Steve Porter |
A veteran Radio/TV journalist, who spent nearly 50-years
covering news stories, Stephen Gregory (Steve) Porter passed away on Friday at
Grand Strand Regional Medical Center in Myrtle Beach, SC., where he had undergone heart surgery last Tuesday.
He was 73 year old according to wbtw.com.
Porter began at WFLA Radio/TV in Tampa
while attending St. Petersburg
Junior College , during
which time he was active in the start-up of a local educational TV station.
At nineteen, while attending the University of Miami
he began a full-time position with Storer Broadcasting's flagship station,
WGBS, where he anchored "Radio Miami", the four-hour afternoon drive
news program.
His career began to take off as he worked starting news
departments and anchoring for several Florida
radio stations, including WINZ. He took a job in 1964 with KONO-TV in San Antonio , where he had his first contact
with presidential politics, freelancing for ABC at the ranch of President
Johnson.
Over the following years, Steve worked for Group W in Philadelphia before moving to the largest radio news
market in the nation, New York City .
There he was the first voice heard on WCBS 880 AM in their new, all-news radio
format. He worked in NYC for sixteen years for WCBS and then NBC before he got
the assignment he always wanted in Washington, as NBC Radio correspondent for
the Pentagon, State Department, Capitol Hill, and finally at the White House.
On television, he was seen regularly on the NBC
News “Sunrise ”
program that precedes the “TODAY” program, and he also provided reports for “TODAY”
and for “NBC Nightly News.” He was a major contributor of syndication coverage
for NBC News affiliates and syndication customers. In addition, he was the
primary White House correspondent for the NBC Radio Network
He spent nine years in the White House Press Corps during
the Reagan and Bush administrations, traveling with both presidents on Air
Force One, and won the Headliner Award for his coverage of the first Reagan/
Gorbachev Moscow Summit.
.In 1992, after personal tragedy, the deaths from cancer, of
his first wife, Rita, and their son, Scott, forced him to leave Washington , Steve settled in Myrtle Beach , where he and Rita had planned
to retire. He purchased a share in N/T WRNN 99.5 FM and became host of the
morning show on New Year's Day 1995.
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