Current News Staff
KRTV news anchors
- Katie Stukey: weekdays at 5:30 and 10:00; also producer
- Tim McGonigal: weekdays at 5:30 and 10:00
- Erin Schermele: weekdays during Montana this Morning; also reporter
- Angela Douglas: weekdays at Noon; Noon News fed from sister station KTVQ in Billings
- Jen Fenter: weekends at 5:30 and 10:00; also reporter
KXLH news anchors
- Tim McGonigal: weekdays at 5:30 and 10:00; also producer
- Shannon Newth: weekdays at 5:30 and 10:00
Great Falls news reporters
- Tara Grimes
- Shannon Newth
- Beth Beechie
Helena news reporters
- Marnee Banks - MTN Political reporter for Q2, KBZK, KXLF, KRTV, KXLH, KAJ, and KPAX
- Melissa Anderson
- Lindsey Gordon
- Evan Weborg: also sports reporter
STORMTracker Weather team
- Mike Rawlins: chief meteorologist (member National Weather Association)
- Matt Jones: Montana this Morning meteorologist
- Ed McIntosh: Noon meteorologist; Noon News fed from sister station KTVQ in Billings
- Claire Andeson: weekend forecaster/reporter
MTN sports team
- Richie Melby: Sports director/weekday sports anchor
- Greg Smith: Weekend sports anchor/weekend sports reporter
Northern Ag Network
- Russel Nemetz - weekdays during Montana this Morning and The Noon News
- Haylie Schipp - fill-in anchor; also reporter
Famous quotes containing the words current, news and/or staff:
“For the purpose of knowledge, one must know how to use that inner current that draws us to a thing, and then the one that, after a time, draws us away from it.”
—Friedrich Nietzsche (18441900)
“I dont have any problem with a reporter or a news person who says the President is uninformed on this issue or that issue. I dont think any of us would challenge that. I do have a problem with the singular focus on this, as if thats the only standard by which we ought to judge a president. What we learned in the last administration was how little having an encyclopedic grasp of all the facts has to do with governing.”
—David R. Gergen (b. 1942)
“We achieve active mastery over illness and death by delegating all responsibility for their management to physicians, and by exiling the sick and the dying to hospitals. But hospitals serve the convenience of staff not patients: we cannot be properly ill in a hospital, nor die in one decently; we can do so only among those who love and value us. The result is the institutionalized dehumanization of the ill, characteristic of our age.”
—Thomas Szasz (b. 1920)