Roland was a
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, native who graduated from
California State University at Long Beach in 1964; he began his
broadcasting career in the 1960s. His first major assignment was for
NBC News in
Los Angeles in 1966. From there, he was hired as a reporter by then-
Metromedia owned
KTTV, where he covered the
Robert F. Kennedy assassination and the
Charles Manson trial, and then went to sister station WNEW-TV (now Fox-owned
WNYW) in
New York City beginning in December 1969. He remained with Channel 5 for the remainder of his broadcasting career. In his early years with WNEW/WNYW, he was a political reporter and weekend anchor for ''The 10 O'Clock News'', and even did a cooking segment that was shown frequently on the newscast. He took over as the main anchor for the weeknight edition in 1979 after
Bill Jorgensen, who had presented the newscast from its start in 1967, left to join the rival station
WPIX. Over the years, Roland's co-anchors included Bill McCreary,
Cora-Ann Mihalik, and
Rosanna Scotto. He left the 10:00p.m. newscast in 2003 in order to prepare for his role as anchor of the new 5:00 and 6:00 p.m. newscasts that WNYW was preparing, which were launched that fall. His long run with the station came to an end upon his
retirement on June 4, 2004. In the late 1980s, Roland also opened a restaurant in New York named Marcello, with two partners, one of whom left the venture before the restaurant opened.
Suspension In January 1988, Roland was suspended by WNYW-TV (Fox) after an on-air argument with
Joyce Brown, a mentally-ill homeless woman whom the
Koch Administration sought to have confined to a mental hospital for treatment. Brown, who was represented by the New York City chapter of the
American Civil Liberties Union successfully challenged her incarceration in court. The interview quickly degenerated into an argument after Roland related his own personal experiences when he encountered Brown on the street. After the interview, numerous people called the station to protest Roland's treatment of Brown. The next day, the station suspended Roland, explaining that his emotions prevailed over his objectivity. Roland personally apologized to Brown, and the station broadcast a taped apology from him. After serving his brief suspension, Roland returned to the air. ==Film appearances==