There was a teacher somewhere who thought World War 2 (spelled with the Roman numeral for 2 meant 11. World War 11? Yes, I'm not kidding.
Here's another promo, from 1994, for what was still NBC Super Channel--it features some of NBC's leading personalities of that period:By the way, here's a 1997 promotional presentation for NBC Europe showing the channel's unusual mix of programming:

WCLQ/61 in Cleveland adopted a similar logo to the Field stations when it signed on in 1981. The former licensee of Channel 61 was Kaiser Broadcasting which shut down WKBF and merged with crosstown WUAB/43 in 1975.

I might be the only one to talk about how I like this one! The "3" looks groovy and the three lowercase "i"s look like three people turned toward the station's channel number. I'll agree that it's dated, but I like the look!I really dislike the logo of KIII-TV, Corpus Christi, TX (in particular, the 3 logo). It looks dated and unfriendly to me. Curious what others think.
View attachment 8850
This one irks me to no end. Folks in Pittsburgh have known the "KDKA" call letters for over a century! In an era where folks in broadcasting are trying to emphasize their "local" aspect, why de-emphasize the local elements? And trying to find local news on their website is a disaster when it's awkwardly integrated with the national CBS news website.I know they're doing it for this age of streaming, but the current logos for the CBS TV O&Os are among the worst. Talk about drastic and not having a differentiated logo in a sea of alphabet-based networks, services, platforms, etc. While WCBS has retained its channel 2 reference (for now), the others are simply, e.g., "CBS Colorado" for KCNC 4, etc.