Maureen Kyle Bio, Age, Family, Married, WKYC and Blog

Maureen Kyle | Maureen Kyle Biography

Maureen Kyle is an American journalist. She covers the news as a morning anchor of Channel 3 News.

She has covered the consequences of the September 11 terrorist attacks and the stories related to her hometown Cleaveland.

She is also an owner and designer of Lionheart Lamb. Her clothing line situated in Cleveland/Akron, Ohio Area, produces the artworks of clothing inspired by the trailblazing women throughout history.

She attended Magnificat High School in Rocky River but haunted Ignatius often. Her father tells of her’s early obsession: her first steps were to grab the microphone on the video recorder. He says she had a vivid imagination and loved storytelling. She attended Fordham University, earning a B.A. in Communications/Media in 2002. She started working for WAVE3 TV Louisville, Kentucky in May 2004 and then moved to Cleveland TV3.

Maureen Kyle Age

She went to Fordham University and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Communications and Media Studies in 2002.

During her college years, the reporter worked as a talent hunter for MTV and even interned at The Oxygen Channel.  Maureen was born in June 327.1980 in Cleveland, Ohio. Thus Kyle is 39 years old as of 2019.

Maureen Kyle Family

She was born to her father Chuck Kyle(a head football coach at St. Ignatius High School) and her mother Patricia Kyle(a painter). She grew up in her family home in Ohio with her sister.

She was at the age of five when her football coach father sneaked up to the room of the siblings and dressed up their stuffed animals in pyjamas.

Maureen Kyle Married | Maureen Kyle Husband |Maureen Kyle Kids

She met her husband, Mark McDougall(He is an attorney at Calfee, Halter, and Griswold who was with one of her high school friends at the time). in front of the State Theatre lobby restrooms, at a fundraiser event in 2008.

The couple married on September 2010, with Kyle finding a local Cleveland jeweler to remake a vintage engagement ring she found in a window in New York City.the two have three daughters named Scarlett, Millie, and Etta Louise.

Maureen Kyle WKYC

Maureen kicked off her career in reporting through broadcast radio. She had her first job at WFUV radio in New York City. There, she covered the 9/11 terrorist attacks and its aftermath in the city.

She eventually left the radio station and started working at WAVE in Louisville, Kentucky. She served in the network as a reporter and fill-in anchor, moonlighting in the weather department.

The reporter was even named Best Feature Reporter by the Society of Professional Journalists in 2004. It was not long before she joined WKYC in March 2007. At WKYC, she serves a part of Channel 3 News Today, which starts at 4:30 am. She brings in every overnight headline to Northeast Ohio from all over the world in Morning Newsfeed.

At WKYC, she reports alongside Hollie Strano, Betsy Kling, Michael Estime, Lynna Lai, Dorsena Drakeford, Chris Tye, and Sara Shookman.

Maureen Kyle Net worth | Maureen Kyle Salary

She is working as a Reporter/Anchor of WKYC-TV since March 2007. She earns an average salary of $78,526 $112,985 thousand dollars annually.

Her net worth is estimated at $124,339 million dollars as of 2019. Since joining WKYC, she has earned numerous awards. Her coverage of Northeast Ohio brought her several Emmy Awards and nominations.

She has earned her income through her own ride by facing the different obstacles and problems. Enjoying her net worth, she is living in a luxurious life by maintaining her standard of living with her family at Cleveland.

Maureen Kyle Height | Maureen Kyle Body Description

The anchor stands at the height of 5 feet 4 inches (1.62 meters)tall. She holds American nationality.

Kyle is stunning and has got an attractive body measurement and has a well-maintained body weight.
She perfectly knows how to dress up in a different function and ceremony. Maureen has a perfect body with an attractive figure that looks great in low-cut dresses.

Naturally so perfect that she needed no plastic surgery and artificial therapy to look beautiful and attractive. She is a timeless beauty who has black eyes with blonde hair and well-maintained body weight. She has a million smiles which can sleep a huge man in the world.

Being a mother of 3 children, she has perfectly managed her body figure by doing regular exercise and yoga. She only eats a balanced diet and avoids junk and oily foods.

Maureen Kyle A Hectic Lifestyle | Maureen Kyle Blog

Kyle has a blog called Mod Mom, posts to YouTube channel, is a full-time anchor, childhood clothing business entrepreneur; she enjoys the busyness and states she lives life at 110 mph in the fast lane.

