Local news operation (1961–2023) KTVL had broadcast 22 hours of locally production news each week. It was known as
NewsCenter 10 in the late 1970s back when they were an NBC affiliate. The name
NewsCenter was used by many NBC-owned and/or affiliated stations to identify their newscasts. After KTVL switched to CBS, the name of the newscast was changed to
Channel 10 News, then again to
News 10. The news department featured well-known news personalities such as Terry Miller, Hank Henry, George Warren, Leon Hunsaker (also previously of KOBI and
theDove TV), Marvin Rhodes, Pete Belcastro, Fred Inglis (formerly of KTVU), Milt Radford (also previously of
KDRV) and, most notably,
Ann Curry (who went on to become host of NBC's
Today Show in 2011). The last news director was Chad Hypes. The newscasts were last anchored by Carmine Gemei and Tyler Myerly at 5, 6 and 11 p.m. The chief meteorologist was Holden LeCroy. Myerly previously anchored the 5 a.m. newscast
News 10 Good Morning. Mollie Smith and weather-caster Tiffany Olin anchored the region's only noon newscast previously anchored by such talent as Libby Dowsett, April Warneke and later-main anchor Trish Glose. It was considered the "usual amount of news for a CBS affiliate." KTVL did not have a full-time local sportscast after 2009 as it was dropped by previous management. However, in 2012 the news team began covering local high school football and basketball highlights called
Friday Night Fastbreaks (KDRV is now the only station in the market to continue airing a local sportscast and KOBI does not have a sports department.)
News 10 Good Morning On January 24, 2011, KTVL added an additional hour to their morning news program. Originally, it was
News 10 at 6 a.m. but they changed the start time to 4:55 a.m. dubbing it
News 10 Good Morning going head-to-head with competitor KDRV's early morning newscast. The show switched up its format, differing from its competitors to include faster-paced headline style news with more morning weather hits than any other station in Southern Oregon and Northern California. The program also showcased the station's strong social media content, with the only station to have smart phone and iPad applications.
Cancellation of local newscasts On April 27, 2023, it was reported that KTVL would be discontinuing its local newscasts, effective May 12, with plans to lay off the entire news operation. The station now runs
The National Desk in lieu of locally produced newscasts.
Notable former news staff •
Ann Curry (reporter/Telethon co-hostess)
Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon (1970–2010) / MDA Labor Day Telethon (2011) KTVL was also the only southern Oregon and northern California television station that has continuously broadcast the
Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon, benefiting the
Muscular Dystrophy Association every
Labor Day weekend from 1970 to 2011. (Fellow CBS affiliate
KHSL-TV in
Chico, California, was the next closest station to do so before broadcasting the program was ceased after 1997 by new ownership.) The local portion of the telethon was hosted by Marvin Rhodes, who was the main host for 35 years, and Donna Hildebrand, who was co-host for over 25 years, until they ended their tenure as main telethon hosts in 2005. Members of the
News 10 team including Trish (Borucki) Glose, Kevin Lollis and Libby Dowsett had hosted the telethon at various times until the format was dissolved by MDA in 2012. It is believed to have been one of the most successful local telethon broadcasts in the country. The most emotional moment came in 2002 when a devastated Rhodes announced that
Grants Pass resident Ray Dimmick, who battled courageously against
ALS (Lou Gehrig's Disease), had died in December 2001. Dimmick, accompanied by his wife Debra, appeared on the show every year for 10 years despite his condition deteriorating. A tribute video was broadcast in his memory. With
Jerry Lewis' retirement as host of the national telethon and its move from hours to six hours in 2011, KTVL did air the telethon as usual. On February 10, 2012, MDA announced that the 2012 edition would be cut to three hours in length airing during prime time on Sunday, September 2, 2012. The 2012 edition, renamed the
MDA Show of Strength (moving away from its heritage as a telethon), effectively ended KTVL's 41 years of telethon coverage. The special was since picked up by ABC for two years in 2013 and 2014 airing on
KDRV, before being canceled altogether by MDA in early 2015.
After 10 On June 3, 2006, KTVL launched a new locally produced late-night program for young adults called
After 10, hosted by Curtis Bartlett and Lindsey Matherly, every Saturday night at 11:30 p.m. It was dubbed as the only locally produced show that delivers news and information on the local music scene, video games, movie releases (in theaters and on video), graphic novels,
music videos,
viral videos from the internet, and websites.
After 10 was KTVL's attempt to compete against NBC's
Saturday Night Live by producing a program for its target audience themselves, instead on relying on syndication.
After 10 was being retooled and was expected to be relaunched in the third quarter of 2007, but it never returned to the air. After various syndicated programs and
infomercials aired in the 11:30 p.m. slot, the slot became the home of the weekly
Ring of Honor Wrestling show in April 2012 upon the acquisition of the station by Sinclair, which owned the
RoH circuit until 2022 when the promotion was acquired by
All Elite Wrestling. ==Technical information==