Pam Moore Biography
Pam Moore is an American anchor and reporter who worked for KRON 4 as an evening anchor and reporter. She joined the KRON 4 news team in March 1991, after previously working for WBZ.
Pam Moore Career
Moore earned a degree in Radio/Television and Film from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Her broadcasting career started when she was working as a news reporter at WJLB Radio in Detroit. She has also worked in broadcast news in Louisville and Dallas. Before she joined KRON, she worked as an anchor and general assignment reporter at WBZ-TV in Boston and was a general assignment reporter at KCBS-TV in Los Angeles. In March 1991, Moore joined KRON 4 as an anchor and general assignment reporter. She was host of “Health Matters,” a half-hour health awareness program, and was assigned to report on medical issues for “4 Your Health” segments.
Moore was nominated for an Emmy for the special ‘Selma to Ferguson”. She has been inducted into the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Silver Circle, honoring her significant contribution to Northern California television, and honored for her career achievements by the Society of Professional Journalism, NorCal. Her work on KRON 4’s five-part news series “About Race” won several accolades, including the Pew Center Batten Prize for Civic Journalism, the prestigious George Foster Peabody Award, an In-Depth Reporting Award from the Society of Professional Journalists of Northern California, top honors from the Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame, and the California Associated Press Television Radio Association’s Best Documentary Award.
Along with her accolades for “About Race,” Moore has received several other awards, including two Northern California Emmy nominations in 1997 for her medical reports, “Diets Don’t Work” and “The Brain.” For his ten-part news series on HMOs, “Who Owns Your Health,” Moore was awarded the California Journalism Award in February 2000 by California State University, Sacramento, in the category of Television Special Feature/Enterprise Reporting. She won a Northern California Emmy Award for “Who Owns Your Health” in May 2000.
Moore won the 2005 Pubby Award from the San Francisco Bay Area Publicity Club for the Best Bay Area Anchor. In 2009, the Bay Area Black Journalists Association honored Moore for her dedication to journalism. In 2001, Moore received an Associated Press Television-Radio Association award for Best Investigative Reporting for “Mercury Rising.” Her 2001 series “Don’t Call Me Crazy” won the Outstanding Journalism Award for the California Chapter of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill and was nominated for an Emmy Award. As a former vice president of broadcast for the National Association of Black Journalists, Moore also holds memberships in the Bay Area Black Journalists Association and the Black Journalists Association of Southern California.
Moore has received multiple honors for her community contributions. She was given the Vanguard Supporter award by the East Oakland Youth Development Center in September 2018 in recognition of her years of voluntary work with the summer program and the college scholarship awarded in her honor. Moore received recognition from the United Negro College Fund in February 2009 for her continuous assistance. She served with the Big Sisters Association in several locations for almost ten years, and the organization honored her in 1989.
Moore was honored with an award from African American Advocates in 1997 for her work mentoring an Oakland public school student, and in 1998 she became the first recipient of the San Francisco NAACP Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett Civil Rights Award. In 2001, Moore won the 100 Black Men of the Bay Area Community Service Award. In 2012, the League of Women Voters of San Francisco named Moore one of the “Women Who Could Be President.” Moore received the Beverly Ann Johnson Media Award from the Bay Area Black Media Coalition in 1994, the YMCA of the East Bay’s Distinguished Community Service Award in 1995, and the Wiley Manuel Law Foundation Award for Outstanding Community Service in 1996.
Currently, Moore does not only volunteer with the summer program at the East Oakland Youth Development Center she is also a founding board member of Friends of Faith, an organization, now operated by the Women’s Cancer Resource Center, supporting low-income and under-insured women who are diagnosed with breast cancer.
Pam Moore Salary
Moore earns anannual salary of about $47,000-$120,000.
Pam Moore Net Worth
Moore has an estimated net worth of about $1 Million – $7 Million which she has earned through her career as an anchor and reporter.
Pam Moore Age
Moore was born on July 19, 1954, in Detroit, Michigan, United States. She is 70 years old as of 2024 and she celebrates her birthday on the 19th of July every year.
Pam Moore Height and Weight
Moore stands at a height of 5 feet 6 inches tall. She has not disclosed her weight. However, this information will be updated when available.
Pam Moore Family
Moore was born to her mother and her father served in the army and was a voracious reader who inspired her career in journalism. Her father lives in Detroit, Michigan. She likes to keep her personal life private hence she has neither disclosed the names of her parent nor those of her siblings. However, this information will be updated when available.
Pam Moore Husband | Pam Moore Frankie Beverly
Moore is currently unmarried. However, she has been involved in a committed and enduring romantic relationship with Frankie Beverly, originally known as Howard Beverly, a highly accomplished American R&B singer, musician, songwriter, and producer. Beverly gained significant recognition in 1976 as the frontman of his funk band, Maze, where he was the band’s lead singer, writer, and producer. However, the duo separated citing unknown reasons. Together, they share a son named Anthony, who has pursued a successful career as a professional drummer.
Pam Moore Retirement
Veteran journalist Pam Moore, who serves as KRON4 News’ evening anchor, announced her retirement from the position on June 6, 2023. Moore began hosting KRON4 News in March 1991 and has spent 32 years in the station. During that time, she covered stories and served as the anchor for KRON4-TV, kron4.com, and the KRONon streaming service, among other KRON platforms. Throughout her career, Pam conducted several important interviews, including one with Alicia Garza, the creator of Black Lives Matter, and a profile of the late Georgia congressman John Lewis.
She also interviewed Belva Davis, a veteran KRON4 anchor and reporter who served as one of her mentors. Additionally, Pam provided insight into stories that emphasized the rich cultural heritage of the Bay Area, such as Oakland’s Historic Grand Lake Theater. She also championed meaningful stories each February hosting KRON4’s ‘Honoring Black History’ special. Moore gave her final broadcast from the evening anchor desk at KRON4 on Thursday, June 29, 2023, and the network paid tribute to her career by naming its San Francisco news studio after her.
Pam Moore Social Media Platform
Moore is very active on her Twitter and Facebook pages. She has 1k followers on Twitter and 4.8k followers on Facebook.