Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Suit settled for former LR anchor

- JENNIFER CHRISTMAN Email:jchri st man@ arkansas online.com

LAWSUIT ROUTE: Karen Fuller, a popular former anchor at Little Rock’s KATV, Channel 7, is used to delivering the news.

Recently, however, she’s been the news.

After nearly a decade with the Little Rock ABC affiliate, the Arkansas native worked 12 years as an anchor for the Kansas City CBS affiliate. That is until February of 2015 when, at age 47, Fuller’s contract was not renewed.

According to the Kansas City Star, Fuller filed suit against the station’s parent company in June of 2017, saying she was terminated without cause and alleging age discrimina­tion: “In the eyes of Meredith Corporatio­n, women news anchors like Ms. Fuller, unlike their male counterpar­ts, simply become too old to deliver the news.”

The case, scheduled for trial this month, was settled in December; details remain confidenti­al.

We reached out to Fuller who graciously responded but didn’t have enough time to consult her lawyer about a statement before our deadline.

Fuller, a graduate of Iowa’s Drake University who worked for stations in Des Moines and Mason City before working at KATV, has since returned to the Hawkeye State where she’s been an anchor for the Cedar Rapids CBS affiliate since September of 2015.

Fuller did make a brief appearance on Little Rock television recently. Like other former colleagues, she contribute­d an onair goodbye message to longtime KATV chief meteorolog­ist Ned Perme who retired in December.

FORECAST CAST: And speaking of KATV and Perme, the station has named a replacemen­t chief meteorolog­ist.

KATV last week announced Barry Brandt — “the single mostexperi­enced meteorolog­ist on the Arkansas airwaves, having covered the natural state for more than three decades” — will fill the role. Brandt, who will handle the 6 p.m. and 10 p.m. newscasts, has been with KATV since 1997.

Meteorolog­ist Todd Yakoubian will move to weekdays, providing forecasts for 11:30 a.m.,

3 p.m. and 5 p.m. shows. Meteorolog­ist Melinda Mayo will continue to work mornings.

A new member of the weather team will work weekends: storm chaser James Bryant, a North Little Rock native with a meteorolog­y degree from Mississipp­i State.

We put chief meteorolog­ist Brandt to work and asked for his winter weather prediction­s.

He says, “We are about 40 percent of the way through climatolog­ical weather already (Dec. 1-Feb. 28), and we are running above average temperatur­e-wise so far.

… I believe our coldest days this winter are ahead of us. It doesn’t mean it will be bitterly cold, but we should start to turn colder and we will have several chances for precipitat­ion. Odds tilt to above normal precipitat­ion anyway during January and February.

“So, I’d say at least one round of wintry precipitat­ion is a good bet.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States