(note: the second and third paragraphs below this sentence were amended after they were originally published)
- The local news program that appeared on the main broadcast channel
for WALA-TV during the hour of 5:00 p.m. on the Tuesday of the
twenty-sixth day of this December ("FOX 10 News at 5:00 p.m.") had one
of its news reporters (Kati Weis) appearing to tell its audience, "If if you see something, do the right thing and call the police" for one of its reports.
- The cable TV channels in the cable TV system operated by Comcast Cablevision of Mobile that usually appeared to have programming for a national cable TV and satellite TV programming service named FXX
each appeared to have had video of a programming feed for the main broadcast
channel for WALA-TV in place of it without audio this Thursday (note: each of them had the video appearing more vertical than the way it usually appeared on the main broadcast channel for WALA-TV in recent times).
- The local news program that appeared on the main broadcast channel for WKRG-TV during the first half of the hour of 10:00 p.m. on the Tuesday of the twenty-sixth day of this December ("WKRG News 5 at 10") had one of its news presenters (Peter Albrecht**) presenting a report regarding a certain "rescue" with statements pertaining to its audience (this is what he was saying while doing so: "a rescue in El Paso, Texas caught on camera is going viral because it's not something you don't see or hear about very often: a man had to be rescued from the back of a garbage truck") and its other news presenter (Rose Ann Haven) presenting a report that had her describing its content as "strange" immediately after the one one (this is what she was saying that had her doing so: "Another strange story: this one out of South Dakota where two best friends turned out to be biological brothers".
(*the last segments of previous installments of it and those of other local news programs for the channel in recent times usually had one or more of their contributors bidding farewell to their audiences whereas the phrase "We'll be right back" was usually said during the last few seconds of certain segments they had between other segments they had between previous installments of them in recent times )
(**he was not a regular news program for the program by then (he was usually one of its news reporters in previous installments of it in recent times)
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