This is AM band (WHBQ) deejay George Klein and 16-year-old Cybill Shephard in 1968 (age 16 - winner of the Miss Teenage Memphis pageant).
This is probably from the following Saturday on TV. My guess is that she was on Klein's LOCAL TV show (that was sort of a LOCAL version of Dick Clark's "American Bandstand") which was called "Talent Party". It highlighted local emerging bands such as the Box Tops, Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs, The Gentry's (Larry Raspberry lived in the Treadwell district, but somehow went to Kingsbury), The Jesters, The Crackerjacks, etc.
...Klein had a set of dancers - on his Talent Party TV show (on WHBQ TV - same call letters as his AM station - WHBQ), who would dance when the bands would play - called the "WHB-Cuties"... (picture below from the same era: 1967)
In the 60's, WHBQ (TV) was the "cheesy/alsoran" (ABC) network station, but they had the best (cheesy) stuff, such as "Sivad" (a vampire character - Davis spelled backwards) who hosted the late-Saturday-night scary movie show, as well as Saturday morning "studio wrestling".
I remember a 1960's jingle that ran for years on that TV station, attempting to present themselves as the station to watch various sports:
That (AM radio) station played top-40, and Klein was a F.O.E. (Friend of Elvis).
At Memphis State, we weren't particularly fond of him, and - when he would show up are marching band practices occasionally to say "hi" to Tom Ferguson (c. 1974) the whole 200 pc. band would hiss. Klein passed away about five years ago (in his 80's) and - until just before his death - was still doing a not-prime-time local TV show where he would interview old-fogey local musicians of the past.
(Tom Ferguson was our band director, amazing jazz pianist, arranger, and was the pianist on the first Matteson/Phillips TubaJazz Consort L.P., which was produced roughly around that same time - c. 1976)
Cybill went to (very fancy architecture, shown previously - ordered by "Boss" Crump, so he could show it off to his out-of-town friends...etc.) East High School, which (by the 60's and through the 70's) was widely known as the "druggies and tarts" school...whereas my high school (Kingsbury) was known as "the redneck school", one called Treadwell as known as "the roughneck school" (knives/white gangs/etc.), and other high schools had reputations that I'd best not discuss.
Both the East High and Treadwell districts were adjacent to the Kingsbury district, and - actually - my elementary school district overlapped all three, so only about a third of my elementary school buds went on to Kingsbury with me.
Two years later in 1970 (barely old enough to legally do so) Cybill was filming the nude scene in "The Last Picture Show" (released - 1971).