Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
KSAT-TV (channel 12) is a television station in San Antonio, Texas, United States, affiliated with ABC.Owned by Graham Media Group, the station maintains studios on North St. Mary's Street on the northern edge of downtown, and its transmitter is located off Route 181 in northwest Wilson County (northeast of Elmendorf).
Fowler attended American University from 1976 to 1977, but left school to become an announcer for the San Antonio Dodgers. In 1980, he became the weekend sports anchor at San Antonio's KSAT-TV, and quickly became the station's sports director. In 1984 he moved to New York City to pursue an acting career. [1]
Leslie Mouton (born 1965) is a television news anchor and public speaker. Mouton was the co-anchor of Good Morning San Antonio between 4:30 a.m-7:00 a.m. [1] for KSAT-TV news, the ABC affiliate in San Antonio, Texas. She has been a broadcast journalist since 1988 and has worked at KSAT since 1999.
WDEF-TV (channel 12) is a television station in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States, affiliated with CBS. Owned by Morris Multimedia , the station maintains studios on Broad Street in Chattanooga. Its transmitter is on Hampton Road in nearby Signal Mountain , along Walden Ridge .
San Antonio is currently ranked as the 31st largest market by Nielsen. Despite the relatively large size of both the city proper and the metropolitan area, San Antonio has always been a medium-sized market. This is mainly because the nearby suburban and rural areas are not much larger than the city itself.
KSAT may refer to: Kongsberg Satellite Services; Krueger School of Applied Technologies, a magnet program of the Krueger Middle School, San Antonio, Texas, United States; KSAT (satellite), developed by Kagoshima University, Japan; KSAT-TV, a television station (channel 12, virtual 12) licensed to San Antonio, Texas, United States
In the fall of 2002, KiddChris took a hiatus from radio and retired to upstate New York. There, he rejuvenated himself and prepared for his return, which occurred on the morning of January 5, 2004, in San Antonio, Texas. He hosted a highly rated show at San Antonio's KSRX K-Rock until early August 2005.
As local stations expanded their morning newscasts, World News This Morning was first shortened into two separate 30-minute newscasts and later to the current, single, 30-minute newscast (which, if an affiliate does not provide a morning news program of its own, can be repeated back-to-back between 4:00 and 7:00 a.m. ET).