Then Maureen reminds us that she recently learned it is unhealthy to live that way, citing “nagging stress” from

Dr. Oz as the biggest stress that ages us, you know the stress of a long “to do” list which doesn’t get done.

She recently learned that an emotional and mental break to enjoy the “ebb and flow of life” was the greatest gift a mother of toddlers/newborn can give herself.

She states “life went on” for everyone while she took some much-needed respite, and now she’s able to advise slowing down and enjoying the vital health component of “being on a break” instead of a full-throttle lifestyle.

Maureen Kyle Clothing Line

Maureen Kyle leads the way into the guest bedroom of her Bay Village home, a pretty pale-blue space that doubles as a workshop.

A Brother sewing machine, complete with computerized embroidery function, and Janome serger, used for stitching knits, sit atop a desk in a corner alcove. Nearby, a child-sized mannequin with a wooden base displays a sleeveless A-line muslin dress with the beginnings of a ruffled neckline.

With her 7-month-old daughter Etta on her hip, Kyle picks up a sleeveless muslin dress with a pleated waistband from the desk.

“This was a sample that I did, and I decided not to go with, at least for now,” says the WKYC morning show anchor and reporter, eying it thoughtfully. “I don’t know what it’s going to be.”

As daughters Scarlett, 5, and Millie, 3, dart in and out of the room, Kyle walks to a closet.

She pulls out a sleeveless golden-yellow A-line finished with a huge bow at the bottom of a modest V-back. It’s a polyester-blend predecessor to the creation she calls the Kindness Dress.

Over the next hour, she covers the bed with girls’ dresses, final results of samples she designed, cut and constructed herself. Kindness Dresses in fuchsia and lilac Ponte knit. Woven-cotton Friendship Dresses — one in pale pink and coral, the other in yellow and Easter-egg purple — with empire waists and sleeveless bodices, each punctuated by an offset bow near the neckline. A short-sleeved V-neck Brave Dress in light-blue cotton featuring a charming park scene printed on the gathered skirt.

On the Brave Dress, Kyle points out jazz vocalist Billie Holiday singing in an amphitheater, ancient Egyptian ruler Cleopatra walking down a path, primatologist Jane Goodall playing with a chimp, activist Rosa Parks waving from a passing bus, suffragette Susan B. Anthony riding a bike, all while aviator Amelia Earhart flies overhead in her red plane.

“It’s almost like a history lesson,” says the 38-year-old Kyle, who began sewing in high school.

The dresses, along with T-shirts screen-printed with images of either Holliday or Earhart, represent the first collection for Kyle’s Lionheart Lamb, a business launched with $6,000 in savings.

Since the line for girls, in sizes 2T to 6, debuted online in late May, Lionhart Lamb has produced fall and holiday counterparts. The items, priced around $50 apiece, are tagged with an inspiring message to be kind, friendly or brave that corresponds to the name of the design.

Rather than pictures of imaginary princesses, they bear images of real women who made history. And almost everything, from tags to clothing, is produced by women-owned businesses such as Esperanza Threads, a nonprofit that teaches the unemployed how to sew so they can find permanent jobs.

The fact that a married mother of three little girls with a full-time job — one that gets her up at 1:30 a.m. and puts her on the air at 4 a.m. every weekday — found the time to start a business is enough to stun some. But the dresses laid out on the bed are the realization of a vision too powerful to ignore.

“I felt like it would accomplish something,” she says, “whether it was helping other parents, helping other kids who were like mine, even if it was just helping my own child.”

For Kyle, Lionheart Lamb was a “Field of Dreams moment,” as she describes it. It unleashed her creativity, sense of female empowerment and commitment to social justice to create what she’s always looking for to help further her daughters’ emotional development.

“It was the thought that would not leave me alone,” she explains days later while driving home from the station. “Things kept popping up, pointing me in that direction. And I knew if I didn’t try it, it would bother me for years.”

Maureen Kyle Articles

Mom Squad: How much is too much when it comes to extra activities for your kids?

wkyc.com — PARENTING With back to school season, that means extracurriculars and sports kick into gear. But overscheduling could be counterproductive. ABOUT A MONTH AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Stress relief? Try meditation the right way

wkyc.com — HEALTH Are you meditating the right way? A new studio in Cleveland guides you to a more peaceful mind. CLEVELAND — There are many benefits to daily meditation — some you may not expect.

