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Radio-X
Guest
This has been something I have been wondering about for quite awhile...
Who was the first to provide regular 24 hour programming on their TV station? Was this heavily advertised?
I have heard WPXI in Pittsburgh started in the late 50's-early 60's for steel workers on the overnight shift...but I have no proof of this. I'm also not sure if it lasted very long.
Alternately, I have heard that stations in LA (KNX-TV) and Dallas had at least a couple nights a week of 24 hour broadcasting by the late 60's.
The earliest actual "24 hour" broadcast I'm aware of from a TV Guide (save for JFK assassination/moon landing/etc) was WCBS-TV New York in the mid 70's. They'd 'sign off' for 15-90 minutes with test card before signing back on. Transmitter was usually not shut off.
In terms of public broadcasters, I have heard WTVS in Detroit ran 24/7 since the mid 80's (auto plant workers and Canadian viewers on cable), and KCTS Seattle (also on Canadian cable) has been 24/7 since 1989. Otherwise, it seems like everybody was signing off into the early-mid 90's...
Radio-X
Who was the first to provide regular 24 hour programming on their TV station? Was this heavily advertised?
I have heard WPXI in Pittsburgh started in the late 50's-early 60's for steel workers on the overnight shift...but I have no proof of this. I'm also not sure if it lasted very long.
Alternately, I have heard that stations in LA (KNX-TV) and Dallas had at least a couple nights a week of 24 hour broadcasting by the late 60's.
The earliest actual "24 hour" broadcast I'm aware of from a TV Guide (save for JFK assassination/moon landing/etc) was WCBS-TV New York in the mid 70's. They'd 'sign off' for 15-90 minutes with test card before signing back on. Transmitter was usually not shut off.
In terms of public broadcasters, I have heard WTVS in Detroit ran 24/7 since the mid 80's (auto plant workers and Canadian viewers on cable), and KCTS Seattle (also on Canadian cable) has been 24/7 since 1989. Otherwise, it seems like everybody was signing off into the early-mid 90's...
Radio-X