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On September 7, 2009, KHOU-TV expanded its weekday morning newscast with the addition of the 4:30 a.m. program First Look; despite being the last station in the Houston market to launch a 4:30 a.m. newscast, KHOU was the only station in the market to announce its intentions to do so (three of Houston's major network affiliates – KHOU, KTRK-TV ...
KTRK-TV (channel 13) is a television station in Houston, Texas, United States, serving as the market's ABC outlet. Owned and operated by the network's ABC Owned Television Stations division, the station maintains studios on Bissonnet Street in Houston's Upper Kirby district. [2]
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] Ratings steadily increased, with total-day ratings tying NBC affiliate KPRC-TV ...
A teenage girl and her boyfriend allegedly killed her grandmother and ransacked her Texas home after the woman refused to let the pair spend the night at her house.. The naked body of Tammy King ...
In 1857, the company began publishing the Texas Almanac, a reference book focused on Texas, and on October 1, 1885, launched a second newspaper, The Dallas Morning News, based in Dallas, Texas. On June 26, 1922, the company expanded into broadcasting with the sign-on of WFAA-AM (at that time, shared time with WBAP and WRR in Dallas, Texas). [4]
In 1960, he was hired as the 6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. news anchor and director of news for KHOU-TV, the local CBS affiliate. In September 1961, Rather covered Hurricane Carla for KHOU-TV, broadcasting from the then National Weather Center in Galveston [18] and showing the first radar image of a hurricane on TV. He conceived of overlaying a ...
An early station identification. The station was established by Dr. John C. Schwarzwalder, a professor in the Radio-Television Department at the University of Houston (UH), [2] and Dr. John W. Meaney, an English professor at UH, and was first signed on the air on May 25, 1953, as the first station to broadcast under an educational non-profit license in the United States, and one of the ...
In late 2007, the Houston Chronicle website reported that she gave notice and quit her job at KHOU. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] In December 2007, she anchored her last Saturday morning broadcast for KHOU. [ 3 ] As a reporter she became the first Vietnamese American journalist to receive an Emmy for her series on medical missions taking place in Vietnam.