upper waypoint

KQED’s Belva Davis to Retire

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Download hi-res JPG: Belva Davis, host of This Week in Northern California. Photo credit: Greg Habiby © KQED 2009.

Belva Davis
Download hi-res JPG: Belva Davis, host of This Week in Northern California. Photo credit: Greg Habiby © KQED 2009.

This Week in Northern California host will lead KQED Public Television’s expanded coverage of the 2012 local and national elections.

Davis’ final broadcast set for November 9

San Francisco, California, February 20, 2012Belva Davis, the award-winning host of This Week in Northern California on KQED Public Television, has announced that she will retire from the anchor chair after 19 years. Davis, who was the first female African-American TV journalist in the West, has been in broadcast journalism for almost half a century. She has reported on many of the most important stories of our time, including the University of California, Berkeley Free Speech Movement student protests, the birth of the Black Panthers, the Peoples Temple cult that ended in the mass suicides at Jonestown, the assassinations of San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, the onset of the AIDS epidemic, and the terrorist attacks on the U.S. embassy in Tanzania that first put Osama bin Laden on the FBI’s Most Wanted List. Davis will lead KQED Public Television’s expanded coverage of the 2012 local and national elections before giving her final broadcast on Friday, November 9, 2012. KQED will celebrate Davis’ career throughout the year, which will culminate with a special event commemorating her distinguished legacy. More details will be released shortly.

“I have enjoyed a unique and long career here in the Bay Area and have been witness to some of the most explosive stories of the last half century. I’m truly thankful for the support of everyone at KQED and the loyalty of our audiences throughout my time on the air,” said Davis, who has received several dozen awards for her journalism, including eight local Emmys. “I began my career with the coverage of the 1964 elections and I’m thrilled that I will be devoting my last months on the air to the elections of 2012.”

“Belva Davis is an icon of fair, thorough and local journalism and she has opened up so many doors for women and African Americans in television and beyond,” said John Boland, KQED president. “We count ourselves lucky to have had such a trailblazer as part of the KQED family. We will continue our commitment to our weekly public affairs and news programming and will build on the insightful and thought-provoking coverage that Belva has so brilliantly led over the last two decades.”

Sponsored

“I want to recognize the extraordinary contribution that Belva has made to the debate in our state,” U.S. House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi said. "When she speaks, people listen. They respect what she has to say, and we're very, very proud of her.”

Prior to her post on KQED 9, Davis anchored news programs on Bay Area stations KPIX-TV and KRON-TV. She is also the author of a memoir, Never in My Wildest Dreams: A Black Woman’s Life in Journalism which chronicles her experience as the first African American woman hired to work as a television news reporter on the West Coast. An inspiration for professional and aspiring journalists, Davis has interviewed several U.S. presidents and other world leaders. She is also celebrated for her community involvement as a board member for various Bay area non-profits and a staunch supporter of numerous cultural institutions.

This Week in Northern California airs Fridays at 7:30pm and Saturdays at 1:30am on KQED 9 and KQED Life. Encore presentations on KQED World are on Saturdays at 9:30am and at 7pm and Sundays at 1am.

About KQED:
KQED (kqed.org) has served Northern California for more than 50 years and is affiliated with NPR and PBS. KQED owns and operates public television stations KQED 9 (San Francisco/Bay Area), KQED Plus (San Jose/Bay Area) and KQET 25 (Watsonville/Monterey); KQED Public Radio (88.5 FM San Francisco and 89.3 FM Sacramento); the interactive platforms kqed.org and KQEDnews.org; and KQED Education. KQED Public Television is the producer of local and national series such as QUEST; Check, Please! Bay Area; This Week in Northern California; Truly CA; and Essential Pépin. KQED’s digital television stations include KQED 9, KQED Plus, KQED Life, KQED World, KQED Kids and KQED V-me, and are available 24/7 on Comcast. KQED Public Radio, home of Forum and The California Report, is one of the most-listened-to public radio stations in the nation with an award-winning news and public affairs program service delivering more than eighteen local weekday newscasts and news features. KQED Interactive provides KQED’s cross-platform news service, KQEDnews.org, as well as several popular local blogs, video and audio podcasts, and a live radio stream at kqed.org. KQED Education brings the impact of KQED to thousands of teachers, students, parents and the general public through workshops, community screenings and multimedia resources.

lower waypoint
next waypoint