Background
Burns was a familiar face to television audiences in Pittsburgh, where she worked for many years for KDKA, a station that her father, Bill Burns, was also a journalist and anchor foreign Patricia Jeanne Burns was born in 1952, while her father was still working for radio station KQV.
Education
She attended Mountain. Lebanon High School and went on to the University of Denver.
Career
Her first job was at WFAA, the American Broadcasting Company affiliate in Dallas, Texas. Burns, trying to make a name on her own, suffered a hostile work environment. Pittsburgh station WTAE tried to woo Burns back to Pittsburgh.
She nearly accepted, but when her father"s station heard about the proposal, they made a counteroffer, and Burns joined KDKA in 1974.
Initially, the move was criticized and labeled "The Patti and Daddy Show," but the concept proved popular with viewers. Burns anchored the news for over 20 years, until her relationship with station management deteriorated over the direction of the broadcast.
Her last broadcast for KDKA was January 16, 1997. After her departure, she created Burns Communications, a video production company, and eventually contributed stories to news programs for WQED, the local Public Broadcasting Service affiliate.
Burns was diagnosed with lung cancer in early 2001.
Burns died on October 31, 2001, with memorial services held on December 9, 2001. She worked for a wide range of charities and causes, including Animal Friends, Saint Peter"s Child Development Centers and Magee-Women"s Hospital Foundation. She was chosen by Carlow University as its first Woman of Spirit and awarded honorary doctorates from Rollins College and Louisiana Roche College.