Glen Walker is coming back to broadcast news after KTLA layoff
Longtime on-air anchor Glen Walker is making his way back to broadcast news in Los Angeles.
After being laid off from KTLA in February, alongside other veteran broadcasters like Lu Parker and Mark Kriski, Walker is starting a new chapter with KTTV, L.A.βs local Fox affiliate. He began his new role as a per-diem anchor this week, where heβs set to have an on-air introduction on Wednesday and begin anchoring shows on Thursday evening.
βI didnβt feel like I was done,β said Walker of his career, in a phone interview Wednesday morning. βIβm still healthy. Iβm not ready to retire.β
As Foxβs new rotating anchor, he wonβt have a regular broadcast time, but will instead float between the KTTV and KCOP channels to fill in as needed.
Over the last few months, Walker has been eager to get back on air, especially with the local primary elections this month and the coming midterms in November. He said he plans to take the new gig βone day at a time,β but heβs most interested in covering politics and the current state of affairs in Los Angeles.
βWith the elections and how itβs all related to the fires and the homeless problem, this city β maybe the whole state β has reached a point where [we ask], which direction are we going from here?β Walker said.
The broadcast news industry has been experiencing upheaval and consolidation β most recently with layoffs and firings at β60 Minutes,β and the pending merger of news giants Tegna and Nexstar. With the ongoing domination of streaming services, many local stations are struggling to compete and maintain viewership.
β[The stations] will get it figured out because thereβs an adjustment period. It used to be just newspapers and radio, then you had television,β Walker said. βNow weβve got the internet. Technology advances, and you just have to adjust to it.β
When he and several of his colleagues received the news of the layoffs at KTLA, the group was met with an outpouring of support from many loyal viewers and fans of the station. Walker, who had been with the station since 2010, was surprised by how many messages he received.
βYou make a bigger impact than you think,β said Walker, whoβs hopeful the same viewers will start to tune in to the local Fox station. βYou just go to do your job every day, and you donβt think about it day to day, but then when something like that happens, thatβs when you really see where people appreciate you.β
In between jobs, Walker said he spent his time golfing and trying to keep busy around the house and focused on landing a job. As soon as he stepped into Foxβs studio for a practice run, he said he felt an immediate sense of familiarity.
βI was sitting behind the anchor desk, and there was the teleprompter, the camera and thatβs it,β Walker said. βItβs all the same at every TV station. Itβs just a little bit of a different environment.β