they wouldn't have been asking for the McJordan in North Dakota without WGNA
Well, here's another out of market WNBC oddity:Did they carry WNBC to address not having an easily available NBC affiliate?
KYTV-3 Springfield should have been receivable, but in hill country, the terrain can create unique problems depending upon location.
I can't find anything about Eminence cable in any of the Broadcasting Yearbook or Television Factbook archives to which I have access.
Telecable in Lexington had the "Network Wildcard Channel". (Their name)Storer Cable in northern Kentucky had channels called "network preempt" that supposedly carried network programs during the many times the Cincinnati stations preempted them. But every time I tried watching these channels, they were just showing the Cincinnati stations.
Well, here's another out of market WNBC oddity:
In the early 2000s, Duo County Cable TV Columbia KY, (Adair county Louisville DMA) carried WNBC on it's OTA channel on cable (4).
No in market WAVE, or Lexingtons WLEX, BUT, they had WLKY and WKYT for CBS, WHAS, WBKO and WTVQ for ABC and WDRB and WDKY for FOX.
One summer back then, I was installing new kitchen equipment at Adair County HS, while school was out. I took my lunch in the cafeteria, so I turned on one of the wall mounted TVs while I ate lunch and I remember the "NBC America" ID. This was maybe 2001..
Duo County eventually added WLEX and WAVE for NBC, however at the end of last year, they have discontinued linear cable TV service and exists solely as an internet provider under the name "Duo County Broadband"
That's probably exactly what they did. Viewers probably wouldn't care whether it were a Louisville or Cincinnati station being inserted, as long as they could get the show they wanted to see.There was no rhyme or reason for which channels were activated, probably someone at the Palumbo Dr headend, just looked in the TV guide and picked one of those available. I don't know if it was a programmable or a manually operated setup.
We had a local cable company here in mcgrath, alaska back in the 80s and 90s. i think they got the programming from dish network and distributed it on cable. we had 600-800 people back then. I'll have to see if anyone has an old cable tv line up from back in the day
Stupid question, were they allowed to do that?
Or were they so far out in the cut that nobody would care?
Dish Network didn't even begin service in 1996, and I don't believe its footprint included Alaska at the beginning.We had a local cable company here in mcgrath, alaska back in the 80s and 90s. i think they got the programming from dish network and distributed it on cable. we had 600-800 people back then. I'll have to see if anyone has an old cable tv line up from back in the day
ok... i recall someone in passing told me the programming came off a commercially available service or so i thought.Dish Network didn't even begin service in 1996, and I don't believe its footprint included Alaska at the beginning.
ok... i recall someone in passing told me the programming came off a commercially available service or so i thought.
ill find out more
was a local channel bleeding in?Storer Cable in northern Kentucky got VH1 pretty early, but the picture and sound were of poor quality. It looked and sounded as if there was another channel on in the background. You could faintly hear audio and see shadows of another channel.
many hotels use direcTV dishMany apartment buildings distribute signals straight from DirecTV to their residents. I imagine this would have been a similar arrangement?
many hotels use direcTV dish
That person was almost certainly talking about HITS.ok... i recall someone in passing told me the programming came off a commercially available service or so i thought. ill find out more
and also overpriced older Nintendo games by the hourIs Lodgenet still around? Feels like many motels/hotels were using a LodgeNet system in the 2000s and early 2010s. They were often known for not including CW or PBS stations on their lineup, and only had 30 or so channels otherwise.
We had a local cable company here in mcgrath, alaska back in the 80s and 90s. i think they got the programming from dish network and distributed it on cable. we had 600-800 people back then. I'll have to see if anyone has an old cable tv line up from back in the day