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Longtime Sacramento television and radio personality Mark S. Allen's son was among four teenagers burned in a backyard accident at a home in Lincoln, police confirmed Sunday. In a public Facebook post, Allen shared with friends and fans that the teens had attended "a makeshift-distanced prom dinner and outdoor informal prom gathering" Saturday night. The accident happened just before 2 Sunday morning in the Lincoln Crossing community and at. ....
Media veteran Elliott Troshinsky joins board of Asian-language network Crossings TV [The Sacramento Bee] Jan. 11 Longtime Sacramento broadcast media leader Elliott Troshinsky has joined the board of the Asian in-language network Crossings TV to help expand the Asian American network’s reach across the country. Troshinsky joined the board on Dec. 7 after retiring as president and general manager of Sacramento news stations KCRA and KQCA in June, according to a statement from Crossings TV. He brings nearly 50 years of experience with broadcast media to the network, where he will help bring the station’s in-language programming to televisions nationwide. “With the rapid growth of the Asian American population across the country, I believe that there is a great opportunity for Crossings TV to provide a wide range of programming and information options on multiple platforms to this fast growing and important community,” Troshinsky said in the statement. ....
Longtime Sacramento civil rights activist and Capitol staffer Georgette Imura dies at 77 Sacramento Bee 12/24/2020 Ashley Wong, The Sacramento Bee Dec. 23 Longtime Sacramento civil rights activist and Capitol staffer Georgette Imura died from lung cancer on Dec. 17. She was 77. Imura was born Georgette Yamamoto on October 18, 1943, in the Manzanar concentration camp at the foot of the Sierra Nevadas. She spent the first two years of her life imprisoned there before her family was eventually released. Her family settled in midtown Sacramento when she was 4. Described as feisty, headstrong and bold her whole life, Imura entered the Capitol for the first time as a receptionist in 1967, working her way over the course of 28 years to hold numerous leadership positions in the state Legislature. ....