CONNECTICUT — It did not take long for Alexa Farrell, who recently left Fox61, to announce her new job in New York City.
Farrell has joined WPIX-TV as the station’s newest member of the morning news team, covering traffic and transit, she wrote on Facebook, accompanied by a brief video.
“Still feeling the ‘pinch me’ moment of this new chapter,” Farrell wrote, adding that she’s “thrilled” to be joining PIX11, and will be on-air mornings starting at 4 a.m.
Farrell, who was at Fox61 for about six months before leaving for PIX11, has also worked at News 12 in both New York and Connecticut; WVII/WFVX in Bangor, Maine; and at WTNH-TV in New Haven.
In other new job news, meteorologist Fred Campagna, who left WTNH-TV in 2018, announced he is leaving television news altogether for a different weather-related role.
Most recently, Campagna was Atlanta First News, and he said in a video on Facebook that he is ending his 26-year television news career for a new job as the director of Forensic Meteorology with Haag Global, a Salas O’Brien Company.
“A lot of you know that I like to run, and 26 years is a nice parallel to the 26 miles of a marathon,” Campagna said. “It’s been challenging, there have been some unfamiliar turns, some tough uphills, but there have also been a lot of really nice downhills. And in the end, it’s been extremely fun, very rewarding, and I cannot thank you enough for all of your support along the way.”
Campagna is a native Bristol, Rhode Island, and in addition to New Haven-based News 8, he has also worked at WLNE in Providence and WFXT in Boston.
Two North Koreans have been indicted for fooling American companies into hiring them for remote worker positions. The schemes aim to raise money for Pyongyang.N
Democratic lawmakers, as well as many federal unions and organizations, are urging federal empl
If you’re looking for a new career, you may want to consider a job in banking. There’s a wide range of bank jobs, each with unique responsibilities, qua
We knew South Carolina’s workforce agency was all about spinning the Palmetto State’s anemic labor participation rate in a favorable directionâ€