searadiofreak said:
blakesmith11 said:
For a brief shining moment, KTVW, Channel 13 in Tacoma/Seattle was an irresistible draw with its eclectic mix of classic TV shows and locally produced programs. While it wasn't the "best" independent, "The Blaidon Station" was fun and unpredictible. It was purchased by Blaidon Mutual Investors Corp. in 1972, a company with no broadcasting experience, from a bankrupt J. Elroy McCaw estate. Blaidon and Channel 13 burned through whatever money they had invested in the station and less than two years later, declared bankruptcy themselves.
Yes, this Seattle native remembers Channel 13...always seemed to be the "black sheep" of Sea/Tac TV...but look where they are today...that bankruptcy eventually evolved into them becoming Seattle's Fox, with a decent news operation and beating the other net affilitates in a lot of slots. BTW, I can't remember, when did KTVW change to KCPQ?
That station, as KTVW, made my "worst" list by virtue of the fact that they didn't even broadcast in color until 1972 (when Blaidon bought it). That's pretty amazing for a top 20 market VHF commercial station!
But to answer your question regarding the call letter change, that happened at the start of 1976 when channel 13 returned to the air as a public TV station -- the "CP" in the KCPQ call letters stands for Clover Park, as in the Clover Park School District -- the owners of this station until it was sold to Kelly Broadcasting and returned to commercial operation on November 4, 1980. It remained a rather weak competitor to Gaylord Broadcasting's KSTW, channel 11, until the rise of Fox. Truthfully, while Kelly was an exemplary owner for NBC-affiliated KCRA (channel 3) in Sacramento, they never quite seemed to know what to do with an independent station. I've long thought that the other commercial bidder for channel 13 in 1979/80 (Roadrunner Broadcasting, owner of then KZAZ, channel 11, Nogales/Tucson) would have done a better job of running this station.
This is a station with a truly fascinating history -- but much as I have a soft spot for this station, it was never a very good independent station. What's also fascinating is a look at how much this station sold for at various times:
1975: $378,000 for transmitter, tower, and license in bankruptcy sale
1980: $6.25 million for transmitter, tower and license. New owners built a new tower and donated the old tower to another PBS station
1999: $370 million to the current owner (Tribune Broadcasting)
That's almost a thousand-fold increase in the station's value in a 24 year period -- better than owning Microsoft stock!