azumanga said:Stanislav said:(1)In 1968, the facilities of WAKA-8 in Selma AL (at the time a very low-powered CBS affiliate not allowed to expand its signal into the Montgomery market) were destroyed in a fire, and they did not return to the air until 1973 after new owners rebuilt the station. It returned as a CBS affiliate (and was finally allowed more powerful facilities in 1984, extending their coverage to Montgomery.)
Wasn't WAKA (at the time WSLA-TV) an ABC affiliate at the time of the fire, getting its programming from WBRC in Birmingham?
Yes, WSLA-TV was ABC ... and rebroadcast WBRC-6. At least when atmospheric conditions allowed it.
To say nothing of viewers in Dallas County who were befuddled by occasional Birmingham commercials and ID slides for WBRC showing up on WSLA when the op was asleep at the wheel.....
WSLA was owned at the time by the Brennan family, their only foray into TV (they were best-known for owning top-40 blowtorches WVOK/B'ham, WBAM/Montgomery, WAPE/Jacksonville and WFLI/Chattanooga). The Brennans constantly hit brick walls with the FCC while trying to move it into Montgomery. (WCOV-20 was Mgm's CBS affil at the time, and they wasted no FCC resource in battling this "threat") Brennan's intent was to sell the station upon such approval. After the '68 fire, Brennan turned in its license, giving up their hopes of playing "Flip This TV Station."
WSLA-TV was brought back to life by the Charles Grisham (who put WHNT-19/Huntsville on the air in '63), and from that moment on was always CBS.
(Which brings up the question of why WCOV-TV didn't approach WSLA and offer to buy 'em out. Even with the FCC aggressively trying to prop up UHF, perhaps 'COV could've cited competitive pressures; WSFA-12 was the only VHF in the city, and always held a lopsided advantage. They still do, in fact.)
--Russell