K
K.M. Richards
Guest
As many of you know, Clarke Ingram put a new website online back on Christmas Day called "The History of UHF Television ... those channels above 13 almost no one could receive". I am proud to have been part of this labor of love, having designed the site for Clarke, written a couple dozen, and edited several more that were written by others (including everything from Peter Q. George's defunct "UHF Morgue" site).
At Clarke's request, I am remaining involved with the site as its content coordinator and it is in that role that I make this post.
I suspect there are people hanging out on the classic television boards here and at the "other" site who may know the history of failed analog UHF stations from 1952 until the early 1980s. And if there are stories to tell, we'd like to tell them.
Please take a look at the site and read some of the articles. If you think you can contribute anything, leave me a PM here, use the feedback form on the site, or contact me via my consulting site (see signature). The pay isn't great -- in fact, it's non-existent -- but you do get to be acknowledged as adding to the published history of the industry.
Thanks for considering.
At Clarke's request, I am remaining involved with the site as its content coordinator and it is in that role that I make this post.
I suspect there are people hanging out on the classic television boards here and at the "other" site who may know the history of failed analog UHF stations from 1952 until the early 1980s. And if there are stories to tell, we'd like to tell them.
Please take a look at the site and read some of the articles. If you think you can contribute anything, leave me a PM here, use the feedback form on the site, or contact me via my consulting site (see signature). The pay isn't great -- in fact, it's non-existent -- but you do get to be acknowledged as adding to the published history of the industry.
Thanks for considering.