NEW: WJAR 10 Names Isaacs News Director

GoLocalProv Business Team

NEW: WJAR 10 Names Isaacs News Director

Scott Isaacs named News Director at WJAR 10
WJAR 10 has named Scott Isaacs as its News Director. 

The announcement comes months after WJAR let go of former News Director Chris Lanni. 

“I’m honored to be joining WJAR, a station with a legacy of producing quality journalism and looking out for viewers. I can’t wait to work with this team of talented journalists,” said Isaacs. 

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Isaacs will start on June 27. 

Scott Isaacs 

Isaacs joins WJAR after 13 years at WCVB, Hearst Television's flagship station in Boston. For most of his tenure, he served as Executive Producer and Sports Director, helping lead coverage of breaking events including the Boston Marathon bombing and its aftermath, the capture and trial of mobster James “Whitey” Bulger, and the fall of football star Aaron Hernandez.

Before joining WCVB, Isaacs served as Senior Producer at WJAR's sister Sinclair Broadcasting station WRGB in Albany, New York. He also produced newscasts at WTVH in Syracuse, New York, and WBNG in Binghamton, New York.

Sinclair, owners of WJAR, has come under fire for claims that is is right wing leaning. The most recent charges came in an article in the New York Times.

As GoLocal reported earlier in May.

The New York Times published an article on Sunday that outlined how the parent company of Providence’s WJAR-10 is requiring its stations to air pre-packaged daily news segments that are right-wing leaning.

Now, Sinclair Broadcasting - who owns WJAR - is in the midst of purchasing Tribune's 42 television stations for $3.9 billion.

Vox calls the deal a mega-move for conservative media. “Sinclair Broadcast Group — a conservative, Trump-friendly television empire — is poised to become one of the most powerful players in the mainstream media. The relatively unknown company, whose stations have mixed conservative commentary with local news, is now on the verge of a deal that would allow it to reach nearly three-quarters of American households. 

This is not the first case of WJAR’s parent company being linked to GOP political causes.

In December, Politico reported that Sinclair Broadcasting made a deal with the Trump campaign for better access - which isn't even the first time that WJAR's parent company has been tied to pushing a conservative agenda.

“Kushner said the agreement with Sinclair, which owns television stations across the country in many swing states and often packages news for their affiliates to run, gave them more access to Trump and the campaign, according to six people who heard his remarks,” reported Politico, of remarks made by Trump's son-in-law, who is married to Trump's daughter, Ivanka. 

Locally, WJAR 10’s General Manager Vic Vetter said he had no comment on the New York Times story.

Issacs' Background

He began his career in 1999 as an assignment editor at WTEN in Albany, New York.

Isaacs attended the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, and graduated with a degree in broadcast journalism.  

He is a native of Albany, New York and resides in Southeastern Massachusetts with his wife Sharman. 


Rhode Island's Changing Media Landscape

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