Irv Weinstein

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Irv Weinstein
Born Irwin Weinstein
(1930-04-29) April 29, 1930 (age 94)
Rochester, New York
Occupation Television news anchor
Years active before 1958–1998
Notable credit(s) WKBW Eyewitness News
Spouse(s) Elaine Weinstein
Children Beth Krom, Marc Weinstein, Rachel

Irwin "Irv" Weinstein (born April 29, 1930)[1] is a retired local television news anchor. He hosted WKBW-TV's Eyewitness News in Buffalo, New York, for 34 years, from 1964 to 1998, becoming an iconic broadcaster well known in both the Buffalo area and in Southern Ontario, which was within WKBW's broadcast area.[2] Weinstein was known for his powerful delivery and sense of humor. Weinstein, weatherman Tom Jolls and sports anchor Rick Azar are the longest running anchor team in television history,[citation needed] fronting the broadcast from 1965 until Azar's retirement in 1989. Weinstein was inducted into the Buffalo Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 1998[3] and the N.Y. State Broadcasters Association in 2006.[4]

Career

Born in Rochester, New York, Weinstein began his broadcast career while he was in high school, working at WHAM Radio as an actor on several locally produced programs. After professional stops in Iowa and West Virginia, he was hired as a newscaster and news director at WKBW Radio in Buffalo in 1958.[3] His fast-paced style featuring strong writing and alliteration ("pistol-packing punks" referring to petty criminals, or "Buffalo blaze busters" in place of firefighters)[5] helped take the newscast ratings to #1 in the Western New York market.[citation needed]

In 1964, Weinstein was hired as news director and anchorman at sister station WKBW-TV, an ABC Network affiliate.[3] At the time, the station's news programs were rated #3 in a three-station market.[6] By 1974, WKBW-TV's Eyewitness News program had an audience larger than the combined audience of the two competing Buffalo stations. It remained the top-rated newscast until Weinstein's retirement in 1998 and beyond. Weinstein's innovations would later be adapted by Mel Kampmann for the national "Action News" franchise.

In 1968, Weinstein briefly returned to his broadcast beginnings as an actor in WKBW radio's Halloween adaptation of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds. Weinstein also appeared in a 1971 remake, which was re-run in 1998. During his 40-year career in Buffalo, Weinstein appeared in numerous stage productions and, in the early 1980s, co-owned The Playhouse, a legit theater in downtown Buffalo.[7]

A WKBW-TV promo for Eyewitness News included a jingle:

"Irv Weinstein, you're really a pro!
Ya got all the news that we wanna know.
You tell it like it is and never throw us a curve,
Nobody says it like Ir-r-r-r-v !
Eye-wit-ness News (Yes-sah!)"

The day of his retirement, December 31, 1998, was proclaimed "Irv Weinstein Day in Erie County" by then-Erie County Executive Dennis Gorski.[8] Five days later, Toronto columnist David Frum wrote a tribute titled "He came from Buffalo" in Canada's National Post newspaper, writing, "The way the French feel about Jerry Lewis, that's how we feel about Irv Weinstein".[9] In October 2004, Weinstein's status as "an icon of television journalism in Buffalo" was discussed on the floor of the Ontario Legislature by MPP Tim Hudak.[1]

Weinstein was known for using alliteration in his reporting. He coined the phrases "Topping tonight's Eyewitness News"[citation needed] and "It's eleven o'clock. Do you know where your children are?",[citation needed] both of which are in frequent use in other news broadcasts.[citation needed]

References in popular culture

Personal life

Weinstein and his wife, Elaine, currently reside in Irvine, California, where their daughter, Beth Krom,[10] served two terms as mayor and now serves on the City Council. The Weinsteins' son, Marc, is co-owner of Amoeba Music, and their younger daughter, Rachel, is an artist and theater administrator in the Pittsburgh area. Irv Weinstein also owns a part-time residence in Ellicottville, New York.

References

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External links

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  • Baker, Vic. 50 Golden Years of Excellence on WIVB-TV. WIVB-TV. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
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  • David Frum, "He came from Buffalo", National Post, January 5, 1999
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