I'd like to see the sign-on from Sept. 1984 of WTIC-TV Channel 61--Bob Steele was there signing on his second WTIC-TV--Channel 3 in 1957 being the other. There was a gala event in Hartford to celebrate the birth of what is now Fox 61
desertv said:WPXI/11 Pittsburgh also called itself 11 Alive; the folks
at WXIA used to laugh about this, since WPXI is a sister
station to WXIA's archrival WSB/2.
Combined Communications (bought by Gannett in '79) used
Alive in the IDs of four of its stations; besides WXIA,
they were: KOCO/5 Alive Oklahoma City, WPTA/21 Alive
Ft. Wayne, IN, WLKY/32 Alive Louisville.
CCC's Phoenix flagship KTAR-TV used "12Alive" until the call letter change to KPNX (back to "Channel 12" also)
Limp73 said:Would love to go back in time to April of 1967 when Dayton's first independant TV station WKTR-TV (now PBS station WPTD) first came on the air airing The Merv Griffin Show..followed by Kim's Kartoon Kapers hosted by a shy,yet sweet and pretty young girl named Kim Christy (or Kristy) who introduced all of the Batfink cartoons and Three Stooges two-reelers. She also read fan mail and art submitted by her fellow youthful viewers. Kim moved on to other things after her year long stint on the original Channel 16 which was licensed in Kettering....but how I wished I would have sent her a fan letter. I was thirteen years old at the time so I'm thinking she was twelve or thirteen at the time as well......yes I had a crush back then on Kim Christy!
Whatever happened to her after all of forty three years?
Hugs and kisses to Kim Christy...wherever you are..and thanks for the Batfink cartoons,your smiles and your cheerfulness!
In terms of cable, I would love to see MTV and Nickelodeon from the 80s again as well as Ha! and The Comedy Channel.
FreddyE1977 said:the day that WIIC/WPXI (it was right around the time of the call letter switch)
heavily promoted "Woody Allen's 'Sleeper', uncut, without commerical interruption!"
When it ran, there were no commercials allright...
just repeated freeze-frames of the movie, during which they used Chromakey to insert their weatherman, Pat Finn, in various costumes so as to interact with the characters on the film. He would then make a plug for some particular show or evening lineup on the fall schedule (Gee, Woody...that reminds me of the great new Saturday evening line-up here on Channel 11...) The movie
would grind to a halt for one of these every 10 min. or so.
The viewing public went nuts....overran the switchboard with complaints! The local press ate them alive, and
Woody Allen actually sued them when he learned about it! The next morning Pat Finn was on a plane to Phoenix,
never to return. (wasn't his fault!) A truly bizarre and surreal moment in TV history!