Brooke Cain's profile photo

Brooke Cain

Raleigh

TV and Media Writer at The News & Observer

Service journalism editor + TV/Media at The News & Observer in Raleigh, NC. Free Press. Yay cats. Go State. See also: @WarmTV ✌️

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Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | newsobserver.com | Brooke Cain

    Charlie Gaddy, longtime WRAL anchor and NC broadcasting icon, has died at 93. Gaddy led WRAL's evening newscasts for 20 years, retiring in 1994. He earned awards, reported from the field during crises and championed public causes. Charlie Gaddy, the longtime WRAL anchor who was often called "the Walter Cronkite of North Carolina," has died. Gaddy's death Thursday morning was confirmed by WRAL news director Mike Friedrich. Gaddy was 93.

  • 2 weeks ago | charlotteobserver.com | Brooke Cain

    Charlie Gaddy, longtime WRAL anchor and NC broadcasting icon, has died at 93. Gaddy led WRAL's evening newscasts for 20 years, retiring in 1994. He earned awards, reported from the field during crises and championed public causes. Charlie Gaddy, the longtime WRAL anchor who was often called "the Walter Cronkite of North Carolina," has died. Gaddy's death Thursday morning was confirmed by WRAL news director Mike Friedrich. Gaddy was 93.

  • 2 weeks ago | yahoo.com | Brooke Cain

    Charlie Gaddy, the longtime WRAL anchor who was often called “the Walter Cronkite of North Carolina,” has died. Gaddy’s death Thursday morning was confirmed by WRAL news director Mike Friedrich. Gaddy was 93. His beloved wife of 60 years, Nancy Rankin Gaddy, passed away in 2021. “It’s a sad day here,” Friedrich told The News & Observer on Thursday.

  • 1 month ago | heraldonline.com | Kimberly Cataudella Tutuska |Brooke Cain |Renee Umsted

    North Carolina copperheads, our most common venomous snake, are often spotted searching for food like cicadas or rodents in yards and gardens. Experts say copperheads prefer hiding under vegetation, porches, or in piles of leaves and wood, so clearing these shelters is the best way to make your space less attractive to them. Removing food sources like spilled birdseed can also help, as rodents drawn to the area bring copperheads in.

  • 1 month ago | yahoo.com | Kimberly Cataudella Tutuska |Brooke Cain |Renee Umsted

    Stories by News & Observer journalists, with AI summarizationNorth Carolina copperheads, our most common venomous snake, are often spotted searching for food like cicadas or rodents in yards and gardens. Experts say copperheads prefer hiding under vegetation, porches, or in piles of leaves and wood, so clearing these shelters is the best way to make your space less attractive to them. Removing food sources like spilled birdseed can also help, as rodents drawn to the area bring copperheads in.

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Brooke Cain
Brooke Cain @brookecain
4 Nov 24

RT @dawnbvaughan: Well I mind it.

Brooke Cain
Brooke Cain @brookecain
3 Oct 24

This thread moved me to tears.

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Brooke Cain
Brooke Cain @brookecain
3 Oct 24

RT @NWSGSP: The path from Helene can be seen from space with all of the power outages the day after it ripped through the Southeast. #scwx…