M
mwebster
Guest
The LA Times reports:
<blockquote>
If everything goes as expected, nobody will really notice.
But with the planned flip of a switch at 11:05 p.m. Friday, another piece of Hollywood's golden age will disappear forever.
Microphones at the last radio station in Hollywood will go dead as announcers and newscasters complete their final on-air shift at the historic Columbia Square broadcast center...
With its porthole-windowed studio doors and chrome-accented, round-cornered interior walls, Columbia Square was considered America's most spacious and technologically advanced broadcast facility when CBS built it in 1938. Legendary CBS President William S. Paley personally oversaw its design and officiated at its dedication.
It boasted eight large broadcasting studios, including one theater-like room that could seat an audience of 1,050.
During the 1940s and '50s hundreds would line up in the building's U-shaped forecourt to get in to see live productions of radio shows featuring Jack Benny, Art Linkletter, Burns and Allen, Edgar Bergen, Orson Welles, Jackie Gleason, Steve Allen, Eddie Cantor, Rosemary Clooney and Ed Wynn....
</blockquote>
Full Text of Article
The article says the last hour KNX broadcasts from Columbia Square will be a retrospective of the building's radio history. The broadcast is scheduled for Friday (8/12) at 10:05 PM PDT (1:00 AM EDT).
KNX Audio Stream: http://winmedcdn.cbsig.net/infinity_knx-am
<blockquote>
If everything goes as expected, nobody will really notice.
But with the planned flip of a switch at 11:05 p.m. Friday, another piece of Hollywood's golden age will disappear forever.
Microphones at the last radio station in Hollywood will go dead as announcers and newscasters complete their final on-air shift at the historic Columbia Square broadcast center...
With its porthole-windowed studio doors and chrome-accented, round-cornered interior walls, Columbia Square was considered America's most spacious and technologically advanced broadcast facility when CBS built it in 1938. Legendary CBS President William S. Paley personally oversaw its design and officiated at its dedication.
It boasted eight large broadcasting studios, including one theater-like room that could seat an audience of 1,050.
During the 1940s and '50s hundreds would line up in the building's U-shaped forecourt to get in to see live productions of radio shows featuring Jack Benny, Art Linkletter, Burns and Allen, Edgar Bergen, Orson Welles, Jackie Gleason, Steve Allen, Eddie Cantor, Rosemary Clooney and Ed Wynn....
</blockquote>
Full Text of Article
The article says the last hour KNX broadcasts from Columbia Square will be a retrospective of the building's radio history. The broadcast is scheduled for Friday (8/12) at 10:05 PM PDT (1:00 AM EDT).
KNX Audio Stream: http://winmedcdn.cbsig.net/infinity_knx-am