Now I remember what CBS's lead story was the day Elvis died...It was on the scandal involving the then-White House budget director, Bert Lance.
azumanga said:Regarding the public domain issue, are any (or all) of the series in PD? If so, CBS has been doing a good job keeping the series under wraps, as boots can't be found anywhere.
A&E (I think it was) did something similar to that on November 22, 1988, the 25th anniversary of the JFK assassination. They started their programming at 12:30 that afternoon, just like the networks did on the afternoon that Kennedy was shot. Since I was born the following week (November 29, 1963), this was the closest I have ever come to reliving JFK's assassination as it happened. (I can't remember what network they carried that afternoon, but I think it was NBC.)Cincinnati Kid said:One of the NBC cable stations (MSNBC-?) has featured taped news coverage of events on the date they took place. For example, last September 11, that outlet had tapes from NBC's coverage of six years before timed right up to the minute beginning shortly before 9 A.M. right after the first tower was struck past when both towers had fallen.
firepoint525 said:A&E (I think it was) did something similar to that on November 22, 1988, the 25th anniversary of the JFK assassination. They started their programming at 12:30 that afternoon, just like the networks did on the afternoon that Kennedy was shot. Since I was born the following week (November 29, 1963), this was the closest I have ever come to reliving JFK's assassination as it happened. (I can't remember what network they carried that afternoon, but I think it was NBC.)Cincinnati Kid said:One of the NBC cable stations (MSNBC-?) has featured taped news coverage of events on the date they took place. For example, last September 11, that outlet had tapes from NBC's coverage of six years before timed right up to the minute beginning shortly before 9 A.M. right after the first tower was struck past when both towers had fallen.
bk77 said:I would like to see what ABC's coverage of the JFK assasination was like. Seems only NBC and CBS's version gets shown.
Several years ago a friend of mine was watching some local station's 50th anniversary and of course they brought up JFK but oddly they showed clips of Walter Cronkite announcing Kennedy's death even though that station was an ABC affiliate then ( in 63 ) and they are still ABC today.
Almost as if ABC didn't cover the event at all.
Cincinnati Kid said:ABC-TV was a distant third in ratings and news coverage at that time. About one year or so afterward, TV Guide had a feature article on what was seen that weekend. Of course there was Walter Cronkete, and Huntley & Brinkley. They should a single newsman on ABC-Tv and I can't recall the name although his first-name may have been "Ron". I just can't remember.
firepoint525 said:The JFK assassination indirectly affected the Beatles finally breaking through in the U.S. On the morning of November 22, 1963, the CBS morning show (whatever it was called at the time) aired a segment featuring footage of the Beatles. They were planning to air it again that evening, but were of course preempted by JFK assassination coverage. When they finally got around to showing it on their evening newscast on December 10th, a 15-year-old girl in Washington, DC, saw it, and called radio station WWDC and asked them something along the lines of, "why can't we get music like that here?" (She evidently liked what she saw!) The DJ there got a British (Parlophone) copy of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" from a British flight attendant, and started playing it on his show. He made copies for DJ friends of his in Chicago and St. Louis. From there, it caught on and went nationwide. Capitol records actually considered a cease-and-desist order against playing the song in the U.S. because it hadn't been "officially" released yet. Instead, they increased the production run, and advance-released it as a single in the U.S. I believe the girl in Washington, DC, who got all this started eventually got to meet the Beatles. This is all in one of Bruce Spizer's books.
Radio stations aren't anywhere near that responsive to listener requests now! :![]()
KRLA had "From Me to You" as high as #31 on their survey sometime in the summer of 1963. (It would be interesting if anyone could find a copy of that survey and post a link to it.) This was while it "bubbled under" at #116 on the national Billboard survey.mleach said:firepoint525 said:The JFK assassination indirectly affected the Beatles finally breaking through in the U.S. On the morning of November 22, 1963, the CBS morning show (whatever it was called at the time) aired a segment featuring footage of the Beatles. They were planning to air it again that evening, but were of course preempted by JFK assassination coverage. When they finally got around to showing it on their evening newscast on December 10th, a 15-year-old girl in Washington, DC, saw it, and called radio station WWDC and asked them something along the lines of, "why can't we get music like that here?" (She evidently liked what she saw!) The DJ there got a British (Parlophone) copy of "I Want to Hold Your Hand" from a British flight attendant, and started playing it on his show. He made copies for DJ friends of his in Chicago and St. Louis. From there, it caught on and went nationwide. Capitol records actually considered a cease-and-desist order against playing the song in the U.S. because it hadn't been "officially" released yet. Instead, they increased the production run, and advance-released it as a single in the U.S. I believe the girl in Washington, DC, who got all this started eventually got to meet the Beatles. This is all in one of Bruce Spizer's books.
Radio stations aren't anywhere near that responsive to listener requests now! :![]()
I remember reading about this. However WWDC was NOT the first radio station in the US to play the Beatles. That honor actually belongs to WEPM-AM 1340 in Martinsburg, West Virginia which pre-dated WWDC by a month or two. Les Goliday who was the owner of WEPM at the time as well as an anouncer played a Beatles tune on his show one night ( I think it was "Love Me Do" but not sure ). Oddly WEPM was at the time a country music radio station ( Patsy Cline worked there prior to her hitting it big ) and Goliday loved rock and roll as much as Mitch Miller did at the time. Why on earth did he play a Beatles tune? As a joke, to give his listeners a sample of "trashy music from Europe". Only about a minute of the Beatles tune was played before Goliday went on the air and said "..thats it folks..I HAVE HAD ENOUGH"..and he broke that record on the air. A month or so later WWDC played the Beatles but at least they were serious about it and did not treat the song and the group as some kind of joke so as result WWDC gets the credit and rightfully so for their connection to the Beatles while the WEPM conection well for good reason is often overlooked.
The Martinsburg WV Journal did a story about all of this when they ran a series of articles on WEPM's 50th back in the 90s.
As for Les Goliday, still alive and kicking at age 94 and he still hates the Beatles.
mleach said:WWDC was NOT the first radio station in the US to play the Beatles. That honor actually belongs to WEPM-AM 1340 in Martinsburg, West Virginia which pre-dated WWDC by a month or two.
jwgreek8606 said:What really pisses me off is that NBC owns the episodes of the Jack Narz and Alex Trebek episodes of Concentration. And, they won't let GSN air them! I mean come the hell on NBC! If you are not using them! let GSN air them for cryin' out loud!