Sandy Hill Biography
Sandy Hill is a television journalist, Miss Washington, a writer, and a commercial real estate dealer from the United States.
How old is Sandy Hill? – Age
She is 77 years old as of 2 February 2024. She was born in 1947 in Centralia, Washington, United States. Her real name is Sandra Marth Hill.
Sandy Hill Family – Education
Her father, John Marth, helped build the local Lutheran church. She was very active with music and the church from a young age. She was intelligent and diligent, graduating from Centralia High School near the top of her class. However, she identified as a social pariah. This did not prevent her from being crowned Miss Lewis County in 1965 and Miss Washington in 1966. She received a scholarship at the University of Washington in Seattle, where she studied Spanish and joined the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority.
Sandy Hill Husband
After college, Hill worked as an employment recruiter for Seattle First National Bank in Seattle, where she met Craig Hill, a junior banker at the time; the couple married in 1969. Hill, her husband, and kid returned to their home state of Washington.
Sandy Hill Net Worth
She has an estimated net worth of $5 million.
Sandy Hill Career
During the 1960s, ladies were practically nonexistent in TV news, except for a periodic “climate young lady.” Slope had planned on going into global relations. Unintentionally, Slope and her significant other saw a paper promotion searching for a ladies’ manager on a nearby Channel. She applied and landed the position three weeks after the fact.
Slope started her vocation on air in 1969, by facilitating a noontime interview and news show on KIRO, the CBS subsidiary in Seattle. Before long she served as a “road” correspondent for the night release of KIRO’s Onlooker News. She procured a dedicated continuing in the Pacific Northwest. During her residency at KIRO, she won numerous nearby Emmy Grants for broadcasting; local people additionally still recall her for facilitating the Large Cash Film in the early evening.
Due to her progress in Seattle, Slope was drawn closer to co-anchor the Channel 2 News at CBS claimed and-worked KNXT (presently KCBS-television) in Los Angeles in 1974. At the point when she acknowledged that position, she turned into the main female anchor in Los Angeles, working close by Jerry Dunphy, Bill Strong and Joseph Benti. Sadly, because of unfortunate outcomes from a center gathering, she and some of her kindred anchors were excused from KNXT in 1976. She promptly got a proposal from the ABC claimed and-worked station KABC.
Not long after joining ABC, Slope was offered a public spot to join David Hartman as co-host of Good Morning America, where she appeared on April 25, 1977, as a trade for Nancy Dussault. The arrangement of the show was basically determined by studio interviews in New York City drove by Hartman, notwithstanding, Slope effectively searched out her own meetings to lead in the field. In 1980, Slope was supplanted in the studio by Joan Lunden, however momentarily remained on GMA as an element journalist; she proceeded to work for ABC Sports and Wide Universe of Sports.
In 1982, Slope was asked by CBS to get back to KNXT in Los Angeles as an anchor for the 4:30 p.m. version of Channel 2 News. She would later succeed Connie Chung (who went to NBC News in 1983) on KNXT’s 11:00 p.m. broadcast. Her co-secures during her second spell at KNXT included Ralph Story, Jess Marlow and John Schubeck. In any case, in 1986, Slope was excused again by the station (which had changed its call letters to KCBS two years sooner), to the mistake of her fans.
By and by, she returned as the co-host of The CBS Morning News soon thereafter. Slope likewise would supplant Mariette Hartley during the last a long time of CBS’ brief The Morning Project In 1988, she began with Home on ABC. She likewise worked with the English government to make a travelog for England that ultimately circulated on PBS. In 1994, she made an appearance playing an imaginary rendition of herself in the initial minutes of the sci-fi film All of a sudden, which was designed as a mimicked news broadcast.