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Joel Daly

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Years active
  
1962–2005

Education
  
Role
  
Presenter

Name
  
Joel Daly

Children
  
2


Joel Daly Joel Daly in Chicago 1978 North East Ohio TV Memories

Born
  
August 21, 1934 (age 89) (
1934-08-21
)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.

Alma mater
  
Yale UniversityChicago-Kent College of Law

Occupation
  
News anchor at WLS-TV (1967–2005)

Spouse(s)
  
Suzon "Sue" Daly (m. 1953–2015)

Movies
  
Death of a President, Betrayed

Wls channel 7 eyewitness news with joel daly bumper promo 1981


Joel Daly (born August 21, 1934) is an American former news anchor. Daly is most known for serving as an anchor for WLS-TV (an ABC-affiliate) in Chicago, Illinois for 38 years from 1967–2005. Daly served as co-anchor on the 4PM news broadcast alongside Linda Yu from January 1985 until his retirement in May 2005. Daly was inducted into the Silver Circle, a group of elite Chicago broadcasters, in 2003. Since his retirement from news broadcasting in 2005, From March 2007 until October 2013, Daly served as spokesperson for Chicago's Cook County Federal courthouse.

Contents

Joel Daly Joel Daly 3988 on How ChicagoKent Prepared Him for His

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Early life

Joel Daly Joel Daly channels 39Network39 anchor Robert Feder

Joel Daly was born August 21, 1934 in Cleveland, Ohio, and was raised between Montana and Washington D.C.. He graduated magna cum laude from Yale University in 1956.

Career

Joel Daly Get me rewrite Joel Daly reissues memoir Robert Feder

Four years after finishing college, Daly joined WJW-TV in Cleveland in early 1960. Daly served as co-anchor with Doug Adair, and the two became one of the first successful co-anchor teams in the United States.

WLS–TV Chicago (1967–2005)

In 1967, both Daly and Adair were hired by WBKB-TV in Chicago. However, Adair stayed in Cleveland for personal and contractual reasons. In Chicago, Daly began doing a solo newscast called Newsnight. In 1968, about the time the station was renamed WLS-TV, Daly was paired with Fahey Flynn, and the two became the highest-rated evening news team in the city, winning a local Emmy Award after just one year on the air. Daly and Flynn popularized a presentantion style known to critics as "happy talk". Unlike most presenters of the time, who delivered the news in an austere, authoritative fashion, Daly and Flynn mixed in playful banter as they segued from one topic to another. Daly later recalled, "We came down from Olympus, and we just became regular people talking to regular people. It's the best form of communication." News presenters across the country soon began emulating Daly and Flynn, sometimes to the duo's chagrin, as when other presenters became too jokey or unfocused. Daly himself did not use the phrase "happy talk" to describe his style, noting, "We always took the news seriously, if we didn't always take ourselves too seriously". After Flynn's death in 1983, Daly briefly co-anchored the 10:00 news with Mary Ann Childers. Daly then joined Oprah Winfrey to co-anchor WLS-TV's 4:00 PM news broadcast. Winfrey was replaced by Linda Yu after only weeks on the air. Daly remained there until May 2005, when he announced that he would step down as anchor to pursue other interests later Alan Krashesky became the 4pm anchor. Since then, he has occasionally appeared on newscasts to report on legal matters, and has also hosted parades for the channel. Daly was inducted into the Chicago Journalism Hall of Fame in 2001 and received the first Illinois Broadcast Pioneer Award in 2008. He won five Emmys over the course of his career.

Other work

In 1988, Joel Daly received a Juris Doctor from Chicago-Kent College of Law after four years of taking evening classes. He became director of external relations at the John Marshall Law School in 2005, and also taught some classes there.

In 2007, Daly was named a spokesperson for the U.S. District Court in Chicago.

One of Daly's other interests is acting. In 1994 he played Atticus Finch in a stage adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird, and in 2000 he starred as Patsy McCall in a production of William J. Kennedy's Grand View.

He played a news reporter in the controversial 2006 film Death of a President, which portrays the fictional assassination of George W. Bush. Daly said he did not regret his involvement, saying, "It's a gutsy undertaking to do the fictional assassination of a living president who's still in office. It's something that's in the American psyche. So dealing with this in a fictional forum -- albeit a realistic one -- is perhaps a purgative," he told the Chicago Sun-Times.

Daly has also dabbled in music, especially country music and yodeling. He has sung with a group called The Sundowners and occasionally writes his own songs. His autobiography, The Daly News, was published by Eckhartz Press in 2014.

References

Joel Daly Wikipedia