Yes indeedy, an el Lay heritage station. AM, FM, and TV. And to think blocks of Polka music started it all.Maybe they could try to get the KPOL calls. 1540 did start out as a polka station after all.
Yes indeedy, an el Lay heritage station. AM, FM, and TV. And to think blocks of Polka music started it all.Maybe they could try to get the KPOL calls. 1540 did start out as a polka station after all.
Yes indeedy, an el Lay heritage station. AM, FM, and TV.
en.wikipedia.org
Scott's article shows the KRTH aux in a little closet sized room. He wonders if the room was the KROQ studio when the AM broadcast from the bunker (in 1976 while the Pasadena studio was being installed). It wasn't. A makeshift "studio" (board, mic, 2 turntables and a cart machine (for jingles) was in the main room within arm's length of the 1kw Sparta. I worked there for a few weeks and saw a broken (literally) toilet on its side in that room. So, this eyewitness can attest that the KRTH aux transmitter is in an old bathroom. Common joke among the staff was, "I've worked in some toilets, but this is ridiculous!Some of them are, some aren't. Scott Fybush's bunker report is an interesting read: A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond
This from Wikipedia in the early channel 22.
I remember regularly watching an ancient TV spy show on Ch 22 back then that was hosted by Boris Karloff! We picked up early UHF stations back then using a UHF Converter Box that was essentially a UHF tuner that down converted the band to a Ch 3 or 4 signal.Although, in the grand scheme of things, KPOL-TV didn't last all that long.
After about ten years transmitting nothing more than a test pattern (and that was via an etched image onto the face of a video imaging tube) and one year as "racially integrated" KIIX before going dark in March 1964, KPOL-TV signed on March 29, 1965 with a schedule of movies and old syndicated series which could have already been described as "ancient" ... before signing off four days later due to a strike by AFTRA-IBEW. The TV station resumed operation one month later (KPOL-AM/FM stayed on the air with a skeleton non-union staff), but when Capital Cities bought the radio stations a year later they were not interested in the television station.
So the television side of KPOL was spun off to some of the investors in the license corporation and relaunched November 7 of that year as KWHY-TV, including the innovative stock market coverage that lasted some 33 years. In fact, during the first few years there were periods when the station signed off after the financial news! It wasn't until 1972 (after another ownership change, to Harriscope) that the weekend and evening hours started bringing in revenue from leasing time to Korean, Japanese and Spanish-language programmers.
Of course, KPOL-TV was channel 22. And now, as Paul Harvey would have said, you know ... the rest of the story.
I remember regularly watching an ancient TV spy show on Ch 22 back then that was hosted by Boris Karloff!
Thank you that was it! Just couldn't remember the name of the show. We didn't have UHF capability at the time Ch 22 was KIIX TV, and I have always been curious about the special "Black" programming that was aired...was any of it taped or kinescoped?Indeed! That would have been Colonel March of Scotland Yard, a British series from 1956-57 that KPOL-TV aired on Friday evenings.
Thank you that was it! Just couldn't remember the name of the show. We didn't have UHF capability at the time Ch 22 was KIIX TV, and I have always been curious about the special "Black" programming that was aired...was any of it taped or kinescoped?
They played some righteous music videos during the afternoon in the mid 80s, so if your parents were too cheap to get cable, well, at least you had that!I should clarify that I watched the Karloff series on KWHY-TV during the daytime. I never saw "KPOL-TV" nor "KIIX-TV" we didn't have UHF capability then. My dad bought the converter to watch the fledgling KCET