West Virginia
West Virginia angler turns lifelong fishing passion into 24-season TV show
BRIDGEPORT, W.Va (WDTV) – Curtis Fleming hosts Fly Rod Chronicles, promoting state tourism through fishing adventures.
“My father and mother took me down to Cherokee, North Carolina. And we went down there and stayed on the reservation. And I’ve got an actual picture of me catching my first fish. And I was two years and a month old. And then we started going somewhere in West Virginia every weekend. That it was nice. And that’s where I really got the deep, deep love,” Fleming said.
His love for fishing started at a young age and continued through adolescence.
Early mentors shaped outdoor passion
“In middle school, and they had the outdoor club. And we had some of the greatest mentors in the world. I mean, you know, Joe Leonetti, his name is up on the wall at the gymnasium in the new middle school that he wasn’t even at, you know. And like Al Lanzi and these guys would give up their time and take us all up to Spruce Knob,” Fleming said.
Originally a teacher, fishing was never far from Fleming’s mind.
“I always wanted to figure out how I could make a living at fishing and hunting. And I was a teacher, and I was working with inner city kids, and I started teaching them how to fly fish. And then I would take them to a 101 class for like a four-day weekend. And I watched these kids, these inner city kids, rough, tough kids that were getting kicked out of school and getting kicked out of their communities, thriving in the outdoors. And we would start as little as just building a fire. Here’s how you do it. I fell in love with just watching these kids get into this,” Fleming said.
From the classroom to television, he figured out how to turn it into a career. Fleming is the host of Fly Rod Chronicles, a weekly fishing show seen locally on WDTV, nationally on ESPN2 and the Pursuit Channel, and internationally on Wild TV.
“I come up with the show, the concept. I didn’t want the show to be about Curtis Fleming. I wanted it to be about my travels, the people we met, the food we eat, you know, the tourism, all the attractions. I didn’t want it just to be another fishing show. So, you know, my next sale was to go back to my wife and say, Shelly, I’m going to quit my job and start a fishing show. And I always tell people that I’m the bravest guy in the world because if any guys that I’m talking to want to go home and tell their wife they’re going to quit a good job and start a fishing show, good luck with that. But she was like, do you know anything about it? And I’m like, I’m learning. And we went out and shot a pilot, sent it in the Outdoor Channel. And they’re like, can you send us 12 more like that?” Fleming said.
The show is now in its 24th season and has over 300 episodes to its credit.
“It’s been a dream come true to be able to do this and to see where it’s grown. And hard to believe that we’ve been to so many cool destinations,” Fleming said.
Promoting West Virginia tourism
Despite his travels, Fleming’s heart is in West Virginia.
“We all have that memory of what it was like growing up here in West Virginia and how great it was. And so I really wanted to bring that into the show. And I wanted to show off our state, you know, show how great it is. I tell everyone I’ve been in 49 states and we in West Virginia, we have the biggest, largest outdoor playground in the world. I mean, it’s just what we can do here in West Virginia is amazing. That’s been one of my biggest achievements is the partnership with the state of West Virginia. Because, you know, we need to figure out different ways to bring in people. And the state saw that it wasn’t just a fishing show, that it was showing off our attractions, showing off the best food, the cool places to go. We have people coming from England, we have people coming from France, from all over the United States, just from our little TV show, coming to West Virginia,” Fleming said.
Fleming says he has no plans of slowing down.
“We just, in December, had our first granddaughter, and then we’re going to have a grandson here in a couple weeks. So I want to get four generations on the show, and I think that would be cool. So it kind of sounds like the kids don’t have a choice whether they’re going to fish or not, right?” Fleming said.
The grandkids will help Fleming continue to promote his love of fishing.
“You know, it was about getting kids into the outdoors, and it circles us back to, you know, I want to be like Joe Leonetti and Al Lanzi and the guys that were there for us. So it’s about getting everyone involved in the sport,” Fleming said.
Copyright 2026 WDTV. All rights reserved.
West Virginia
Brooke County man sentenced to 1 to 15 years for meth distribution
WELLSBURG, W.Va. — A Brooke County man has been sentenced to prison after pleading guilty to a felony drug charge stemming from a January investigation at a Follansbee home.
Brooke County Prosecuting Attorney Allison Adyniec Cowden said Rian Harkins, 25, was sentenced July 13 by Brooke County Circuit Judge Jason A. Cuomo to serve one to 15 years in the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
Harkins pleaded guilty April 20 to one count of possession with intent to deliver methamphetamine.
The case began Jan. 4 when Brooke County Sheriff’s Deputy Shane Siranovic responded to a reported overdose at a home on Fourth Street in Follansbee.
Prosecutors said Siranovic found Harkins unresponsive behind a table in the basement of the home. After attempts to wake him, including a sternum rub, Harkins regained consciousness and told deputies he was fine.
While inside the home, deputies reported seeing suspected drugs and drug paraphernalia in plain view. Authorities secured the home while Siranovic obtained a search warrant from Brooke County Magistrate Court.
During the search, deputies recovered digital scales, small plates containing a white substance that field-tested positive for cocaine or cocaine base, plastic bags containing suspected narcotics, and other items investigators said were consistent with packaging and distributing controlled substances.
Investigators also found several containers holding a liquid with a white, grainy substance, along with an ice cube tray containing similar material and a box of baking soda. Prosecutors said laboratory testing later confirmed the liquid contained fentanyl.
