Pete Wilson (broadcaster)
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Peter James Wilson (April 5, 1945 – July 20, 2007) was an American broadcaster born in
Wisconsin Wisconsin ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the Great Lakes region, Great Lakes region of the Upper Midwest of the United States. It borders Minnesota to the west, Iowa to the southwest, Illinois to the south, Lake Michigan to the east, Michig ...
. For more than 20 years prior to his death, he worked in the San Francisco Bay Area. He was not related to the Pete Wilson, former California governor of the same name.


Personal life

Wilson was a graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Madison and a Vietnam War, Vietnam era veteran.


Broadcasting career

Wilson's first broadcasting stint was at WTMJ in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, followed by stint as news anchor at KTXL in Sacramento, California in 1979 and later at his first stint at ABC-owned KGO-TV in 1983 before moving to then-NBC affiliate KRON-TV in 1990. In October 2001, he became one of the first high-profile employees to leave KRON after it was announced that the station would be losing its Network affiliate, affiliation with the NBC, NBC television network. Subsequent to this, he returned to KGO-TV. Wilson hosted a talk radio show on the number-one rated 50,000-watt KGO (AM) weekdays 2–4 p.m. up until his death in 2007. He was the winner of five Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award, Peabody. Wilson also news anchor, co-anchored the 6 p.m weekday editions of KGO-TV's ''KGO-TV, ABC 7 News''.


Political stances

In the San Francisco Bay Area, Wilson was considered a moderate Democrat to moderate conservative, while others have referred to him as a common-sense liberal. He was not known to immediately endorse the fad or "politically correct" thinking of the day. Contemporaries considered him a journalist and a "traditional" newsman. In his role as an inflammatory talk radio show host, Wilson raised controversy with comments he made on KGO radio on October 10, 2006, criticizing San Francisco Supervisor Bevan Dufty, who is gay, for his nonromantic co-parenting relationship with a lesbian friend, sparking calls for Wilson's resignation from four members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Wilson later issued an apology for the harshness of his criticism, while standing by his opinion on such nontraditional relationships.


Death

Pete Wilson died at age 62 after suffering a "massive heart attack during the operation, was put on life support, and last night (2007/07/20) was taken off" while having hip replacement surgery at Stanford University Medical Center. During the last hour of his final radio broadcast, the day before his surgery, Wilson talked about his worries concerning the surgery with fellow KGO talk show host Gene Burns and invited callers to recount their own surgical experiences. It was reported later that Wilson had severe anxiety about the surgery and was hospitalized briefly at Stanford University Medical Center to recover from it. On September 17, 2007, longtime ABC reporter/anchor Gil Gross was named to replace Wilson in his radio post.


Legacy

After his passing, Wilson's friends and colleagues at ABC7/KGO-TV-DT established a scholarship in his name. The annual scholarship is administered by the Radio Television Digital News Association. The scholarship is granted to either an undergraduate or graduate journalism student from the Bay area.


Personal

Wilson lived in Mill Valley, California, with his wife Sandra and son Brendan. Wilson publicly acknowledged his frequent use of Wikipedia.


Obituaries


Gold & Silver Circle Profiles
on WTMJ-TV, WTMJ
PETE WILSON , 1945-2007 / TV news anchor was a straight shooterTV anchor Pete Wilson’s death reveals limits of medicineNewsman Pete Wilson, a Marin resident, diesPete Wilson, 62, news anchorABC7 anchor Pete Wilson dies :: Bay Area ReporterKGO anchor Pete Wilson dead at 62KGO-TV co-anchor Wilson diesKGO's Pete Wilson dies at 62Pete Wilson Obituary (2007) - San Jose, CA - Mercury News


References


External links


Pete Wilson's bio
on KGO-TV
Pete Wilson Scholarship
Radio Television Digital News Association {{DEFAULTSORT:Wilson, Pete 1945 births 2007 deaths American television journalists Television anchors from Sacramento, California Television anchors from San Francisco University of Wisconsin–Madison alumni Radio personalities from San Francisco Radio personalities from Wisconsin American male journalists