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George Putnam Dies

mleach said:

It really is amazing how early LA got into those news copters even before NYC.

Since KTLA was the first station in the west to use such things ( and the first one period ), I wonder when did the east coast markets start using them?

The earliest I can remember an east coast TV station using a chopper was in 1981 and oddly it WXEX-TV 8 in Petersburg/Richmond, Virginia. I am sure there were other stations along the east coast who had one before then but the earliest I can remember was WXEX. Not sure how often WXEX used their "TV 8 Eye in the Sky" since I just remember those old WXEX Eyewitness News ads in TV Guide but I do remember in the summer of 1984 when a young man was killed on a roller coaster at Kings Dominion Amusement Park. Kings Dominion wouldn't allow any of the local Richmond TV stations inside the park to show the roller coaster much less interview the staff about the accident but WXEX thanks to their chopper not only showed the roller coaster ( it was the Galaxy...where the Shockwave stand-up coaster is at now ) but even showed the body being taken out of the park. This may have been one of the few times WXEX actually beat WTVR and WWBT in "breaking news".

I'm not sure about the east coast, but when I moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1973, no TV stations had copters, and none were doing the kind of live "on-the-spot" broadcasts that KTLA had pioneered probably 15 years before. Oddly enough, the big news and talk radio stations like KGO and KCBS had both planes and copters doing traffic reports. During big news stories (fires, natural disasters, etc.), they would divert the copters and planes to live news coverage.

Most other radio stations publicized their traffic copters too - but it was a not very well kept secret that the traffic guy in the "K-101 Traffic Copter" (or whatever station) was really in the back seat of the KGO copter.

I think the TV stations first got into copter coverage about 75 or 76 - with all 3 network affiliates getting copters at the same time and [publicizing it heavily.
 
Stanislav said:
Mark Evanier has a lengthy post about Mr. Putnam on his blog today:

http://www.newsfromme.com/archives/2008_09_16.html#015835

An interesting blog entry. I don't argue with his premise - that Putnam like many "performers" who carve out a niche in a TV news media are acting to a certain degree, and also convince themselves of the righteousness of their own beliefs once they cash in on their own act.

But for those of you that read the blog, I feel the need to comment on a couple of items:

1. Putnam was at KTLA off an on for a few years from the mid 60s thru 69, then again in 71 and perhaps 72. But he spent far more of his TV career at KTTV - from the mid 50s through the mid 60s, then again in 69-70.

2. From what I remember, that "Talk Back" segment that began in the last half hour of the 10:00 News on KTLA was not Putnam's preference - he would have preferred doing a full hour of news, but Golden West Broadcasters was cutting his budget, and he had no choice. In a sense, it was the beginning of the end for his TV career. He was increasingly considered too theatrical and old fashioned for the 1970s, and he was gone from KTLA within a year or two. But Evanier is right that Talk Back was nothing more than silly people showing up to be verbally eviscerated by Putnam (and Hal Fishman) who always cut them off after a few sentences and ridiculed them. Larry McCormick (then the KTLA weather man) was also there, but mostly look uncomfortable with the whole thing. It reminded me of Joe Pyne's "beef box" segments from a few years earlier - more than a little undignified for a supposed news program.

3. Putnam's subsequent radio career could not be called "wildly successful," as Evanier states. Little KIEV AM in Glendale was making a wishful move into the Talk Radio big leagues with Putnam and Mr. Blackwell's programs, but it was never a big hit in the Arbitron ratings.
 
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