Frank Buckley anchors KTLA's signature broadcast, L.A.'s No.1-rated KTLA 5 Morning News every Monday through Friday from 7-11 a.m. He is also the host/executive producer of the weekly TV show and podcast, Frank Buckley Interviews, airing on weekends on KTLA and also available on YouTube, KTLA + app, and all available as an audio podcast. Frank also co-anchors Inside California Politics, airing statewide across California TV stations including KTLA in Los Angeles, KRON4 in San Francisco, and Fox5 in San Diego. He began his career as a radio announcer while still in high school as a DJ and sports play by play announcer. He occasionally appears in TV shows and films as a TV news anchor, reporter, radio announcer, or play by play announcer. Frank is also an experienced voice over artist whose voice has been used in TV shows and films, and as an announcer on TV programs. Frank joined KTLA in 2005 from CNN, where he had been a national correspondent. Frank is the recipient of numerous awards, including Emmys for hard news reporting, for news special for his coverage of the Hong Kong handover, and for entertainment programming for co-hosting KTLA's Rose Parade pre-show. He has also won awards from the Los Angeles Press Club, including best documentary for KTLA's "When Disaster Strikes: A Survival Guide" and for talk/public affairs for "Access L.A." His other honors include APTRA Awards from the Associated Press Television-Radio Association, including reporter of the year; Golden Mike Awards from the Radio and Television News Association for writing and feature reporting; and the national Americanism in News Media Award. In 2019, Frank Buckley Interviews was nominated for a Los Angeles Press Club National Arts & Entertainment Award. In 2020, the program was nominated for an Emmy Award. Frank's reporting has taken him to nearly every community in Southern California and to many locations across the United States and the globe. In March 2011, Frank traveled to Japan for KTLA and reported from Sendai immediately after it was devastated by a tsunami and earthquake. Frank has also reported for KTLA from London on a terror plot and from Tehran, Iran, on the presidential election. While at CNN, Frank's varied assignments ranged from breaking news to politics to long-form enterprise reporting, including several CNN Presents documentaries including "Carrier at War." During Operation Iraqi Freedom, Frank was embedded with the U.S. Navy aboard the aircraft carrier USS Constellation in the Persian Gulf. In the weeks following 9/11, he reported from the Pentagon and from warships in the Arabian Sea. In 2004, Frank participated in CNN's political coverage, traveling with the John Kerry and John Edwards campaigns. In 2003-2004, he also traveled with President George W. Bush and frequently reported from the White House. Other political reporting assignments have included Hillary Clinton's New York Senate run and the 2000 presidential election and its aftermath. His spot news reporting for KTLA, CNN, and in the 1990s for KCAL-TV has included hurricanes in the Caribbean and the Carolinas; the Landers and Northridge earthquakes in California and the devastating earthquake in Kobe, Japan; wildfires in Southern California; the Los Angeles riots, the OJ Simpson case and trial; and the death of John F. Kennedy, Jr. off Martha's Vineyard. Prior to KTLA and CNN, Frank reported for Los Angeles station KCAL-TV (1992-1999), WXII-TV in Winston-Salem, N.C., and at KESQ-TV in Palm Springs. He has also written for the Los Angeles Times and the Detroit News. He graduated from USC with a double major in broadcast journalism and history in 1987. Frank frequently donates his time to community organizations and has served on the boards of JDRF (formerly known as the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation), and the Los Angeles chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association. He is a member of the people-to-people diplomacy organization, U.S.-Japan Council, and he served on the Japanese American Leadership Delegation to Japan in 2006. He speaks conversational Japanese. Frank is also a member of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Frank is married to writer Elena Pearce Buckley, a native of London and Milan. He is the father of two adult sons. He is a bogey golfer, a weekly basketball player, and a cyclist who gives it everything he's got to complete a 100-mile ride every year to raise funds for JDRF to defeat type 1 diabetes.
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Frank Bukkwyd was born on 24 April 1955. He is an actor and writer.
Frank Bunce is known for Oceans Apart: Greed, Betrayal and Pacific Island Rugby (2020), Dancing with the Stars (2005) and Treasure Island (1997).
Frank Burns Jr. is an actor, known for Mysteries at the Museum (2010), I'd Kill for You (2013) and Celebrity Ghost Stories (2008).
