MURFREESBORO, Tenn.
— The Tennessee Journalism Hall of Fame honored six broadcast journalists,
including some with strong MTSU ties, during a banquet and awards ceremony
Thursday, Dec. 8, at the Murfreesboro Association of Realtors Training Center
at 311 Butler Drive.
The 2016 class of inductees includes former state
representative, MTSU alumnus and current university administrator John Hood,
who began his journalism career on local radio. Also being honored posthumously
is sports director and announcer Monte Hale Sr., who was “the voice of the MTSU
Blue Raiders” from 1961 to 1980 and whose name graces Murphy Center’s Hale
Arena.
Other members of the 2016 class include:
·
Tom Britt of Jackson, Tennessee, a news
producer, anchor and reporter for WBBJ-TV.
·
Hudley Crockett of Nashville, a former news
director, anchor and producer for WSIX-TV (now WKRN) and former press secretary
for Tennessee Gov. Buford Ellington.
·
Darrell Patterson of Chattanooga, retired sports
director and anchor for WTVC-TV Channel 9.
·
WSMV-TV Channel 4 anchor Demetria Kalodimos, who
was the surprise sixth inductee at the end of the ceremony, served as emcee for
the event.
Guest speakers included Murfreesboro Mayor Shane McFarland;
Ken Paulson, dean of the MTSU College of Media and Entertainment; Ron Fryar,
president of the Tennessee Press Association and owner of the Cannon Courier;
and Whit Adamson, president of the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters.
This group was the fourth to be honored by the Tennessee
Journalism Hall of Fame, a nonprofit organization based in the John Bragg Media
and Entertainment Building on the campus of Middle Tennessee State University.
A listing of previous Tennessee Journalism Hall of Fame inductees
may be found at www.tnjournalismhof.org.
Individuals who have distinguished themselves through news
or business management, leadership in the industry, or in the ordinary practice
of all forms of journalism can be considered for induction into the hall. They
may be living or dead.
Nominees for the 2017 class are being accepted now.
Nomination forms and guidelines may be downloaded from the TJHOF website. For
more information, contact Hall of Fame board member Hooper Penuel at
615-347-1672.
About the Class of
2016
• Tom Britt:
Britt is a 40-year veteran of electronic media in West Tennessee, the past 19
or so years with WBBJ-TV 7 Eyewitness News. During his tenure, he has reported,
and anchored Midday and ABC 7 Eyewitness News at 5 and 6 p.m. Currently he
anchors and produces the midday, noon and 5 p.m. newscasts. Before coming to
WBBJ, Britt spent 21 years in radio and area stations working news, announcing
and sport casting. For more than three decades he has been the voice of
University of Tennessee-Martin football and women’s basketball with the
Skyhawks Sports Network. He also serves as the color analyst for UT Martin
men’s basketball.
• Hudley Crockett: A
native of Rutherford County, Crockett began his journalism career working for
radio stations in North Carolina, New Mexico and Alabama where in 1955 he was
named as Sportscaster of the Year. In 1956, Crockett returned to Nashville,
where he graduated from West End High School, and was named sports director for
WSIX Radio and Television. Radio listeners heard Crockett’s voice during this
time announcing a wide range of high school and college games, which included
voice over of Tennessee football games on film. He began the first MTSU
football and basketball networks working closely with football coach Charles
“Bubber” Murphy and basketball coach Ed Diddle Jr. In 1961, young Crockett
moved from radio to television and was appointed news director at WSIX-TV (now
WKRN) in Nashville where he covered many major news events throughout the
United States and in Latin America as the ABC Network’s special assignment
producer. A professional in his field, Crockett was elected president of the
Tennessee Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi Journalism Society.
• Monte Hale Sr.:
Hale was born in West Virginia, growing up as the son of a coal miner who spent
many years digging out a living for his family. Understanding the perils and
hard work his father endured as a coal miner, Hale decided to develop his radio
voice, seeking a future in broadcast journalism. After graduating from high
school, Hale ventured north, where he attended and graduated from Northwestern
Radio School in Chicago. Fresh out of school, Hale worked at a couple of radio
stations before moving to McMinnville, Tennessee, where he continued his radio
career. After a brief period in McMinnville, Hale moved to Murfreesboro and was
hired by WGNS Radio, where he worked as a sports announcer for many years. His
voice could be heard on 1450 AM calling both high school and college games.
Hale was also the voice of the MTSU Blue Raiders from 1961-1980. Later he
became the first voice of the Nashville Sounds baseball team. For his
outstanding support and tireless commitment to MTSU, the university named the
Murphy Center basketball arena in his honor in 1983 and he was named to the
MTSU Athletic Hall of Fame two years earlier. Hale succumbed to cancer in 1982
at age 42.
• John D. Hood:
Hood began his journalism career at Murfreesboro’s WGNS Radio in 1948 working
as a staff announcer until 1954. In 1956 he became news and program manager for
WMTS, another local radio station and served in this capacity through 1960.
Developing a way with words and developing his skills as a people person, Hood
continued to be a voice of the community in many ways. Throughout his career,
he has served as a personnel manager, bank vice president, a Tennessee
Representative and presently serves as director of government and community
affairs for Middle Tennessee State University, where he holds both a bachelor’s
and master’s degree and is known to many as “Mr. MTSU.” A U.S. Army veteran, Hood served in the Army
Security Agency and 74th Regimental Combat Team at Fort Devens, Massachusetts.
He’s considered by many as an ambassador for Murfreesboro-Rutherford County.
Very active in the community, Hood was past president of the Rutherford County
Chamber of Commerce, a member of the Murfreesboro School Board, former member
of the old Quarterly Court, now County Commission, and he was named Rutherford
County Chamber of Commerce Business Legend of the Year in 2014.
• Demetria Kalodimos:
Kalodimos is the longest continuous evening news anchor in WSMV history and has
consistently been voted a favorite in local reader polls, according to
WSMV.com. She started at WSMV in 1984 and has made her mark as a skilled
reporter and anchor. Known for her investigative skills, Kalodimos has won 15
Emmy Awards, two National Headliner Awards, two Investigative Reporters and
Editors National Awards, The Edward R. Murrow Award for Investigative Reporting
and two National Citations from American Women in Radio and Television. In
1996, she was chosen as the Tennessee Associated Press Broadcaster of the Year.
Kalodimos is also known for her community service, including her work with the
Nashville Rescue Mission, MS Society, the Conservancy for the Parthenon and
Centennial Park, and many other nonprofit organizations, according to the
station's website.
• Darrell Patterson:
A native of Athens, Tennessee, where he started his broadcasting career in 1965
at WLAR radio at the young age of 16, Patterson worked the 5-9 a.m. sign-on
shift while participating in the local high school’s industrial cooperative
training program. He worked as an on-air disc jockey, news and sports director,
broadcasting McMinn County High School and Tennessee Wesleyan College games
until moving to WDOD in Chattanooga in 1973 as a DJ and news and sports
director broadcasting UTC basketball and football games. Later he transitioned
to television in June 1975, moving to WTVC-TV as sports director anchoring the
nightly sportscasts. Patterson was inducted into the Greater Chattanooga Area
Sports Hall of Fame in 2004. He retired from broadcasting after 48 years in
December 2013.
No comments:
Post a Comment