Brian Kirkpatrick
Brian Kirkpatrick has been a journalist in Texas most of his life, covering San Antonio news since 1993, including the deadly October 1998 flooding, the arrival of the Toyota plant in 2003, and the base closure and realignments in 2005.
He also served as news director and anchor at KTSA and Metro Networks, and was previously the "Morning Edition" anchor at Texas Public Radio. His early career included work as a news anchor and production assistant for the Texas State News Network/Dallas Cowboys Radio Network in Dallas, from 1988-1993. During his years at TSN, he helped cover the Luby’s mass shooting in Killeen and the Branch Davidian standoff at Mount Carmel. Kirkpatrick read his first newscast on a small radio station in the Hill Country as a teenager in 1981.
Brian returns to reporting after teaching high school journalism at Harlandale High School in San Antonio for the past seven years.
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Many San Antonio businesses that could not adjust their operations to meet the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic have failed. But one of the city's oldest businesses stuck with what it knows best — hats and customer service — and survived long enough to reopen. Its customers have included presidents, royalty and entertainers.
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The American Automobile Association reports nearly 3 million Texans will hit the road this Memorial Day weekend, an increase of 60% over the same holiday last year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Lynn Holzman, the NCAA's vice president of women's basketball, said the organization has started to address disparities between the women's and men's tournaments, specifically the weight room equipment, the quality of meals, and the contents of swag bags.
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State and local officials are already discussing plans to rebuild the 111-year-old Mason County Courthouse, which a fire nearly destroyed on Thursday. Officials suspected arson as the cause.
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A record increase in hiking has been reported in Texas as residents seek exercise and escape from a pandemic that is nearly a year old.
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The scaled-down San Antonio Stock Show and Rodeo is set to become the biggest, continuous public event to be held locally since the COVID-19 pandemic began a year ago.
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The next few months will see the convergence of COVID-19, the flu, and cedar fever season.
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For the first time, San Antonians are expected to cross the newly completed Robert L.B. Tobin Land Bridge at Phil Hardberger Park in the north central side of the city.
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It was a season that killed hundreds of people, ravaged some regions like Louisiana, Central America and Puerto Rico over and over again, left behind billions of dollars in damages and stunned even the most experienced meteorologists with its unrelenting pace.
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Was the Alamo once brightly painted like other Spanish missions in the area?
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Business is booming for a San Antonio company that builds a robot designed to kill the virus that causes COVID-19 in the air and on surfaces with a burst of UV Light.
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Irma Alicia Cortez Nicolas formed a media empire with her husband Emilio Nicolas and launched Univision, which debuted as the fourth major media network in the U.S., following NBC, CBS and ABC.