Judd Hambrick (born September 25, 1945, in Tulsa, Oklahoma) is an American former television newscaster and reporter. Hambrick grew up in Mount Pleasant, Texas.
Later on, by 1972 Hambrick had moved on to WCAU-TV in Philadelphia and served as co-anchor of their evening news programs with John Facenda, better known outside of Philadelphia as the "voice" of NFL Films. Hambrick's stay at WCAU lasted only one year. He later moved onto stops at KDFW-TV in Dallas, KABC-TV in Los Angeles and KTVU in the San Francisco Bay Area.
In 1977, Hambrick arrived in Cleveland, Ohio, where he became an anchor of the evening newscasts on WJKW-TV (now WJW-TV). Hambrick won a local Emmy Award in 1979, and helped the station's newscast become the Nielsen ratings news program in Cleveland until his departure from WJKW-TV in 1981. The next year, he moved to rival WKYC-TV, where he served in a similar capacity until 1985.
Hambrick then spent next several years away from television news anchoring, though he worked on several business news ventures with NBC through his own production company.http://www.americanradiohistory.com/hd2/Archive-BC-IDX/86-OCR/BC-1986-11-24-OCR-Page-0074.pdf
Hambrick ended his self-imposed hiatus in 1992 when he joined KTUL-TV in Tulsa as an anchor. Not long after, Hambrick returned to Cleveland and to WKYC-TV, for one final anchoring stint from 1993 to 1999. During his career, he also worked in markets such as Memphis, Atlanta, and Honolulu.
In North America, Hambrick created a second word game for newspapers called Word Scrimmage. The game is similar in nature to the ‘’Scrabblegrams'', but with a football motif and different bonuses attached such as 60 points for using all of the letters.
Hambrick, who is now semi-retired, lives with his wife in Florence, Alabama after pursuing some business ventures for a time in both the Belden and nearby Saltillo, Mississippi areas. Hambrick continues to work in mostly free-lance video news media production.
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