The life of trailblazing journalist Belva Davis, the first Black female television reporter on the West Coast, was celebrated in a remembrance at San Francisco's Grace Cathedral on Monday.
Some of the biggest names in Bay Area politics, media and activism gathered Monday to honor the life of a trailblazing journalist. A public celebration of life for Davis, the first Black female ...
That said, this tenaciously talented and universally beloved reporter is a hero to legions among the African American community, fledgling female journalists and all seekers of truth. A 400-strong ...
Earlier today, much of San Francisco’s political and journalistic elite gathered at Grace Cathedral to celebrate the life of Belva Davis, the legendary TV journalist, who died in September.
Change is inevitable. Growth is optional. That was the spirit I carried as a young Black journalist in San Francisco, searching for direction. And it was Belva Davis — the woman who became the first ...
Friends, family, and colleagues are gathering at Grace Cathedral Church in San Francisco on Monday to honor the life and ...
Belva Davis and John Carter Brown will be this year’s recipients of SAG-AFTRA’s Howard Keel Award, which is presented in recognition of their significant contributions to the 160,000-member union.
The Bay Area news icon, first Black woman on West Coast TV, leaves behind a legacy of courage and trailblazing reporting. Belva Davis, the first Black woman to work as a television reporter on the ...
Belva Davis, a trailblazing journalist and Bay Area television fixture, has announced that she will retire from the anchor chair later this year. Raised in Oakland, Davis was the first black female TV ...
Belva Davis's journey began in the 1960s when she broke into the male-dominated field of television journalism at KTVU. Her first assignment covering a beauty pageant marked the start of a ...
Belva Davis, anchorwoman for Bay Area’s KQED Channel 9, is a pioneer with 43 years of journalism under her belt. Donned a “Bay Area Journalism Icon,” the Contra Costa Times, recently chronicled ...