Where's Marty? Checking out the annual Christmas Bazaar at St. Michael-St. Clement School
This mornings "WM?" was just a lot of good feel and positive vibes.
Watch CBS News
Marty Bass is the star of WJZ at 9's "Where's Marty?" segment, as well as a fixture of our First Alert Weather team.
Before his role in WJZ at 9, Baltimoreans would rise and shine with the dynamic morning duo of Marty Bass and Linh Bui. Some viewers might even skip their morning cups of java as long as they got their fix of Marty in the morning.
Known for his unique take on everyday events, Marty also preps area residents to handle the day's weather with his noon weather reports.
Marty started in the broadcasting business in high school, working part-time as a disc jockey at a local radio station in the Louisville, Kentucky area - the place where he grew up. His passion for broadcast only accelerated with time. He went on to graduate from Southern Illinois University in Carbondale with a degree in radio/television, and then entered broadcasting full-time.
His early jobs were in radio, but professional journalists encouraged him to switch to the television side. He took their advice, working in TV markets east of the Mississippi before joining the WJZ family in 1977.
Marty holds the distinction of helping to define early morning news for the broadcast business by anchoring Baltimore's first early morning newscast.
As for his co-anchor at the time? The indomitable Oprah Winfrey, who worked for the station during the early '80s.
Marty also initiated the concept of "Just the fax, Internet and e-mail," inviting viewers to add their comments and opinions during the live morning newscasts. This interaction between viewers only served to cement the audience connection to WJZ's morning show and helped make the "Don and Marty" team a model for other stations to follow.
The morning show remains No. 1 in Baltimore.
This mornings "WM?" was just a lot of good feel and positive vibes.
This is National Cappuccino Day.
Behind a plain entrance in a Bare Hills businees park lay an explosion of colors! Mind blowingly so!
Look at how much food was gathered in the name of kindness.
On November 2, 1948, 75 years ago, Baltimore's WAAM carried its very first newscast.
During the 1950s, 60s, 70s, Enchanted Forest was a sight to see, and stop at, on a very major highway, Route 40.
Today we begin the month, November, that to many signals the beginning of the holiday season.
This is a high-tech project in business since 2016, missing only 2020 due to COVID.
When the Baltimore Museum of Art reaches out and says we have something cool going on they do!
Sometimes a logo say's it all...
How many people can say a relative taught Frederick Douglass to pray?
Marty Bass checks out the pumpkin patch at the Four Seasons
Today we were with the Backyard Chicken Caucus.
Lacrosse may be included in the 2028 Olympic games in L.A.
The fact is, the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore is big time.