Goin' To The Lake: Frank Vascellaro and Heather Brown head to the Motley-Staples area
WCCO's Goin' To The Lake adventures continue two hours northwest of the Twin Cities in the heart of cabin country.
Heather Brown loves to put her curiosity to work to answer your Good Questions on WCCO News at 10. She also helps you kick your weekdays off as an anchor on WCCO Mornings and WCCO Mid-Morning.
She returned to WCCO in October of 2012 after two years of reporting at WNYW-TV in New York City. In the Big Apple, she primarily covered New York City public schools, but also reported on breaking news, Hurricane Sandy and the 10th anniversary of Sept. 11th.
Heather had been at WCCO from 2006 through 2010. Some of her most memorable stories included the destructive forest fires in the Boundary Waters, the Republican National Convention in St. Paul and the 35W bridge collapse. She also reported for CBS News on the historic flooding in Fargo and tornadoes in western Minnesota.
Before her first journey to Minnesota, Heather worked at WIS-TV in Columbia, S.C. There, she covered the 2004 S.C. Democratic presidential primary, reported on the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina from Biloxi and produced an award-winning education series that helped students get school supplies needed in many South Carolina classrooms.
Heather was born and raised just outside of Philadelphia and graduated from Colgate University. After college, she worked at CNBC in Los Angeles producing business news stories. In 2003, she earned a master's degree in public policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.
On the weekends, there's a good chance you'll find Heather, her husband, their three kids and pup, Ollie, exploring the lakes, parks and restaurants all over Twin Cities. She's also an enthusiastic spectator in many hockey rinks across Minnesota. But, give her a good book in front of a warm fireplace and she'll disappear for hours.
WCCO's Goin' To The Lake adventures continue two hours northwest of the Twin Cities in the heart of cabin country.
It is not lost on the Vikings that the last time it snowed inside a Vikings stadium was a disaster. In 2010, the Metrodome collapsed under the weight of 17 inches of snow.
With Christmas right around the corner, it's left many people wondering about the origins of some of the holiday's traditions.
Heather Brown confers with some culinary experts to find the definitive answer!
Have you ever called someone the wrong name, or maybe you list off each of your kids before you get to the right one? We've all done it. So, why do we mix up names? Good Question.
Minnesota's golf courses need to close before the real snow comes — and crews need a week or two of above freezing temperatures to close up shop.
Like trees for Christmas, or eggs for Easter, pumpkins pop up everywhere around Halloween. But how did pumpkins become the symbol of Halloween? Good Question.
All of the picking is done by hand to protect the fruit.
"Seeing zero championships in 30 years for one team is actually not that anomalous," said statistics professor Vittorio Addona. "It might be hard to swallow."
Many of us will go to a corn maze this fall. In fact, WCCO's morning team already spent time at one at the Sever's Fall Festival in Shakopee. It had them wondering, how do they even make corn mazes? Good Question.
Ever heard of something called NextGen TV? If not, there's a good chance you will soon.
It's been so dry this summer, there's a good chance you haven't seen many mosquitoes -- but that doesn't mean the Metropolitan Mosquito Control District isn't out looking for them.
Heather Brown and A.J. Hilton are Goin' to the Lake to check out all of the hot spots in the Brainerd Lakes area.
As you might have heard once or twice, Taylor Swift is coming to town Friday for a two-night stint of sold-out shows. But Swift is just one of many acts coming to the Twin Cities this year.
Minnesotans seem to have no problem jumping in and splashing around the state's 10,000 lakes, but what about one of Minnesota's crown jewels: the Mississippi River?