Meditation expert, Ben Turshen, just opened a studio in Ohio City to guide people into a more peaceful state. “I didn’t think I was the meditation type at all,” says Turshen. He was more the fast-paced, high-stress type. “I was an attorney.2 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

How hard is it to live plastic-free? We tried it to find out

wkyc.com — PLANET-CLE Plastic is breaking down in the water we drink from Lake Erie. It’s killing wildlife in the ocean, cluttering our beaches and landfills are growing by the day. CLEVELAND — Pollution in our waterways has switched from industrial waste to consumer waste.

Plastic comes wrapped around pretty much everything that we buy, and then ends up in our landfills, lakes, and oceans. But is it possible to eliminate it from our lives? We wanted to find out.3 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Laura’s Home crisis shelter empowers women to live their best life

wkyc.com — CLEVELAND Laura’s Home is part of The City Mission of Cleveland’s ministry and a 5K and 1 mile walk on June 15 benefits the crisis shelter. CLEVELAND — Laura’s Home is for single women and women with children who are experiencing a crisis in their lives.

But what it isn’t, is just a 30-day stay like many homeless shelters. Laura’s Home is a program center and those who come here stay from nine months to a year.4 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Stedman Graham talks about the new book, leadership and yes, Oprah Winfrey

wkyc.com — LIFE ‘Identity Leadership’ guides readers to discover who they really are and what they really love. CLEVELAND — Stedman Graham, the New York Times best-selling author and lifetime partner to Oprah Winfrey, stopped into our studios Friday to talk about his latest book, Identity Leadership.4 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Kids lie, but parents can make it worse

wkyc.com — LIFE Our lies week continues with expert advice on what every parent should do when they catch their child fibbing. CLEVELAND — Every kid does it from the time they start talking until they leave the nest: They all tell lies. Some are big, some are small and in the grand scheme of things, it’s the way you react that really matters.

Dr. Carolyn Landis with University Hospitals tells us the way we handle our kids lies could be making it worse.4 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Cleveland photographer turns premies into superheroes

wkyc.com — LIFE Brittany Gidley donates her talents to turn babies in the NICU into powerful superheroes CLEVELAND — For any new parent, you hope and pray your baby is born healthy. But one in every 10 newborn babies end up in the NICU. That means for those parents, they aren’t sharing newborn photos, they’re sharing health updates.5 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

#PantryGoals: Maureen Kyle’s chic & functional pantry makeover

wkyc.com — WKYC-MORNING-SHOW Inspired by social media trends and real-life needs, Maureen Kyle reorganizes her pantry. They’re color-coded, categorized and oh-so-satisfying. Photos of beautifully curated pantries have been trending on social media, and it seems everyone now wants to achieve #PantryGoals.5 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Mom Squad: 3 simple steps to teach your kids kindness

wkyc.com — LIFE All February, we are giving you four weeks to happier kids in our ‘Mom Squad’ series. CLEVELAND — On this Valentine’s Day, we celebrate love of all kinds. If you have kids, you’re probably spoiling them today, too.

But it’s also important to teach them how to love and be kind to others. There are multiple studies that show being kind increases happiness.8 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Mom Squad: Here’s why your kids shouldn’t be wearing winter coats in their car seat

wkyc.com — Baby, it’s cold outside. But, do you put your baby in a coat before strapping them into the car seat or seat belt? We asked our mom panel in our first edition of “Mom Squad”.

Each one says they struggle with choosing between a cold child and car seat safety. Jennifer Walker, Manager of the Rainbow Injury Prevention Center at University Hospitals, says never strap your kid into a car seat with a “puffy coat.”10 MONTHS AGO Open in Who Shared Wrong byline?

Toddlers & tech: How screen time impacts brain development and behavior

wkyc.com — CLEVELAND — Toddlers are growing up with an iPad, iPhone, and video learning. Now, research is finally catching up to the trend. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends limiting screen time to one hour for kids ages 2 to 5.

But some of our experts say, even that’s too much. Have you ever noticed a child (maybe your child or grandchild) throwing a tantrum after using the tablet or phone and it’s taken away? That’s a huge red flag that it was affecting their brain chemistry.

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