Marsha Taylor    

WDIZ    WMFE    WDBO

Marsha Taylor was co-anchor of Central Florida's morning news with Scott Anez. She's no stranger to Orlando. She moved to Orlando when her father was a navigator on B-52's stationed at what was then McCoy Air Force Base. (It's now Orlando International Airport). Marsha is a radio-TV graduate of Morehead State University in Kentucky. After graduating she came "home" and started looking for a job! Her first job was WDIZ-FM 100.3, in 1980 Marsha moved to public radio station WMFE-FM 90.7 in Orlando. She arrived at WDBO-AM 580 in 1986 as a reporter and anchor. Marsha anchored the midday and the afternoon newscasts. In 1988 she replaced Lee Hall. During Hall's tenure, WDBO won numerous industry awards for the excellence of its news coverage, including the International Edward R. Murrow award in 1985, in competition against stations throughout North America. Taylor, however, is confident. She told the Orlando Sentinel "I always felt Lee Hall had very big news shoes," she said, adding lightly, "but I guess I have the heels." 


 and has spent the last 17 years co-anchoring Central Florida's Morning News. During her tenure as News Director, she won countless awards, including "the best ration news operation" in Florida by the Associated Press 13 years in a row.She's married with 3 children. Her oldest son is in the Army, her daughter is an RN with Orlando Health and her youngest is now a freshman in high school. After co-anchoring news on Central Florida's morning news for 38 years she has retired. Before that anchored afternoon 2 hour news block. In charge of hiring part time news talent and running the internship program. Managing the WDBO news room since 1988. Hired as a street reporter in 1986. Co-anchoring news on Central Florida's morning news for 24 years. Before that she anchored th afternoon 2 hour news block. WDBO had been an award winning radio news operation for years but while she was News Director, WDBO won