https://www.inquirer.com/news/al-primo-obituary-20220930.html
Al Primo, creator of ‘Eyewitness News,’ has died at 87
He modernized TV news and diversified newsrooms across the U.S.
by Layla A. Jones
Published Sep 30, 2022

Albert “Al” Primo, 87, who transformed television news when he created the 
now-ubiquitous Eyewitness News format, died Thursday, Sept. 29, at his home 
in Old Greenwich, Conn.

Mr. Primo launched Eyewitness News at Philadelphia’s KYW-TV, now CBS3, in 
1965 as the station’s 30-year-old news director. Mr. Primo’s makeover of 
the TV news format ushered in an era of record viewership and profits for 
the medium and changed America’s relationship with local news.

Diverting from the static, newsreader format of the day, which featured a 
sole, middle-aged white anchor, Mr. Primo created a beat system and hired 
women and people of color for the first time.

He paired men and women to anchor together, creating the first “family” of 
local news people.

“They said ‘it was not journalism’ and ‘he’s using show-business 
techniques,’ ” Mr. Primo told The Inquirer earlier this year of critics who 
challenged his strategy. “And of course, I said, ‘Yes, that’s right. This 
is television, so we use lights, camera, action — that’s what we do.’ But 
we do the news, too.”

Integral to Mr. Primo’s vision were newsrooms that looked more like the 
communities they were covering. Soon after taking a top role at KYW-TV, he 
began meeting with civic leaders in Philadelphia.

“What it did for me was really highlight the fact that there was no 
minority representation on the station,” Mr. Primo said. “And so I began to 
look around for someone who was qualified to join the team.”

The young newsman then recruited Trudy Haynes, the first African American 
television reporter in the city. Haynes died in June at 95.

“It took a lot of courage to take a radio reporter from Detroit and put her 
in Philadelphia, the fourth biggest city in America,” Mr. Primo recently 
told The Inquirer of hiring Haynes.

>From mailroom to mogul
With his success in Philadelphia pushing him into the national spotlight, 
Mr. Primo moved to New York City’s WABC-TV in 1968, and unrolled the 
Eyewitness News format there.

In New York, he gave big names like Geraldo Rivera their start.

Building on his successful approach to television news, Mr. Primo innovated 
again when he became a news consultant, inventing an entirely new media 
profession and spreading the Eyewitness News format to more than 100 
stations across the world.

His brainchild emphasized action on video, the perception that reporters 
were always on the scene when news was breaking, the familial coanchor 
arrangement with quippy banter, music, and graphics, and a more narrative 
storytelling approach. These elements still define local TV news stations 
across the country and some national TV news programs.

Later in life, he created Teen Kids News, a children’s television program 
that still airs and publishes online today.

A Pittsburgh native, Mr. Primo began his journey to media mogul in the 
mailroom of a local television station and worked his way up to assistant 
news director. Frustrated by lack of promotion to news director, he left 
first for Cleveland before coming to Philadelphia.

Once he arrived, pioneering female broadcaster Marciarose Shestack helped 
Mr. Primo launch Eyewitness News.

”What I can tell you about Al is he really revolutionized the news 
business,” she said, noting that his death came as a “shock.” Shestack 
emphasized Mr. Primo’s drive to hire people of color like Haynes and 
prominent newspaper columnist Claude Lewis, who was Black. “He was a very 
dynamic personality,” she said. “He was forward looking.”

“We’re so proud of my dad and the advancements he did for women and 
minorities and we’re so heartbroken. I knew him as dad and he was a great 
one,” daughter Juliet Primo told The Inquirer.

In addition to Juliet, Mr. Primo is survived by another daughter, Valeri 
Primo Lack, and other relatives.

Services are tentatively planned for Saturday, Oct. 8, at First 
Congregational Church in Old Greenwich, Conn.

Published Sept. 30, 2022
Layla A. Jones

© 2022 The Philadelphia Inquirer, LLC

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