Latest news with #KCRA
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Legendary Sacramento Anchor Stan Atkinson Dies at 92
Veteran Sacramento reporter and anchor Stan Atkinson died on Sunday. He was 92. Atkinson reported for KCRA and KOVR as an anchor for nearly 40 years. He retired from local news in 1999. At one time local paper The Sacramento Bee called him 'the man who owns Sacramento.' At the age of 25, Atkinson embarked on a career in Sacramento at a station that had just gotten off the ground. It was 1957, and in walked a fresh-faced, youthful man with a tight crew cut. He'd been recruited from a small television station and the owner of KCRA at the time, Gene Kelly, had no idea he'd been hired. Kelly turned on his TV one night and saw the 11 o'clock newscast only to show up in the morning editorial meeting the next day asking 'who in the hell ever hired that damn kid?!' Instead of firing him, Kelly kept Atkinson, beginning a decades-long relationship between KCRA and Stan Atkinson. They had a newscast in the beginning…it was 10 minutes long. Five of it was sports. Television news was different in the 1950s. For one, it was sponsored and those sponsors' products showed up on set. The entertainment had a fried pie company. The network's 'Huntley/Brinkley news hour' had Camel cigarettes. And Stan Atkinson had Hostess. 'The floor man would roll in a table that was decorated with open or still packaged Hostess Cinnamon Dainties,' Atkinson described in a 2015 interview. 'And, it was up to me to open a package, pull one out, hold it up, take a bite, and say, Hostess Cinnamon Dainties. I'd say. Got it. Hostess Cinnamon Dainties. I'd take another bite. Get them.'"Atkinson was a principal fundraiser helping to raise money to build the $2.2 million California Vietnam Veterans Memorial on the State Capitol grounds," the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences said on its website.
Yahoo
27-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Stan Atkinson, cornerstone of Sacramento broadcast news, dies at 92
Longtime Sacramento news anchor Stan Atkinson died on Sunday at the age of 92, Channel 3 (KCRA) and Channel 13 (KOVR) reported Monday morning. For nearly three decades, Atkinson was a mainstay of Sacramento broadcast news, earning legend status for his boots-on-the-ground reporting on wars across the globe and his charitable work raising millions of dollars for organizations in the region. He spent 24 years at KCRA before moving to KOVR in 1994. The Sacramento Bee's Bob Sylva called Atkinson 'the man who owns Sacramento' in a 1986 profile. 'Viewers ... see KCRA as their station and Stan Atkinson as their news caster,' Sylva's story read. 'Until some other local anchor can peer down the barrel of a camera and emote and ad-lib as artfully as Atkinson, that affiliation is unlikely to change.' Walt Gray, an anchor on Channel 10 (KXTV), considered Atkinson a mentor when they worked the same shift at KCRA. 'When I got to town (in 1988), I had heard of him, but I'd never seen anything like that before — a guy who was so dominant in his field, yet doing as much charitable work as possible with an already busy schedule,' Gray said. 'That's leading by example.' Atkinson had charity events and benefits 'scheduled nearly every evening,' Sylva wrote. He adamantly supported the work of the Sisters of Mercy in the Sacramento region, according to Gray. Steve Swatt, a former KCRA politics reporter, said he remembered Atkinson's insatiable need to find news in every corner of the globe. 'He simply had to be where news was happening ... whether it was Cambodia, Afghanistan, Cuba, Guatemala, or many other world hot spots,' Swatt wrote in response to a request for people to share their recollections of Atkinson. 'He had the clout to convince management that these stories needed to be covered, delivering compelling reports that were the talk of Northern California and a significant reason why KCRA was so highly regarded,' he wrote. Atkinson retired in 1999 after five years on Channel 13. A gala honoring his career held earlier that year was attended by 900 people, The Bee reported at the time. KCRA reporter Kurtis Ming witnessed Atkinson's gravity in the community firsthand — 15 years after his retirement. In 2014, Ming took Atkinson to lunch in Sacramento, and he was in awe seeing restaurant-goers light up upon recognizing Atkinson. The local legend took time to shake hands with every diner in the room, Ming said. 'They don't make them like him anymore,' Ming said. Gray had similar memories from when the two would grab a glass of wine at Paragary's after the evening news. 'He was so friendly to everyone, but that's who he was,' Gray said. 'He wasn't doing it to be the anchorman ... he was as kind as could be.' Ming and Gray both agreed Atkinson could be considered the Walter Cronkite of Sacramento. 'He certainly was the dominant anchorman of his era,' Gray said. 'The 'right-place-at-the-right-time' guy who really was interested in journalism, and he was so easy on the air too.' Matías Bombal, film historian and friend of Atkinson, said it was his connection with the community that set Atkinson apart from broadcast news' heavy hitters. '(He) was so intermeshed with everyone in town,' he said. '(He) would talk to anyone, from a garage mechanic to a visiting titled person, with the same ease.' Though he was regularly in contact with Atkinson throughout the years, Ming said one of his biggest career regrets is that he never worked directly with the man he called an icon of Sacramento. 'What a thrill it was to know him,' Ming said.
