> What would it be?
>
I have a couple that come to mind....
One would be seeing WOR/WWOR in the era before Syndex ruined it (and WGN). I only had a few opportunities to see WWOR, once when I was 7 (in 1987), when I lived across from a neighbor who had cable (this is the era where it was rare for some areas to have TBS, WGN, and WWOR all on the same cable system). This is when lived in a unincorporated area of South Los Angeles where the cable TV service was from Compton. The one from Compton and the one that served most of southern Los Angeles county were the same cable operator (American Cable Systems, then Continental Cablevision, then MediaOne, then AT&T, and now Comcast), but had different channel lineups for each community.
Anyways, back to WWOR, my early memories were the Mets games, the local news, and some other stuff. Just about a year, I went to spend the summer with my aunt and uncle in Milwaukee, and again this cable system (Warner Cable, now Time Warner Cable) had all big three superstations. Except for some Cubs games and Bozo, I didn't watch WGN too often. I watched TBS a lot, as well as WWOR. It was kinda cool that in the 5pm hour back, WVTV, WGN, and TBS all used to play Leave It To Beaver at the same time (TBS had the New Leave It To Beaver on Sundays and Mondays at 5:30pm CT). The reason I had this sudden interest in WWOR was because I used to always see their listings in the TV Guide, but the local cable company in Rockford (where I was born and spend part of my childhood) didn't carry New York's Channel 9, so I was always curious about them. We got WGN via antenna, but it was always had some sort of interference (the same kind of interference that showed up on the national WGN feed, pre-Syndex).
Second, would be WGN (again, pre-Syndex). This current version of Chicago's Very Own (both local and national) is just a shell of former self, although you could say it's a change of the times. I used to like watching Bozo on weekdays, some of the local news, some of the Cubs games (the Cubs were seen on one of the local network stations in Rockford, WTVO, later WIFR), and the Sunday morning programs like the 50's Superman shows and the westerns that aired (Rawhide and one other show). Now, WGN is just a typical clone WB station, while Superstation WGN doesn't have a lot to show for anymore.