Put your 'Storm Area 51' plans aside for a minute to pay homage to the truly awesome feat of a man setting foot on the moon 50 years ago today. It was one small step for a man and one giant leap for awesome stuff half a century later!
Social media has been running rampant with stories about a creepy skull-shaped asteroid that will pass by Earth on Halloween night, but according to NASA, that's not quite true.
We sat down with meteorologist John Cameron and asked him a few questions about what we can expect from the total solar eclipse here in the Texoma area, and how and when to view it.
On August 21, everyone in the Continental United States, including right here in Texoma, will be able to witness one of the most spectacular astronomical events to ever occur, a total solar eclipse. Here's what you need to know for viewing in the Wichita Falls area.
Earlier this year there was a company that announced they would take your ashes to the edge of space and spread them into the atmosphere. That sounds cool but gross at the same time because those ashes will come raining down on us eventually.