AFRTS would make up packages of shows on film and rotate them to about 10 or 12 stations on a circut.
Berlin was lucky as it was the second station on a circut and the film was still in pretty good shape as only the Frankfurt station had used it so far.
(This said, we got a lot of reels of film that had been shown umpteen times and had lots of splices and a few hunks missing too.)
Pity the last station on the circut who got the film and it was scratched, spliced and sometimes scotchtaped back together.
I recall one really cold spell and the film had sat on the train or in an unheated truck for a long time. When we got it, the APO guys dropped a box or two and the film broke into zillions of pieces that we had to splice back together.
Sometimes the film still had local PSAs spliced into it from other areas, like Japan and more recently at that time, Vietnam.
I recall seeing a home-grown psa with George Jessel telling the troops to drive carefully in Vietnam that got left in some show.
After showing the film, it would be packed up and sent on to the next station, which I believe was in Iceland.
We would always have at least week of shows in house as a back up in case
"something" happened to the shipment, which now and then did occur.
(I heard about one shipment of film that was being transported by helicopter
in Vietnam. The side door was open, the cases were not secured and the chopper came under fire. The pilot took evasive action and the film boxes slid out never to be seen again.)
Berlin was also unique in that it had a large film library of shows and movies
because many of the shows in the weekly packages could not be shown as the
programs were trying to be sold to the German market. Each week we'd get a list of programs in the Television Weekly shipment(the TW) that we could not show.
However, what programs we could not show, would be fine for another station on the circut to show, especially if that station was at Fort Goosebump in Greenland or someplace where there was not
a large metro area, like Berlin.
As noted in a previous post, many locals would pay about a hundred bucks to have their TV's adapted to get AFN as many of them knew enough English to understand what was going on in the shows.
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"What's That?" "French Horns!"
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