Monday, March 09, 2015

Retirement article from TV Spy

WFAA Says Goodbye to Retiring Sports Anchor

By Kevin Eck Comment

Last night, Dallas ABC affiliate WFAA gave the last ten minutes of its 10:00 p.m.newscast to saying goodbye to sports reporter, anchor and executive sports producer George Riba.
Riba is retiring after 37 years with the station. Sports anchor Dale Hansen put together a video tribute.
“He arrived in Dallas in the middle of the golden age for local TV news,” said Hansen “A one-man-band: reporter, photographer and editor — long before the term ‘multimedia journalist’ existed.”
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram put the tribute on its site.

Riba was working at KXAS/Channel 5 when Channel 8 lured him away in 1977, as revealed in the clip [watch below]. The tribute was followed by an in-studio farewell in which former Texas Rangers player-manager Toby Harrah gave Riba a parting gift: a framed, signed Rangers jersey with “Riba” and the number 37 on the back.

Wednesday, March 04, 2015

Retirement article from Star Telegram

ICYMI: WFAA bids farewell to George Riba
02/20/2015 8:13 AM



WFAA/Channel 8 bid an affectionate farewell Thursday night to George Riba, the sports reporter-anchor who is retiring after 37 years with the station.

The final 10 minutes or so of the 10 p.m. newscast were dedicated to Riba, with a sweet goodbye led by sports anchor Dale Hansen and featuring a few special guests.

“He arrived in Dallas in the middle of the golden age for local TV news,” Hansen said. “A one-man-band: reporter, photographer and editor — long before the term ‘multimedia journalist’ existed.”

Riba was working at KXAS/Channel 5 when Channel 8 lured him away in 1977, as revealed in the clip.

The tribute was followed by an in-studio farewell in which former Texas Rangers player-manager Toby Harrah gave Riba a parting gift: a framed, signed Rangers jersey with “Riba” and the number 37 on the back.
Watch the whole tribute here:
The 10 p.m. newscast was only part of a farewell tour that Riba did Thursday, a sign of what he meant to the station. During the 4 p.m. newscast, anchor Shelly Slater interviewed Riba and his wife, Maggie, about his departure, life and career.
And on Thursday’s Good Morning Texas, co-host Mike Castellucci chatted with Riba and another longtime DFW sports-media vet, Norm Hitzges of KTCK/1310 AM “The Ticket.” Riba talks about change — when he started, there were no Dallas Mavericks or Dallas Stars ... or, for that matter, “The Ticket.”
Also: Check out this WFAA slide show of Riba through the years.

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/sports/article10735388.html#storylink=cpy

Retirement article from The Advocate

George Riba reflects on his 37-year career with Channel 8


George Riba: Photo by James Coreas.
George Riba: Photo by James Coreas.
Old Lake Highlands neighbor George Riba has been a familiar face on Channel 8, where he has worked as a sports anchor, executive sports producer and sports director since 1977. He remembers when WFAA made the switch from film to digital. He remembers when major sports teams like the Texas Rangers, the Dallas Mavericks and the Dallas Stars first signed on in this city. But now, after 37 years, the final countdown on Riba’s colorful career has begun.

Riba is retiring this month, and his reason for doing so is simple: “I can’t do it forever,” he says with a shrug. He had a good run and has produced or co-produced more than 10,000 stories during his career. From here on out, Riba has one objective for how he’ll spend his time: “If it’s not fun, I’m not doing it,” he insists.

Riba’s career began while he was still attending the University of Texas at Arlington. He originally started in radio before he found out TV pays better. He worked a couple of different TV stints while still in school, and he was hired on at Channel 8 after he graduated.

For the first few years he did half radio and half TV, and he loved it. “I still think radio is very cool,” he says. He never planned to cover sports full time, but it fit him well.

In 37 years, Riba says, it’s hard to pick a favorite story; there are too many. But Riba says he usually enjoyed stories that involved trips, and he has especially fond memories of a trip to Tokyo to cover SMU playing Houston in the 1983 Mirage Bowl. Spring training and football training camp stories also hold a special place in his heart.

Since the late ’70s, if Riba wasn’t in the newsroom, you could find him running or cycling at White Rock Lake — often with his wife, Maggie, who works as a personal trainer. He has run 29 marathons and completed the Dallas Marathon 21 times. “I try to do one every year,” he says. “That’s one of the reasons why I moved over here to the lake area.”

He says he plans to keep running after retirement and maybe work or volunteer somewhere part time, or possibly learn an instrument or two — or who knows, maybe none of that. The point is: He can do whatever he wants.

- See more at: http://lakewood.advocatemag.com/2015/01/26/george-riba-reflects-on-his-37-year-career-with-channel-8/#sthash.LV5Adg4g.dpuf

Retirement article from Unclebarky

Simply the best: A fond farewell to sports reporter George Riba

IMG_0059

Closing shot of George Riba for his last story on Gannett8. It aired on Wednesday’s 10 p.m. newscast. He’s standing in front of Fair Park Coliseum, where the Dallas Blackhawks hockey team used to play. Photos: Ed Bark

By ED BARK
@unclebarkycom on Twitter
George Riba’s final story for Gannett8 aired on Wednesday’s 10 p.m. newscast.

