K
kirjtc2
Guest
> What are the worst television stations you've ever seen?
>
Any discussion of bad TV stations HAS to include WVII (ABC, ch. 7) in Bangor, Maine. They're the #3 station in town in every way imaginable.
In the 80s they were even worse. Their newscasts were on a bare-bones blue and marble set. They looked like they were shot with a home video camera too, and their chron had maybe 2-3 fonts, one of which was butt-ugly. Don't forget the Brady Bunch reruns and cartoons in late afternoon well into the 90s. I have a tape of a 1992 WVII newscast. The open consisted of poorly-shot images of Bangor with a blue tint to them with electronic music playing. Some of their stories came from WMTW in Portland, graphics and all.
The most popular local program on WVII in the 70s and 80s was Dick Stacey's Country Jamboree, which aired on Saturday nights. Dick Stacey was an owner of a group of Citgo stations in the area who put in his own commercials: "See these hands? They smell like gas." It was ideally a variety show, but it seemed anyone who wanted to go on, could. The results would make Simon Cowell scream in horror, but probably not as loud as the screams which were apparently songs. The show had a cult following.
WVII hasn't improved that much. Last time I was in Bangor I turned it on expecting to see a newscast and got an infomercial. The next morning, their "local" update during GMA was a Bloomberg business report and an AccuWeather forecast. I see their website has a Deer Stand Makeover contest now.
JPK
>
Any discussion of bad TV stations HAS to include WVII (ABC, ch. 7) in Bangor, Maine. They're the #3 station in town in every way imaginable.
In the 80s they were even worse. Their newscasts were on a bare-bones blue and marble set. They looked like they were shot with a home video camera too, and their chron had maybe 2-3 fonts, one of which was butt-ugly. Don't forget the Brady Bunch reruns and cartoons in late afternoon well into the 90s. I have a tape of a 1992 WVII newscast. The open consisted of poorly-shot images of Bangor with a blue tint to them with electronic music playing. Some of their stories came from WMTW in Portland, graphics and all.
The most popular local program on WVII in the 70s and 80s was Dick Stacey's Country Jamboree, which aired on Saturday nights. Dick Stacey was an owner of a group of Citgo stations in the area who put in his own commercials: "See these hands? They smell like gas." It was ideally a variety show, but it seemed anyone who wanted to go on, could. The results would make Simon Cowell scream in horror, but probably not as loud as the screams which were apparently songs. The show had a cult following.
WVII hasn't improved that much. Last time I was in Bangor I turned it on expecting to see a newscast and got an infomercial. The next morning, their "local" update during GMA was a Bloomberg business report and an AccuWeather forecast. I see their website has a Deer Stand Makeover contest now.
JPK