> Just to represent Green Bay...
>
> Best ever: Probably Don Sidney (news)/Bob Schulze
> (sports)/Fred Wagner (weather) at WFRV-TV 5 in the late
> 1960s. This was the first local station to do a "30 minute"
> news show with everything integrated, rather than separate
> 15-minute news, 5-minute weather and 10-minute sports in the
> Green Bay market. Sidney was a veteran who had moved over
> from the strong news department at WBAY-TV; Schulze was a
> solid sports guy (who later moved to WLUK-TV to do sports,
> then news) and Wagner was the market's first "legit"
> meteorolgist and had the first radar in the market. Quite
> impressive for the 1960s in Market 69.
>
> The "worst" wasn't really that, but it was the strangest.
> WLUK-TV, circa 1971 - Stanley Siegel (host), Ray Wheeler
> (news), Bob Schulze (sports), Glen Loyd (Action Man).
> Host? And no weather? Read on...
> WLUK had been out of the news biz since 1967.(Strangely,
> they were owned by a nearby newspaper). When they started up
> again, they did so with a strange newscast. Siegel was the
> host, introducing the show each night and doing offbeat
> features. (His most famous were his driving of a Volkswagen
> into a creek to see if it would float and, in one that got
> him national attention, donning a wet suit and climbing into
> a tub of Jello to see how fruit felt.) Schulze did sports
> as he did at WFRV, while Wheeler was a classic Ted Baxter
> newsreader - handsome with great pipes. Weather? Well, the
> genius who put this together decided weather wasn't that
> important, so Wheeler just read the forecast. The show stunk
> - I would dearly love to have videotapes of it now - and
> after a year, Siegel was out, meteorologist Bob Thomas was
> imported from Chicago, and the show became a "legitimate"
> newscast, more's the pity. They may just have been ahead of
> their time. It wasn't that the talent was bad - Wheeler
> stayed as anchor until 1980 when Schulze replaced him;
> Siegel got a local talk show in New York that, for a year or
> so, gave Phil Donahue a run for his money. It was just, in
> the immortal words of Dr. Johnny Fever, "deeply weird."
>
Stanley Siegel...Wasn't it his show where Truman Capote guested once, and was absolutely hammered, and made a total, unintelligible spectacle of himself?