Newscasts KSAT-TV presently broadcasts 41 hours, 55 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week (with 6 hours, 35 minutes each weekday and hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). In 2002, weeknight co-anchor
Leslie Mouton was diagnosed with
breast cancer; Mouton courageously decided to anchor the evening newscasts without a wig while she was undergoing
chemotherapy treatments that resulted in her going bald. Mouton chronicled her treatment and recovery on KSAT, earning accolades from local
oncologists and cancer patients. Mouton recounted her battle with the disease in a 2004 interview on
The Oprah Winfrey Show (which aired on KSAT at the time), which included clips of Mouton's first anchoring appearance after she lost her hair, including the explanation she gave on-air of what she was going through at the time. On February 5, 2009, KSAT became the second television station in the San Antonio market to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in
high definition. prior to the upgrade, only in-studio cameras recorded in HD, with video downconverted to
widescreen standard definition; certain field cameras and other station camera feeds are in standard definition and upconverted to a
16:9 widescreen format in the control room, as some field reports still remain in upconverted 16:9 standard definition. On May 26, 2011, KSAT debuted a half-hour late afternoon newscast at 4 p.m., titled
First News At Four; the program (along with its lead-out
Inside Edition) replaced
The Oprah Winfrey Show, which ended its syndication run on May 25, 2011.
First News At Four ended its run on September 5, 2014. On September 12, 2011, in a move announced in May 2011, KSAT-TV became the first station in San Antonio to expand its 10 p.m. newscast to one hour; as a result, it was one of the few television stations affiliated with the
Big Three networks that airs an hour-long late evening newscast. Also coinciding with the expanded newscast,
Inside Edition was reduced from two daily airings to one, as the newscast took over that timeslot;
Nightline remained in its timeslot at 11:05 (later occupied by
Jimmy Kimmel Live! at 11:05 p.m. and
Nightline at 12:05 a.m.). However, ABC's newest affiliation contract has required all its affiliates to carry
Kimmel as scheduled at 10:35 p.m., and KSAT, along with several other ABC affiliates carrying extended newscasts, reduced their late newscasts to the traditional 35 minutes at the start of 2019. In March 2012, KSAT expanded its weekday morning newscast
Good Morning San Antonio to hours, becoming the third station (behind WOAI and later KENS) to expand its morning newscast to the 4:30 a.m. timeslot. That month, the station also added Saturday and Sunday editions of
Good Morning San Antonio, in the form of one-hour blocks (with the second half of the Saturday edition running two hours) surrounding the weekend editions of
Good Morning America. In February 2017, KSAT announced the launch of a new hour of programming in the 9 a.m. block,
Good Morning San Antonio at 9. In September 2018, the station launched a 9 p.m. newscast, though unusually, the program is exclusive to the station's app on the three major
digital media player platforms.
Death of Michelle Lima Tragedy struck the station on March 26, 1999, when anchor/reporter and rising star Michelle Lima was killed while reporting live during a newscast from the scene of a search for a 9-year-old boy. As she was helping pack up for a future assignment, Lima was hit by a truck on a dark rural frontage road in southern Bexar County. Lima was airlifted to a local hospital where she was pronounced dead two days later. She was 30 years old.
Sports programming KSAT airs select
San Antonio Spurs games through
the network's contract with the NBA; the station aired four of the team's five NBA Finals victories in
2003,
2005,
2007, and
2014, as well as the team's
2013 NBA Finals appearance.
Local programming KSAT produces a one-hour lifestyle and variety show,
SA Live, weekdays at 10 a.m. In addition, the station produced the hour-long sports highlight and discussion program
Instant Replay, which aired Sundays at 11 p.m. until the program's cancellation in March 2025. ==In popular culture==