Women taking charge at advertising agency, Media Works
For a long time, advertising agencies were run almost entirely by men.
Watch CBS News
Caroline Foreback joined WJZ in November 2022, and she is thrilled to be reporting in her home state of Maryland for the station she grew up watching.
After graduating from West Virginia University in 2018, she began her journalism career in southern West Virginia reporting for WVNS 59 News. Then she went up to northeastern Pennsylvania where she became the lead nightside and investigative reporter at WBRE/WYOU.
While in Pennsylvania, Caroline's extensive reporting on a local missing woman led her to an exclusive jailhouse interview with international serial killer, Harold David Haulman III. She created a three-part special called "Tracking a Killer: Harold David Haulman III," which received the Pennsylvania Association of Broadcasters award for outstanding investigative report in the spring of 2022.
Caroline is from Crofton, Maryland and graduated from South River High School. When she's not reporting, Caroline loves to be out and about in Annapolis. She loves the outdoors and being on the water. She enjoys hiking, group fitness classes, and playing with her rescue dog, Barbie.
For a long time, advertising agencies were run almost entirely by men.
Last week, authorities in Texas arrested 23-year-old Roger Alexander Alvarado-Mendoza in connection with the fatal shooting.
The Maryland Department of the Environment wants to assure the public that the plan to treat two million gallons of water contaminated by a train derailment in Palestine, Ohio, poses no danger to the state, but local leaders still have questions.
Tom Walsh, a sous chef at Phillips Seafood, is "humble, private and does not want attention," according to the restaurant's spokesperson.
From the Civil War to World War II and beyond, there's a long line of lady spies who came from Maryland, women who risked their lives for their country.
Several homes in Fells Point were covered in flour over the weekend. Residents tell WJZ that the flour dusting could only have come from the industrial bakery next door.
Their Terps are moving on to the Round of 32 in the NCAA Tournament.
State's Attorneys Offices in Maryland are announcing a collaborative effort to protect victims of child sex abuse and trafficking.
Thousands of Marylanders of Iranian descent and non-Iranian allies have been demonstrating in Washington, D.C., this weekend.
In September 2021, a tornado struck the Annapolis area and caused a lot of damage to businesses and homes.
Noah's Law passed in 2016 in honor of Montgomery County Police Officer Noah Leotta, who died after he was hit by a drunk driver while on duty.
Derelict or abandoned crab pots litter the bottom of the Chesapeake Bay and surrounding waterways. Baltimore County leaders announced expansion of a program that lets watermen fish for debris during the off-season.
A group rallied in Annapolis Thursday to end sub-minimum wage for tipped workers.
The Maryland Food Bank is preparing for a surge in people who need their services with the SNAP emergency allotments coming to an end.
It has been more than two years since the first COVID-19 vaccine was administered in the United States.