Pittsburghers can vote to bring back Mister Rogers forever stamp
The U.S. Postal Service is holding a contest to bring back a forever stamp, and one featuring Mister Rogers is in the running.
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Barry has been watching the news on television for as long as he can remember. His parents regularly tuned into KDKA news, religiously watching it to learn about their community and their world. As a young child, Barry often sat there with them, admiring, and studying the men and women who seemed so knowledgeable about the world around them.
That fascination never stopped. So much so, that by the time Barry was in high school, from time to time, Barry would "skip" school, unknown to his parents, and take the PAT bus to downtown Pittsburgh to sit in the "Pittsburgh Today" audience to see those people up close.
Eventually, Barry would be the first in his family to go away to college where he entered the Communications program at Clarion University. Barry wholeheartedly immersed himself in the program, spending hours in the on-campus television station where he would learn anchoring, hosting and reporting.
By graduation time, Barry hit the ground running. He got his first job at WDTV in Clarksburg, West Virginia as a reporter, and eventually began anchoring the morning news. After nine months there, Barry received a call from WSAZ in Charleston West Virginia, where he was hired as a reporter and within a few months was the main anchor of the 6 and 11 p.m. newscast.
After three years in Charleston, Barry landed a job at WBNS in Columbus Ohio where he was brought in to co-anchor a ground breaking early news show called "The Heart of Ohio." Most of the show was ad-lib and live. That's where Barry believes he learned to tell an effect, adlibbed, full story.
From Columbus, Barry moved to L.A. where he worked full time on many television projects, which included hosting many shows, and helping to start a new morning news show called the KTLA Morning News.
While in L.A., Barry got married and was blessed with two children, who until this day, he considers the most important, most fulfilling thing he's ever done or experienced.
After many years on the West Coast, Barry moved back to his hometown of Pittsburgh to be near his aging parents and family. Shortly after Barry returned, his two young adult children also decided to move to Pittsburgh and are now all here together. Barry began reporting at KDKA in May of 2024.
The U.S. Postal Service is holding a contest to bring back a forever stamp, and one featuring Mister Rogers is in the running.
City investigators have determined the cause of the fire that destroyed an apartment building in Squirrel Hill.
The structure is "an imminent danger and poses a risk of serious or life-threatening injury," city officials said.
Dozens of people lost their homes after a massive fire tore through a nearly century-old apartment building in Pittsburgh's Squirrel Hill.
A large, fast-moving fire in Squirrel Hill prompted a massive response from Pittsburgh firefighters and other city first responders.
The drinking water warning was issued after excessively high levels of manganese were discovered.
A crime-fighting Pittsburgh nun has made the news again.
The man accused of stealing a car with Lucky, a veteran's beloved dog, inside has pleaded guilty.
Those in favor of a union at the hospital say the push came so that they can have more time with their patients along with having a seat at the decision-making table.
The New Kensington-Arnold School District is installing vape detectors in its junior and senior high schools.
Allegheny Health Network just announced record enrollment in its nursing program.
Part of the strategy to grow Downtown is taking the ever-growing amount of empty office space and turning it into residential space.
Three people were trapped inside the building and rescued by firefighters.
From U.S Steel and Heinz to the Clark Bar and Iron City Beer, Pittsburgh has many world-famous brands and inventions.
Pittsburgh is expanding its deer culling program to several more parks in an attempt to get the population under control.