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・ Ann Marie Calhoun
・ Ann Marie DeAngelo
・ Ann Marie Di Mambro
・ Ann Marie Doory
・ Ann Marie Fleming
・ Ann Marie Flynn
・ Ann Marie Hayes
・ Ann Marie Lipinski
・ Ann Marie Lynch
・ Ann Marie Rogers
・ Ann Marie Starr
・ Ann Marlowe
・ Ann Marsh
・ Ann Marshall
・ Ann Martin
Ann Martin (journalist)
・ Ann Marvet
・ Ann Mary Hamilton
・ Ann Mary Newton
・ Ann Mather
・ Ann Maurice
・ Ann Maxwell
・ Ann May
・ Ann McCrea
・ Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer
・ Ann McGovern
・ Ann McKechin
・ Ann McKee
・ Ann McKenna
・ Ann McLane Kuster


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Ann Martin (journalist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ann Martin (journalist)

Ann Martin (born Martha Gebhardt) is a former award-winning journalist and a news anchor for CBS owned-and-operated KCBS-TV and KCAL-TV television stations in Los Angeles, California.
Martin was born in Portland, Oregon and raised in Everett, Washington, where her father Paul Marmont worked at the former Everett Western Gear facility. She attended the nearby University of Washington, where she majored in communications and earned a Bachelor of Arts in 1972.
Shortly after graduation, Martin began her broadcasting career at KIRO-TV as a weathercaster for the station's morning newscasts. She would soon advance become the first woman in the Seattle market to solo anchor a newscasts when she was promoted to weekend co-anchor.
After reporting and anchoring for KIRO for a few years, Martin moved to Los Angeles in April 1976 to work for KABC-TV as a reporter. Again she soon worked her way up to an anchor position, initially co-anchoring the Saturday editions of ''Eyewitness News''. In the fall of 1980, KABC expanded its news to three hours on weeknights, and Martin began co-anchoring the 5 p.m. hour with Paul Moyer; the on-air partnership would last for almost 12 years until Moyer's return to rival KNBC-TV in 1992.
During her years at KABC, Martin also had brief hosting stints on many of the station's popular local programs, including ''A.M. Los Angeles'' and ''3-3-0''. She also was a substitute host on ABC's ''Good Morning America''.
In the spring of 1994, Martin moved to KCBS-TV initially to co-anchor the 5 and 11 p.m. newscasts; the reported $1.7-million-a-year deal, like her former KABC colleague Moyer's deal with KNBC two years earlier, was highly publicized by the local press. In later years, Martin would be reunited with her other former co-workers: sports anchor Jim Hill was already at KCBS after his five-year stint at KABC; Harold Greene, who succeeded Moyer as Martin's co-anchor, would join in early 2001; Laura Diaz joined in 2002 and Johnny Mountain arrived in 2005. While at KCBS, Martin also co-hosted the CBS network special ''Beyond Belief - Amazing True Stories!'' with Pat O'Brien, and for a brief period also anchored the female-oriented newscast ''Women 2 Women''.
On April 1, 2008, she and Greene that informed that her contract would not be renewed. Media reports speculated that her contract expired June 1, 2008. By this time, Martin and Greene were anchoring the 4 p.m. news on KCAL and the 6 p.m. news on KCBS. CBS, through a press spokesperson, stated that both had chosen to retire, but there was no official comment from Martin herself.
Martin has earned three local Emmy Awards and two Golden Mike awards for her reporting throughout her career.
Christina Applegate's character in "Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy" is reported to have been inspired by Martin.

==References==



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