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KHOU (channel 11) is a television station in Houston, Texas, United States, affiliated with CBS.It is owned by Tegna Inc. alongside Conroe-licensed Quest station KTBU (channel 55).
Chau Nguyen is a former Vietnamese-American news anchor most recently seen with KHOU-TV, before stepping down in December 2007 to become a social worker. [1] She is now the Chief Public Strategies office for the Houston Area Women's Center.
In March 2017, Facebook extended live-streaming support to PCs. [114] [115] In May, Facebook Live was updated on iOS to let two users livestream together, [116] and the following month, Facebook added support for closed captioning to live video. This is limited to the CEA-608 standard, a notable difference from the automatic closed captioning ...
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 ...
The logo of KHOU – CBS television affiliate in Houston: Date: 17 September 2018: Source: Vectorised by LooneyTraceYT and VulcanSphere from https://www.khou.com: Author ™/®Tegna Inc. SVG development
Disasters Cyclone Yasi The Australian state of Queensland evacuates off-shore islands and low-lying parts of North Queensland ahead of Cyclone Yasi which is expected to hit the state as a Category 4 tropical cyclone late on Wednesday or early Thursday. (Courier Mail) (Reuters via Yahoo! News) Cyclone Yasi is upgraded to Category 5 and is predicted to be the worst storm to hit Australia in ...
From January 28 through February 4, 2017, a large number of protests at international airports and other locations were held across the United States and abroad, in opposition to Donald Trump's Executive Order 13769, known as Protecting the Nation from Foreign Terrorist Entry into the United States.
On July 29, 1994, Burnham Broadcasting sold WLUK-TV to SF Broadcasting – a joint venture of Savoy Communications and the Fox Broadcasting Company, then a division of News Corporation – for $38 million; [12] the company later sold three of its other four stations (KHON-TV in Honolulu, WVUE in New Orleans and WALA-TV in Mobile, Alabama) for $229 million on August 25 (a fifth Burnham station ...