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Linda won an Emmy for Beyond Brown vs. Board: The Journey Continues, a documentary on how Houston desegregated its schools, and an Emmy for her first-person account of another local news anchor's cancer. She garnered two national Gracie Awards, given by the American Women in Radio and Television. [2]
Caroline Collins is a weekday evening news anchor for KRIV-TV in Houston, Texas. She gained attention for her Social Media posts during her time at KSEE-TV in Fresno, California . She co-hosted a nationally televised golf instructional show series, The Swing Clinic, which aired on Fox Sports.
Past and present television anchors from Houston, Texas. Pages in category "Television anchors from Houston" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total.
Julie Banderas (born Julie Bidwell, September 25, 1973 [a]) is an American television news anchor for Fox News. [2] She hosted Fox Report Weekend before moving to a weekday anchor role, and currently serves as a primary weekday fill-in anchor on programs such as America's Newsroom, The Faulkner Focus, and Outnumbered.
Kaitlin Monte is an American television news journalist who last worked for Fox-owned KRIV in Houston, TX.Monte joined KRIV in 2016 as a reporter and fill-in anchor. [1]Her television career began in New York City where she worked at WPIX, [2] SportsNet New York, [3] and WNBC.
In October 2012, Nauert left Good Day Wake Up to rejoin Fox News Channel full time as an anchor and breaking news reporter. She appeared regularly on Fox & Friends . [ 26 ] [ 28 ] According to the Washington Post , Nauert "broadcast just about every right-wing talking-point under the sun" when she was a presenter on Fox News.
Natasha Verma holds a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University, where she graduated with honors at the age of 18.She is also the youngest-ever graduate of the University of Texas at Austin, having earned two undergraduate degrees—one in Broadcast Journalism and another in Biology Pre-Med—at the age of 17.
The primary changes were in local programming—where the new owners cut channel 26's existing local public affairs show, Houston Live, and a local children's program [25] —and the move of KRIV's news to 9 p.m. to accommodate more Fox prime time programming. [26]