Frank Burt Avalon was born on 29 September 1963 in Los Angeles, California, USA. He is an actor, known for Better Off Dead... (1985), The Karate Kid (1984) and Airwolf (1984).
Frank C. Sun is an actor, known for The Rover (2014).
Frank C. Turner is an actor and iconographer born in Wainwright, Alberta and now living in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia. He received his theatrical training at the University of Alberta, graduating in 1975 with a BFA. For the first few years after graduation he acted in theatres across western Canada and Ontario. In 1983 he moved to Vancouver, BC and has worked mainly in film since then. His favourite credits include, Air Bud (1997), Air Bud: Golden Receiver (1998), Air Bud 3: World Pup (2000), Air Bud: Seventh Inning Fetch (2002), The New Addams Family: Addams Family Feud (1999), Lonesome Dove: The Outlaw Years (1995), Cats & Dogs (2001), Snow Dogs (2002) and The Duke (1999). Frank has previously performed the GKC - GBS debate in Calgary, St. Paul, Minnesota, and on Apostle of Common Sense with EWTN. In 1991 he began studying iconography under Vladislav Andreyev. He has completed about 50 icons in the Byzantine tradition for individuals and churches in the Vancouver area. A frequent attendee of the Mount Angel Iconography Institute where he studied with Charles Rohrbacher, Mary Katsilometes, and Cathy Sievers; more recently he studied with Father Gianluca Busi from Bologna, spending six weeks there in 2007. He gives private instruction in iconography. Along with Chris Kielsinki and Michal Janek, Frank was a founding member of Epiphany Sacred Arts Guild, and has served as its president for four years. He also served on the curriculum advisory board of Living Waters College, soon to be opened in Derwent, Alberta.
Frank C. Williams is a New York-based actor and member of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and member of the Screen Actors Guild. Conceived in New York City, born Baltimore, Maryland. At a very young age, he cultivated his love to entertain performing in neighborhood backyards, school plays and singing in grade school, high school and church choirs. Using life experience as the basic reference for some of his characters, Frank is a US Navy Veteran, Computer Specialist and System Computer Analyst and studies at Negro Ensemble Theatre Company as well as studying with Acting coach Roger Simons of Roger Simon Studios which focus on both contemporary and classical works. He continues to use his life experiences, training and daily observations of everyday life to create and feed his characters as an actor and an artist in several film shorts and full-length features. Frank has starred in the NBC dramas "Law & Order SVU," and NBC's hit "The Blacklist " as one of Red Reddington's Army members. Most recently, Frank has a recurring role as DS Agent John Kendall on the CBS television show "Madam Secretary" as Secretary Elizabeth McCord's Diplomatic Security detail.
Although Frank Cady's most famous role would be that of general-store owner Sam Drucker, one of the less nutty residents of Hooterville in both Green Acres (1965) and Petticoat Junction (1963), he had a history as a film, stage and television actor long before those shows. Cady also appeared on some radio programs including Gunsmoke. In the 1950s, Cady played Doc Williams in The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (1952), along with numerous supporting parts in movies and also appeared in television commercials for (among other products) Shasta Grape Soda. Cady has been most prolific in television and was the only actor to play a recurring character on three TV sitcoms at the same time, The Beverly Hillbillies (1962), Green Acres (1965), and Petticoat Junction (1963). Usually cast as a gregarious small-town businessman, druggist, store clerk or other type of all-around Midwestern-type good guy, Cady was actually a California native, born in Susanville in 1915. The acting bug bit him when he sang in an elementary school play, and after graduating from Stanford University he headed to London, England, to train in the theater. When World War II broke out he was already in Europe, so he enlisted in the Army Air Force and spent the next several years in postings all over the continent. After his discharge he returned to the US and headed for Hollywood. An agent saw him in a local play, signed him, and he was on his way. One of his earlier--and more atypical--roles was as a seedy underworld character pulled in for questioning in a cop's murder in the noir classic He Walked by Night (1948), and he played a succession of hotel clerks, bureaucrats, henpecked husbands and the like for the next 40+ years. He did much television work from the mid-'50s onward. Cady resided in Wilsonville, Oregon and at the time of his death had two children; daughter, Catherine Turk; son, Steven; three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren.