ...

  3. Jan 22, 2021 · Warren Bell. Sonya Masingale’s interview with Warren Bell, the first black television anchor in New Orleans. He discusses: the impact of his cocaine addiction on his job at WDSU-TV;...

  4. Aug 30, 2021 · That first-hand role in the way local broadcast sports news was gathered, packaged and presented came courtesy of then-WDSU news anchor Warren Bell, the first African-American anchor in New Orleans history and, at the time, the shop steward for the local chapter of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists union.

  5. Veteran broadcast news anchor Warren A. Bell, Jr had not personally visited the tomb since 1985 when his paternal grandmother was buried there. He soon learned that his great-grandfather Jean Vigne, for whom the tomb was built, was one of New Orleans’ original trap set drummers at the beginning of the 20 th Century.

  6. Saturday, April 1, 2017 For Immediate Release. Legendary New Orleans Journalist Warren Bell and CBS Correspondent Michelle Miller to Serve As Honorary #NABJ17 Co-Chairs. New Orleans business and community leaders serve as local corporate partners for the 2017 National Association of Black Journalists Convention.

  7. Feb 6, 2024 · Warren Bell walks viewers through the process of researching names from New Orleans’ past, using such resources as the New Orleans Cemetery Database.

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