David Garcia (journalist)

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David Garcia (January 8, 1944 – August 28, 2007) was a

television network in the 1970s.[1]

Garcia was born James David Garcia, in

Dallas, Texas. He possessed an unusually deep voice with a rounded, warm sound that marked his on-air delivery with authority. The 1960s were a period when the older style of stern sounding newscasters on radio and television was giving way to a more informal, friendly style. Garcia's voice and delivery neatly bridged the changing era. During his time with WFAA radio, Garcia was selected to anchor the Saturday evening newscasts on WFAA-TV, a job he was carrying out, along with radio reporting, at the time he was hired by ABC radio in New York in 1969.[1]

While working for

public affairs program titled At Issue/With David Garcia. He covered the environmental beat from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s at KNBC and from 1993 to 2001 at KTTV, where he served as the station's environmental reporter earning the nickname "Earthman." As Earthman, Garcia achieved such visibility throughout the Los Angeles area that children would send him letters addressed "Earthman, Los Angeles" and the postal service would deliver them to Garcia at his station.[1]
In 2002 he began hosting a newsmagazine show titled Eye on Riverside County at Palm Springs CBS affiliate KPSP-LP. It was during this period that Garcia and his wife, Susan Garcia, went "on the road" together with a video camera and produced half hour programs around the American west for a local public broadcasting station. His wife would shoot and edited the video, Garcia would narrate and appear on camera. He and his wife were actively engaged in this pursuit at the time for his death.[1]

Garcia died in Rancho Mirage, California of complications from a liver ailment at the age of 63.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e David Garcia, 63; pioneering Latino newsman, environmental reporter dubbed 'Earthman', Los Angeles Times, Jocelyn Y. Stewart, August 29, 2007. Retrieved July 28, 2017.

External links