My co-workers and Cincinnati viewers have become family and I’ll cherish the overwhelming love and support they’ve shown me from my first day on the air back in 2011, through my recent health challenges and breast cancer journey. In the station announcement, Hughes said she was “so grateful to have had the opportunity to serve the Greater Cincinnati and Tri-State community for over the past 10-plus years through my weather forecasting, storytelling and community involvement. And that personality and authenticity is why the audience connected with her,” Brogan said. “We will all miss Sherry – her positive attitude, smile, laugh, dancing – you name it – she always makes you feel better. Jeff Brogan, WCPO-TV vice president and general manager, told staffers Monday that Hughes was leaving the station. He’s now managing director of Blue Rose Supply in Cincinnati. Three months later, Myron Hughes left the Greater Tampa Chamber of Commerce to work at UC. She had previously worked at stations in Raleigh, N.C.
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Hughes, wife of former University of Cincinnati basketball star and administrator Myron Hughes, was hired by WCPO-TV 10 years ago from a Tampa TV station. Because I’ve got a life to live, and that’s what I’m going to do,” she told May. But truth be told, I’m not going to worry about cancer either. I’ve got something bigger to worry about. “What I think I was showing everyone is that I’m taking control of my life, and I’m not going to worry about the superficial or what I look like. And I just was not going to live my life hiding what was going on,” she told WCPO-TV reporter Lucy May in a story posted last month on.
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I had lots of viewers and social media followers that I talk to on a daily basis. “I just felt as if I wasn’t going to hide anything.
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She cut her hair short before it fell out, and when her wigs were too uncomfortable under the hot TV studio lights, she stepped in front of the cameras with no hair at all. She told Channel 9 viewers and her social media followers about her journey step by step. In July 2019 she was diagnosed with breast cancer, which had taken her mother’s life when Hughes was a young adult. God has ordered my steps and I’m walking in my purpose,” Hughes posted on Facebook Monday. “I’m going to love on myself more and continue the work I’ve been doing around women’s health, breast cancer awareness, education and advocacy. I know how important it is and how you depend on it.A month after saying she wanted her life “to be about something,” meteorologist Sherry Hughes is leaving WCPO-TV after her inspiring public battle with breast cancer. I will regularly pray for you and for Channel 9 as a whole. I sincerely apologize if you don't because you deserve to know. I'm sure there will be a sense of emptiness for a while not seeing certain folks on a daily basis. I am thrilled to start writing this chapter of my life with no preconceived outcome but I will miss so many of you. If that intrigues you, friend request me on my personal Facebook page and you can watch it happen. Then, I am going to start doing what I love - what my heart is telling me to do - telling great stories. I am going to attend to some projects around my house that I never had time to get to.
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I am going to spend some much needed time with my family during normal hours. Some of you have asked what I will be doing. Forgive me, but this time I am going to accept every single word. The kindness that has been shared through cards and letters and emails has been a bit overwhelming. I am a little nervous at times when I think too much but my days are infinitely brighter and more promising. Nearly every day was heavy and bleak and that is no way to spend so many hours week after week. Recently, Channel 9 has become a very dark place for me. Honestly, I couldn't be happier or more excited. My most recent 15 years with WCPO and, potentially, my 25 years of uninterrupted service as a television meteorologist are over. Here's his "So long" message to coworkers: It is over. He returned to the station as the morning meteorologist 15 years ago, in April 1999, to replace Rod Hill. Handley, a Mount Healthy native and Air Force veteran, first worked as a Channel 9 camera operator while studying electronic media at the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music from 1985-89.