Making News: Texas Style

Making News: Texas Style was a 2007 TV Guide Network reality series based in the Midland/Odessa, Texas Metro area, following the work lives of the anchors and reporters at KOSA-TV, the local CBS affiliate in the nation's 159th-ranked media market. The show aired on Monday nights at 8/7C on the TV Guide Network.

Making News: Texas Style
GenreReality Tv
Directed bySteve Bronstein
StarringKOSA-TV Staff
Theme music composerMusicBox
Country of originUSA
Original language(s)English
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes13
Production
Producer(s)Nick Davis Productions
Production location(s)Odessa, Texas
Running time60 Minutes
Release
Original networkTV Guide Network
First shown in2007
Original releaseJune 11 
September 23, 2007
Chronology
Followed byMaking News: Savannah Style
External links
Website

Production

The program was taped at KOSA's studio at Music City Mall, which is owned by KOSA's parent company and is located in Odessa, contrary to the title sequence.

The series featured stories from Odessa and Midland as well as Goldsmith and Pecos. Sometimes, news anchors at rival station KWES-TV, the market's local NBC affiliate, were followed, but not as frequently.

Reception

The series marked the shifting priorities of the TV Guide Network as it "veered harder into entertainment" and "extended the channel's thematic interest in television."[1] The series was described as a ratings success for the network, doubling its average primetime household rating and leading to a 2008 spinoff series set in Savannah, Georgia.[2]

Writing for Texas Monthly, TV critic Christopher Kelly compared the program to mockumentaries like Waiting for Guffman, calling it " a witty, insightful, and even touching look at a television station that’s probably not much bigger than your average high school AV club" and said the show "blows to smithereens every last stereotype of small-minded, small-town Texas." [3] New York Daily News critic Richard Huff said that the series was "fun to watch", but he thought that it largely confirmed the stereotypes of local television news as "cheesy, overwrought and sensational".[4]

Cast

*The cast is listed by appearance in theme sequence*

  • Jay Hendricks- Anchor
  • Kara Lee- Reporter
  • Jose Gaona - News Director
  • Tatum Hubbard- Anchor (listed as Co-Anchor in first two episodes)
  • Gary Williams Jr.- Producer
  • Melissa Correa- Reporter
  • Bill Warren- Anchor (Dropped as Anchor in second episode, Listed as Reporter in third)*Not Listed in title sequence and appeared on show*
  • Craig Stewart- Weather Director
  • Greg Morgan- meteorologist
  • Jeff Stewart- Sports Director
  • Mike Barker- Anchor
  • Javi Perez - Sports Reporter
  • Catherine Collins - Reporter
  • Armando Saldivar - Reporter
  • Krista Escamilla - Morning Anchor
  • Eddie Garcia - Reporter
  • Allyson Powell - Reporter

The entire KOSA news team can be found here: KOSA-TV Staff

gollark: This is very ethical.
gollark: You can fix climate change by deploying self-replicating nanomachines to dissemble atmospheric carbon dioxide into solid carbon and oxygen.
gollark: Birds are NOT real.
gollark: There are entirely too many weird interacting trends going on right now which make it hard to predict much, not that that was ever very easy.
gollark: The best estimate I'm aware of is that humanity has a 1/6 chance of ceasing to exist within a century, although this says nothing about societal collapse which doesn't wipe out everyone.

See also

References

  1. Derek Johnson (2018). From Networks to Netflix: A Guide to Changing Channels. Taylor & Francis. p. 27. ISBN 978-1-317-33166-7.
  2. John Dempsey, "TV Guide makes ‘News’", Variety, November 25, 2007.
  3. Christopher Kelly, "This Just In: Making News: Texas Style is one of our best reality shows yet.", Texas Monthly, July 2007.
  4. Richard Huff, "Texas 'News': The story's all about 'Style'", New York Daily News, June 13, 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.