Authorities also recovered several firearms from the home. One, a Smith & Wesson Bodyguard .380-caliber handgun, was determined through the National Crime Information Center database to have been reported stolen from Wheeling, prosecutors said.
Harkins remains in the custody of the West Virginia Division of Corrections and Rehabilitation.
West Virginia
West Virginia Wesleyan College to keep Governor’s School for the Arts through 2030
Help Wanted
Upshur County Schools is hiring a part-time MedEd nursing instructor — a licensed RN or certified medical assistant — to lead high school students through hands-on training in clinical and hospital settings, in partnership with WVU Medicine St. Joseph’s Hospital. Read more →
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West Virginia Wesleyan College will continue to inspire the state’s next generation of artists after being selected to host the West Virginia Governor’s School for the Arts for another three-year cycle, extending the partnership through 2030.
The college first hosted the Governor’s School for the Arts from 2014 to 2016, and the program returned in 2024 for a three-year cycle. The announcement marks a continued partnership between the college and one of the state’s premier educational enrichment programs for talented young artists.
West Virginia Wesleyan College President James Moore, the college’s 20th president, came to the college in 2006 as director of jazz ensembles, where he built one of the most vibrant collegiate jazz programs in the region. Today, that jazz program is under the direction of Adam Loudin ’07, who studied under Moore and is continuing the tradition.
Moore said, “We are thrilled and honored that we have been trusted with another three years of this amazing program. This College has always been one that’s valued the arts, and it’s what brought me here in 2006 as a young faculty member. We see the value in these students and know that they need to be supported by an institution that understands that the contributions of artists are among the most valuable to society. West Virginia Wesleyan College is most certainly that place.”
A transformative, free-of-charge program, the Governor’s School for the Arts invites current sophomores interested in expanding their artistic talents and experiences in digital art/media, creative writing, dance, instrumental music, studio art, theatre arts and vocal music to apply. The state of West Virginia covers the costs of the program.
The announcement comes at a time when West Virginia Wesleyan College continues to demonstrate its strong commitment to the creative and performing arts. This fall, the college will welcome approximately 60 students in creative and performing arts, including several who attended the Governor’s School for the Arts in 2024. Overall, the college has welcomed more than 160 creative artists across the last three incoming cohorts, and 11% of students study creative arts.
Sophomores can apply at the West Virginia Governor’s Schools website once applications open in the 2026-2027 academic year.
West Virginia
Secretary of State maintains West Virginia’s elections are “safe, secure” after Trump claims – WV MetroNews
CHARLESTON, W.Va. — West Virginia’s Secretary of State maintains that elections in the Mountain State are secure after voter information corruption claims by President Donald Trump.
Secretary of State Kris Warner joined MetroNews “Talkline” Friday to unpack claims by President Trump that voter information for over 200 million Americans had been compromised by China, starting in the 2020 election. Trump addressed the nation Thursday night and said 18 states had experienced corruption by the Chinese government in regard to voter data.
“Our elections are safe, secure, fair, and honest,” Warner said. “We have 55 county clerks and about 8,500 poll workers that did a phenomenal job in the Primary Election, and we’re ready, less than four months away to conduct a general midterm election. So, there’s confidence in our elections and we’re very proud of that.”
Warner said his office has not heard from federal officials.
“I know the President mentioned 18 states, but West Virginia’s not been contacted by the White House, by anyone in the intelligence community; nobody from FBI, CIA, DNI (Director of National Intelligence), or any other federal agency alerting us to any real or existing threat for our upcoming election,” he said.
If the White House or other officials reach out to the Secretary of State’s office with “actionable intelligence,” Warner said the election division will investigate it. Warner praised his office, saying that other states consider West Virginia as a gold standard for election safety,
“People from all over the country look to us,” Warner said. “So, obviously, anything that comes our way that we can act on, we want to increase our election security even further. But until then, we’re going to stay the course.”
West Virginia’s elections are quite secure, Warner emphasized, because the state uses ballot-marking devices. He said that not only are ballots marked electronically, but those votes are also noted on paper.
“Every vote in West Virginia cast is backed up by a paper ballot,” Warner said. “You get to see that paper ballot and make sure that it is exactly who you intended to vote for.”
Because of this commitment to security, Warner said, the election officers in West Virginia will catch anything out of the ordinary. He said his office tracks previous elections and understands the typical numbers of who votes in each precinct. Additionally, he said that 10 days after the election, an audit occurs to confirm results through hand counting.
West Virginia has also been one of the states targeted by the U.S. Department of Justice over disclosure of voter information. A federal judge tossed out a DOJ lawsuit against West Virginia earlier this week over voter data.
Warner said Trump’s claim doesn’t change West Virginia’s stance on refusing to hand over voter information to the DOJ.
“West Virginia law says I’m not to share personal information — that’s social security numbers, driver’s license numbers, tied to birth dates, in some cases, cell phone numbers, email addresses, your home address,” Warner said. “Again, there would need to be actionable intelligence that is going to strengthen our election security before we do anything further.”
While he said he agrees with the mission — keeping people outside of the law from voting — but this isn’t the way to do it. Warner said voter information is personal, and it doesn’t need to be “floating around to vendors” in the nation’s capital, Washington, D.C.
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