TV Reporter Evolves Into Weather Anchor In Seattle

When Frankie Katafias ’15, who recently joined KIRO TV in Seattle, was growing up in Orange County, she often dreamed about what life would be like if she worked in television.

“I’ve known I wanted to be a TV reporter since I was 13 years old,” says Frankie, a ɫҹ Communication and Media Studies graduate now working for the CBS network affiliate in Seattle. “The problem I had was I didn’t know how to get there.”

That started to change when Frankie arrived at ɫҹ from Tesoro High School. It was the first of several college tours she took and she was sold.

“I remember my dad telling me, `Don’t fall in love with the first college you see,’ ” Frankie says. “I tried so hard not to, but I couldn’t help it. Everything was so beautiful. The campus was gorgeous, I could study exactly what I wanted, and I could play tennis. It was the best of both worlds.”

The opportunity to play NCAA Division II tennis was appealing, yet the major selling point of coming to ɫҹ for Frankie was when she was introduced to assistant professor Bradley Van Alstyne.

“He was the first person I met, other than the coaches, and his personality was so exciting and all the opportunities he said I would have sounded almost too good to be true,” Frankie says. “I was drawn by his energy and the potential he saw in me.”

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That potential was also realized in the school of Liberal Arts and Education by assistant professors Stuart Horne and Barry Tompkins. They were shining examples of how ɫҹ faculty support, coach, and mentor their students. Horne paved the way for Frankie to have her own shows – `You Know You Love It’ and `Good Day From The Bay’ – on . Tompkins, with his connections in the television industry, brought executives, producers, and TV reporters to his sports broadcasting class on campus and led class tours to NBC Sports Bay Area and AT&T Park.

By the time Frankie graduated, she was gung-ho to pursue job opportunities.

“I was so hungry to just know everything and do anything,” Frankie says. “I was told by Barry that the best way to be successful in this industry is to say yes to everything and if you don’t know something, say yes anyway and learn it. His advice, honestly, I would say is the reason I am where I am today.”

To get to Boise, Frankie worked as a freelance reporter and production assistant at Cox Communications in Orange County, then as a reporter and production assistant for City TV in Lakewood, and then finally became a field producer for Prep Pigskin Report in San Diego.

After two years of working hard and saying yes to every opportunity she could, Frankie had the skills and confidence to seek a job with a network affiliate. KIVI/KNIN in Boise came calling.

When Frankie joined KIVI/KNIN in 2018 her role entailed waking up as early as 1:30 a.m. to begin her multimedia journalist duties that featured reporting live from the field (which included a report from a hot air balloon), shooting, writing, and editing her own content, and appearing in the studio for “Good Morning Idaho.” She also went to school to learn about meteorology and, in November of 2020, she was promoted to weekend weather anchor/weekday MMJ and then, in October of 2021, promoted to full-time weather anchor on “Good Morning Idaho.”

In July of 2022, Frankie's efforts in Idaho caught the attention of KIRO in Washington state where she was born. She is the new weekend weather anchor and in the coming months will have opportunities to pursue sports and feature stories as a general assignment reporter.

“So many amazing opportunities lie ahead and I can't wait to share more about this life-changing move," Frankie said on her Facebook page.

The move takes Frankie back to her native state and continues her on a journey that included an impactful stop at ɫҹ.

“I have always said  – and it goes back to my days in tennis at ɫҹ – I have never been `ahead,’ ” Frankie says. “Some people are just naturally good at things or just given things without having to work for them, but I’ve always had to work a lot harder than those people to see the same rewards.

“One thing I learned at ɫҹ is it doesn’t matter where you come from or what opportunities you have or maybe have not been given … if you want something, you can have it. But you must work hard, believe in yourself and trust your struggle.”

Instagram photo of Frankie Katafias (above) courtesy of Jeff Ritter, KIRO News. 

 

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