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The past & future collided at WRAL-TV as three legendary broadcasters returned to join a fourth for a reunion newscast. Former anchors Charlie Gaddy and Bobbie Battista, retired weathercaster Bob DeBardelaben and current Sports Anchor Tom Suiter anchored the 6pm newscast on Friday, Nov. 18, 2006 as part of the station’s yearlong celebration of our 50th anniversary. Gaddy has been retired for 12 years and DeBardelaben for 17, but they didn’t miss a beat. And Battista and Gaddy easily fell back into their comfortable repartee together. The 80’s fashions and magnetic weather map were gone, but the team clicked together as if their heyday as WRAL’s ratings winners were just yesterday. Gaddy and Battista came into much clearer view with WRAL’s high-definition, all-digital new operation than on the grainy sets of their era of news dominance. DeBardelaben perhaps had the most difficult job. During his formidable tenure as “The Biggest Name in Weather” DeBardelaben used magnetic sun and cloud graphics on a stationary map. For the reunion newscast he was introduced to the chroma key, Greg Fishel’s green screen. The screen requires the weathercaster to look into a monitor hidden just off the viewer’s screen to see the weather map as he points to the “invisible” map on the wall behind him. Quite a feat of coordination. DeBardelaben has always been known for being quick on his feet, and his starring weather role on the Nov 18th newscast was no exception. "I'm personally thrilled about this reunion because, having worked with Charlie, Bobbie and Bob several decades ago, it will be a special treat to see them back on WRAL-TV, even if it's just for one night," Jim Hefner Tom Suiter has spent all of his 34 year broadcasting career at WRAL-TV. When he came on board Suiter said that about the only thing he knew about television was how to turn on the set. He started at $90 a week with no experience on the air. Bobbie Battista joined WRAL in 1974 as Jim Goodmon’s secretary. He is now CBC’s President & CEO but at the time had just stepped up to the role of President. She moved on to the newsroom as a morning news producer. She then became part of the Triangle’s first male-female anchor duo with Gaddy. Gaddy spent 24-years at WRAL-TV, the anchor of the newscast in every sense of the word. He reported on everything from hurricanes to the State Fair, winning numerous awards and inductions to the N.C. Broadcasters Hall of Fame. He was an advocate for, and active in, community service while at the station, a mission which he continues today. DeBardelaben started out as the host of the “Dialing for Dollars” call-in program, gaining a large following among Triangle viewers. He spent three decades at the station, most of which were spent as WRAL’s full time weather anchor. He was, and still is, wildly popular, viewed as a celebrity of Hollywood proportions here in Raleigh.
Battista left WRAL in 1981 to join CNN as one of its original anchors. DeBardelaben retired from WRAL in 1989, and Gaddy followed in 1994. Gaddy frequently hosts some of the station’s “WRAListens” installments and the occasional documentary. And DeBardelaben says he is still recognized and asked, “How’s the weather, Bob?” Suiter still graces the sports desk every night. He quickly made a name for himself in sports, helping creating WRAL’s popular Football Friday. He and his team began covering high school football on the news in 1981, and then evolved that coverage into a half-hour program that celebrated its 25th anniversary last year.
Thanks to NMG's Nathan Clendenin for these capcom photos. |
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| POSTED: November 24, 2006 | ||||