But as previously posted, his official last day at the Dallas-based station is Friday, Feb. 20th. And during Thursday’s 10 p.m. edition, the finest shoe leather TV sports reporter in the history of this market will be honored in full by sports anchor Dale Hansen and many others whose profiles may be higher than his.

“I grew up having some desire to anchor, but the longer I stayed in the business, the more I learned that reporting really was what I do best,” Riba says in an email interview. “I really enjoying going out on the street, meeting people and putting together stories. They’re always different, plus it gets you away from the office. Then the writing and editing is where the real fun comes in. In sports, we edit all of our own stuff. So that gives you full control over the final product.”

Riba has filled in as an anchor numerous times during a career that included short stints at KTVT-TV (CBS11) and KXAS-TV (NBC5) before he joined WFAA-TV (Gannett8) in September, 1977. He’s worked in D-FW television for nearly 42 years, the last 37 years and five months at Gannett8.

“When I have to anchor for a week at a time during peak vacation time, I start getting a little antsy to go outdoors,” he says. “Maybe that’s the farm boy in me and just needing to get out.”

He grew up on a farm in the Texas Hill Country and initially worked as a radio deejay before finding his true calling. It’s always been Riba’s view that a reporter should stay out of the way whenever possible. Or as the late Charles Kuralt used to counsel, “Don’t ride the tricycle. Keep yourself out of the story. The people who are watching it are not interested in you.”

“I have never felt like I should be part of the story, although these days they want more and more reporter involvement,” Riba says. “I’m sure that comes from covering news during my early days. For me, it was impossible to make a tragic incident a story about yourself. I always felt that if the story was interesting, then it should be able to carry itself without reporter interference.”

Riba has been to the gate thousands upon thousands of times, covering the Dallas Cowboys’ Super Bowl XXVII win in Pasadena; the Texas Rangers’ first journey to post-season play; and the Dallas Mavericks’ inaugural 1980-’81 season and their 2011 championship run. He even went to Japan in 1983 to cover SMU’s win over Houston in the Mirage Bowl.
IMG_0060

Riba reporting from 1983 Mirage Bowl festivities in Tokyo.

“But really, the stories that had the most impact on me were the human interest ones,” Riba says, spotlighting Duncanville High School basketball coach Sandra Meadows’ battle against cancer while her team rallied round her; the 2014 TCU baseball team adopting cancer-stricken little Micah Ahern; and Allen High School golfer Drew Miller, “who got sponsors to donate money for every birdie he made and then in turn donated the money to a charity in honor of a young kid who died of cancer.”

“Those are the ones you never forget,” Riba says. “I know that if it brings tears to my eyes while I’m editing the story, it’ll have an impact on the viewer at home.”

He’ll turn 66 in May, and his decision to retire is “really based on age,” Riba says. “I’m not checking out entirely. Hopefully I’ll be able to do something like voice-over work, commercials, part-time radio . . . Who knows? I’m wide open to anything that’s fun and hopefully less time-consuming.”

Through it all, he has continued to run. And at last count, that includes 29 marathons.

“I started running 41 years ago because I needed to lose some weight and felt like I needed more energy,” he says. “I eventually worked my way up to a marathon and then tried to do one a year because I figured it was a great way to keep me in shape. I ran a 3:01 (3 hours, one minute) in 1979. But of course, I weighed about 135 pounds back then. Now that was an awesome day!”

And yes -- wait for it -- Riba has been an awesome, generation-spanning sports reporter who never forgot how to be a nice guy as well. He leaves this particular scene in times when local newscast sports segments continue to shrink in both relevance and importance in the eyes of station consultants and news room managers. But Riba experienced all of the glory years and companion technology changes. D-FW will never see the likes of him again. In both duration and sustained excellence, he stands alone and on top. When you say George Riba, you’ve said it all.

Here’s the video of his final story, a travelogue through time, space and sports venues that couldn’t quite keep up with him.



Email comments or questions to: unclebarky@verizon.net

Retirement article from Dallas Morning News

Sports DaySports Day Columnists Barry Horn

Barry Horn


Hot Air: George Riba, the man behind 8,000 stories, closes book on 37-year WFAA career


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Louis DeLuca/Staff Photographer
George Riba, retiring WFAA sports reporter, is pictured at the station on Thursday, February 12, 2015. (Louis DeLuca/The Dallas Morning News)

Growing up on a farm in the Hill Country, George Riba learned three things: English may have been his second language; the value of hard work; and he didn’t want to spend the rest of his life growing peaches on the family spread in Stonewall.

Riba took his first baby step away from the farm while still a student at Fredericksburg High School. He got a weekend disc jockey gig at a local radio station. When he wasn’t playing country, western or polka music, he read the news and voiced commercials.

Soon after graduation, he followed an older brother north to the campus of the University of Texas-Arlington. While his brother studied engineering, Riba went to school in the morning, worked in the afternoon at a succession of radio stations and then at night, he manned an assembly line at an electronics giant.

