I posted this in classic tv, but thought it might be of interest here.
TV news originating from the newsroom
I wasn't sure where to place this thread, but classic tv seems to be the best fit. Was watching a Sundance "The Set" repeat of the Mary Tyler Moore Show (Season 4, Episode 7...1973) that dealt with the idea that a new trend in local news was to broadcast it from the actual newsroom. In this episode, it failed. But many stations in the 70's tried this format for their local news and were successful with it.
I believe the CBS stations WBBM Chicago and KNXT in Los Angeles were a couple of large market stations that attempted this approach. WBBM lasted longer than KNXT (now KCBS-TV), but this format expanded quickly and many copycats sprung up in the 70's and well into the 80's. KING-TV Seattle experimented with a "newsroom" format in the mid-70's but was quickly replaced with a traditional desk set after about a year. KIRO-TV (CBS affiliate) in Seattle went to a similar format to WBBM in 1981, and lasted for about a decade.
What other markets went this route, and have any continued to today?
WBBM, perhaps the pioneer of this format, had dropped it by the early 90's. (Although, KTLA apparently tried it as early as the 60's, but failed).
TV news originating from the newsroom
I wasn't sure where to place this thread, but classic tv seems to be the best fit. Was watching a Sundance "The Set" repeat of the Mary Tyler Moore Show (Season 4, Episode 7...1973) that dealt with the idea that a new trend in local news was to broadcast it from the actual newsroom. In this episode, it failed. But many stations in the 70's tried this format for their local news and were successful with it.
I believe the CBS stations WBBM Chicago and KNXT in Los Angeles were a couple of large market stations that attempted this approach. WBBM lasted longer than KNXT (now KCBS-TV), but this format expanded quickly and many copycats sprung up in the 70's and well into the 80's. KING-TV Seattle experimented with a "newsroom" format in the mid-70's but was quickly replaced with a traditional desk set after about a year. KIRO-TV (CBS affiliate) in Seattle went to a similar format to WBBM in 1981, and lasted for about a decade.
What other markets went this route, and have any continued to today?
WBBM, perhaps the pioneer of this format, had dropped it by the early 90's. (Although, KTLA apparently tried it as early as the 60's, but failed).