KNWS-TV (Channel 51) is an independent television station licensed to Katy, Texas, and with studios in Houston, Texas, serving Houston metropolitan area. It is the only broadcast station in the United States (to date) to develop a 24 hour local all-news format, which was its original intent. KNWS is owned by Johnson Broadcasting and is not currently affiliated with any broadcast network.
The station began broadcasting full-power in 1993, which was also the same year it introduced its live news format. This format is best described as a local version of CNN's Headline News channel in the sense that it featured special segments, and pre-recorded newscasts looped then updated throughout the day. Local news was pushed aside throughout 1995, to simulcast live coverage of the OJ Simpson Trial from KTLA-TV in Los Angeles.
In 1998, the station abandoned local news in favor of syndicated programming, sports telecasts including Houston Astros baseball (much of the games were also simulcasted on sister station KLDT-TV in Lake Dallas, Texas), and occasional movies. It has since maintained local news updates, using the remains of the station's old newsroom.
Some NBC shows that KPRC-TV declined to air have also aired on KNWS. One was the NBC daytime talk show, Leeza, which aired briefly in 1998. The other was the soap opera, Passions, which also had a brief airing on KNWS in 2001 (Passions would finally clear on KPRC the following year but not in its normal 2 P.M. CT timeslot until August 30, 2004). In 1996, while KPRC carried Big 12 college football coerage, KNWS carried NBC Sports coverage of Notre Dame football home games as well as the Breeders' Cup. In 2000, KPRC opted to carry NBC News coverage of the 2000 Presidential Debates, so KNWS carried game 6 of the 2000 American League Championship Series, which would be NBC's last baseball game.
KNWS currently airs various re-run entertainment programs that have a large following in Houston such as Martin and dramas such as ER. It was also the broadcast home for the Houston Astros but in 2008, Astros telecasts have since moved to KTXH.
During the non-stop coverage of Hurricane Rita by Houston's news channels, KNWS showed CBS's network broadcasts (usually carried by KHOU-TV 11). However, the image was shown in a distorted aspect ratio (1:1 compared to standard 4:3). Currently, KNWS is doing the same thing for Hurricane Ike, except with no distortion.
Programs
Former Talent
- John Granato
- Wendy Granato
- Felicia Griffin
- Julie Jameson
- Doug Johnson
- Randall Kamm
- JD Luna
- Dawndy Mercer
- Steve Ottesen (Among the last of the original talent to leave, in 2004)
- Jeff Power
- Michael Quinn
- David Rancken
- Donna Rusch
- Sydney Seaward (Deceased)
- JoAnn Vallie Rush
See also
External links
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Television stations in Houston |
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| Houston |
KPRC 2 (NBC, WX+ on DT2, LATV on DT3) • KJIB-LP 5 (Ind) • KUHT 8 (PBS, HD on DT2, V-me on DT3) • KHOU 11 (CBS, Ind. on DT2, .2Net coming Mid-08) • KTRK 13 (ABC, News on DT2, AccuWX on DT3) • KETH 14 (TBN, on DT2 Church,JCTV on DT3, TBN Enlace on DT4, Smile on DT5) • KTXH 20 (MNTV) • KVQT 21 (Span/Rel.) • KLTJ 22 (Daystar) • KRIV 26 (Fox) • KCVH 30 (silent) • KUVM 34 (AZA) • KIAH 39 (CW) • KHLM 43 (Multi) • KXLN 45 (UNI) • KTMD 47 (TEL) • KPXB 49 / KBPX 33 (ION, qubo on DT2, Life on DT3, Worship on DT4) • KNWS 51 (Ind) • KTBU 55 (A1) • KAZH 57 / KHMV 28 / KVVV 53 (TuV) • KZJL 61 (Ind) • KFTH 67 (TFU)
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| Outlying areas |
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| Defunct stations |
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| Texas Broadcast television areas by city:
Abilene/Sweetwater • Amarillo (Texas Panhandle) • Austin • Beaumont/Port Arthur • Corpus Christi • Dallas-Fort Worth • Del Rio, TX • El Paso • Houston • Laredo • Lubbock • Odessa/Midland (Permian Basin) • Rio Grande Valley • San Angelo • San Antonio • Sherman/Ada, OK • Texarkana/Shreveport, LA • Tyler/Longview (East Texas) • Victoria • Waco/Bryan (Brazos Valley) • Wichita Falls/Lawton, OK
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Other English-Language Television Stations in the state of Texas |
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See also: ABC, CBS, CW, Fox, ION, MyNetworkTV, NBC, PBS and Other stations in Texas
Also see: Telefutura, Telemundo, Univision, Religious and Other Spanish Language stations in Texas |
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