One of the radio stopovers was at a station that happened to be in the same building as KTVT-TV (Channel 11). The scuttlebutt in the halls was that television paid better than radio. So Riba, weary of working two jobs, “beat down the door” at the station until he was hired as a weekend news reporter.
Since he knew nothing about reporting, the station graciously sent him to a workshop at the University of Oklahoma to learn how to shoot tape and talk into a microphone.

He made his Dallas-Fort Worth television debut in 1973. Riba lasted almost two years at Channel 11 before he moved to KXAS-TV (Channel 5) where he expanded his horizons to include sports.
He was out covering a Rangers game at Arlington Stadium when he ran into Verne Lundquist, who mentioned there was a sports opening at his station, WFAA-TV (Channel 8).

Sports had captured Riba’s heart. It skipped a beat when he heard Lundquist’s news. Sports certainly were more fun than covering county commissioners’ hearings and standing outside the yellow tape at crime scenes.

On Sept. 12, 1977, Riba began in the sports department at Channel 8. His hop-scotching from station to station was over.

Almost 37 1/2 years later, Riba’s run ends Feb. 20. He’s retiring.

“I don’t think there has ever been a day I didn’t go to work at Channel 8 not looking forward to it,” he said in a breakfast interview this week. Maybe that’s why he hung on nine months past his 65th birthday.

“But I would never want to be known as an old clown who stayed too long,” he said.

Riba has worked some as a weekend anchor and a fill-in on weeknights. But mostly he has been out in the field reporting stories.

The other day, he and anchor Dale Hansen, his longtime boss in Channel 8’s sports department, buried their noses in the archives before putting pencil to paper. They computed that, including the old days when sports got more time on local news, Riba has reported 8,000 stories for the station.
It’s a record that may last forever.

Riba never had an itch to move permanently into an anchor chair. He never wanted to be tethered to the studio. He has had feelers over the years, asking about his interest in moving to other markets. Always, he turned them down.

If you have seen only a sliver of Riba’s reports or every one of his 8,000, you know one thing: He never has gotten in the way of a story. He never conjured a catch phrase or screamed, “Hey, look at me,” into a camera lens.

Hansen said he has had to force Riba into stepping in front of the camera to add a face to his voice in an effort to solidify his brand.

“The man just wants to tell a story,” said Hansen, who has worked with Riba for three decades.
Riba’s work ethic also always has been above and beyond.

“To have worked as hard as he has in a secondary role and produce the quality work he has over the years is a wonderful tribute to him,” said Lundquist, who worked with Riba for six years before moving on from Channel 8 to CBS.

And one more tribute:

“I have never seen George angry,” Lundquist said. “And you can’t say that about too many people who work in a television newsroom.”

Lundquist obviously missed the day when Riba sweated hard to produce a breaking UT-Arlington football story. He hustled back to Channel 8’s downtown Dallas studios convinced he had an exclusive interview. It was 5:30 p.m. He tried to convince anchor Hansen that his story belonged on the 6 o’clock news. Hansen said it would have to simmer until the 10 o’clock.

But what if Cowboys tight end Doug Cosbie had just sprained his ankle? Riba demanded. Surely Hansen would re-work his sportscast at 6 p.m.

Of course he would, responded Hansen, who has never met a Cowboys story he didn’t like.
Riba reacted by kicking a trashcan the entire length of the newsroom.  Had he been wearing a Cowboy uniform, Hansen might have found a way to get it on the air.

“It was the only time I’ve seen him angry,” said Hansen, who calls Riba “the nicest man I have ever worked with in television.”

Hansen then volunteered a story that may put Riba on the Mount Olympus of television newsrooms from coast to coast.

It seems that Marty Haag, the iconic longtime news director at Channel 8 once told Hansen: “If I was ever going to build a news department at another station, I would start with George Riba.”
Hansen dutifully relayed the story to Riba.

Riba, in our interview over breakfast, neglected to relay that piece of history to me. As an interviewee, Riba, the consummate interviewer, desperately lacks ego.

In his final days at Channel 8, Riba has been revisiting some of the folks he has covered through the decades.

Among his favorites from the thousands he has met along the way, is George W. Bush, who owned a piece of the Rangers before advancing to higher callings. For whatever reason, President Bush has a pet name for Riba. He always kiddingly refers to him as “Hor-Hey.”

Riba, in fact, comes from German and Czech stock. At home, his parents often spoke German. Riba says he has been told he spoke that language with a Texas twang before he learned to communicate in English.

On Thursday night, Channel 8 plans to air a tribute to Riba. Tony Martinez, a master producer who worked alongside Riba for years, has put together a retrospective. Lots of surprises are planned.
In retirement, Riba plans to maintain his running regimen around White Rock Lake, trying to keep pace with his wife of 28 years, Maggie, a personal trainer. He’ll also try to keep his familiar voice active in the commercial voiceover game.

“A lot of people won’t appreciate what George did here until he is gone,” Hansen said. “Trust me, they all will be sorry.”