B
Bob1370
Guest
We had an earlier topic dealing with the stations with the shortest daily broadcast schedules of the modern era (excluding the 1941-47 period, when even the big New York stations, WCBS, WNBT and WABD, were only on the air in the late afternoons and evenings and didn't always broadcast seven days a week).
But what were the first stations to go to a round-the-clock, 24 hour a day, seven day a week schedule? Nowadays most stations in the top 100 markets never sign off except for antenna and tower repairs (they never even close down for transmitter fixes, since they all keep alternate main transmitters on line and switch back and forth between them--if one needs a tuneup, the alternate is cycled on without missing a beat). But there was a time stations didn't do this consistently. Who was first? I'm guessing a big-market network O&O like WNBC, WABC or WCBS, or maybe a NYC or LA indie like WNEW or KTTV before they became Fox network flagships, or WPIX or KTLA. Would I be right?
But what were the first stations to go to a round-the-clock, 24 hour a day, seven day a week schedule? Nowadays most stations in the top 100 markets never sign off except for antenna and tower repairs (they never even close down for transmitter fixes, since they all keep alternate main transmitters on line and switch back and forth between them--if one needs a tuneup, the alternate is cycled on without missing a beat). But there was a time stations didn't do this consistently. Who was first? I'm guessing a big-market network O&O like WNBC, WABC or WCBS, or maybe a NYC or LA indie like WNEW or KTTV before they became Fox network flagships, or WPIX or KTLA. Would I be right?