Yahoo
26-05-2025
- General
- Yahoo
Stan Atkinson's son Mike, colleague Roy Stearns remember news legend
Stan Atkinson's son Mike and former KCRA colleague Roy Stearns recall Stan Atkinson after the legendary journalist's death.


CBS News
26-05-2025
- General
- CBS News
Legendary Sacramento news anchor Stan Atkinson dies at 92
Sacramento news legend Stan Atkinson has died at the age of 92, according to his family. Atkinson's Sacramento TV career stretched for nearly four decades at KCRA and KOVR. Atkinson first started his career thinking he would find success in the radio industry, but that changed quickly. "They said, 'You're going back to work in the TV station.' I said, 'I can't do that, I don't have a coat and tie,'" he said in an interview on Primetime Sacramento in March of 2024. This marked the beginning of his TV career, sitting behind the anchor desk at KCRA before moving to KOVR. Atkinson reported from multiple wars, including Cambodia, Afghanistan and Serbia. He was once grazed by a sniper's bullet. "All of a sudden, I hear his gunfire, and all of a sudden, I feel a 30-[caliber] part the hair on the back of my neck," he said. "It didn't hit me, but it came so close." One of his first stories exposed appalling conditions at a hospital in Auburn. Atkinson described the Sacramento area as "special," which made it easy for him to stay in the market. He retired from TV in 1999.
Yahoo
30-04-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
In a break from progressives, Newsom says soliciting older minors for sex should be a felony
Gov. Gavin Newsom spoke out Tuesday in support of legislation that sought to increase the punishment to a felony for soliciting a 16- or 17-year-old for sex in California after Democrats in the state Assembly watered down the bill. 'The law should treat all sex predators who solicit minors the same — as a felony, regardless of the intended victim's age," Newsom said in a statement first provided to KCRA. "Full stop.' It's unusual for the Democratic governor to take a position before a bill reaches his desk, but Newsom has interjected in the legislative process a few times to support increasing penalties for sex crimes against minors, opposing members of his own party. The bill sought to criminalize loitering with intent to buy sex and build on existing state law to make it a felony to solicit anyone under 18 for sex. It's currently a felony in California to pay for sex with a minor under the age of 16. State law also carries stronger felony penalties for sex trafficking a minor under age 18. Democrats refused to allow the proposal to be heard in a public safety committee hearing Tuesday unless Assemblymember Maggy Krell (D-Sacramento), who carried the bill, agreed to remove the felony charge for soliciting 16- and 17-year-olds from the legislation. The action from Democrats inspired a wave of criticism about the party's priorities during the hearing and on social media. "These are girls, and these are people that our society should be doing everything they can to protect," Assemblymember Tom Lackey (R-Palmdale) said during the hearing. "So why are we protecting the predator?" Democrats defended the decision and said they will hold additional hearings on the topic in the future. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.