K.M. Richards
Program Director, The Eighties Channel™
Thanks for filling in that gap, but it still doesn't get us to 1993.
As luck would have it, I was able to look at the translator section of the 1993 TVFB, and as of then, K11KD was still in operation, relaying KSBY. The owner was King Holdings, with the address (333 Dexter St Seattle) of KING-TV at the time. (Mr Warta retained the KGO translator.)Thanks for filling in that gap, but it still doesn't get us to 1993.
K11KD shows up as late as 2002 in the Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook as being owned by King Videocable, though no indication is given as to what station it is repeating.
Still hard to understand why, unless the translator was in a particularly good knife-edge sweet spot (and even then), there would be interest in watching, retransmitting, or carrying a station from San Luis Obispo. It's over 175 miles away in a small town that, while very picturesque and of historical interest, has no apparent connection with Mammoth Lakes, other than the latter possibly being a resort spot for people from SLO who want to spend their vacations in the Sierra Nevada, the same way that everyone and their neighbor in many Appalachian towns (who could afford it) have historically gone to Myrtle Beach in the summer, or why French Canadians gravitate to Hollywood, Florida. I wouldn't mind visiting either Mammoth Lakes or SLO.That may well be the answer. The cable company ended up buying the translator in order to keep the KSBY feed from it on its system. Cheaper in the long run than setting up a microwave relay as a replacement.
And it explains why KSBY was also on cable channel 11 (see thread starter).
Still hard to understand why, unless the translator was in a particularly good knife-edge sweet spot (and even then), there would be interest in watching, retransmitting, or carrying a station from San Luis Obispo.
Still hard to understand why, unless the translator was in a particularly good knife-edge sweet spot (and even then), there would be interest in watching, retransmitting, or carrying a station from San Luis Obispo. It's over 175 miles away in a small town that, while very picturesque and of historical interest, has no apparent connection with Mammoth Lakes, other than the latter possibly being a resort spot for people from SLO who want to spend their vacations in the Sierra Nevada, the same way that everyone and their neighbor in many Appalachian towns (who could afford it) have historically gone to Myrtle Beach in the summer, or why French Canadians gravitate to Hollywood, Florida. I wouldn't mind visiting either Mammoth Lakes or SLO.
followtiffsjourney.com
I've been looking at Google Street View of Mammoth Lakes. I'd go there and chill out for a few days. Pretty country.![]()
Driving to Mammoth Lakes from Los Angeles | Visit Mammoth
Located in the heart of the breathtaking Sierra Nevada Mountains, scenic Mammoth Lakes is only a drive away from the hustle and bustle of Los Angeles and Southern California.www.visitmammoth.com
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Highway 395 Road trip Must-Stops from LA to Mammoth Lakes
Your ultimate Eastern Sierra California road trip guide: must-stop eats, views, and cheap gas traveling from SoCal to Mammoth Lakesfollowtiffsjourney.com
I seen tour guides to Mammoth Lakes but the majority of the visitors as seen here are from Los Angeles. I rarely hear other parts of California talk about this place. It has to be weekend tours in the same way we hear about Bay Area and Sacramento residents visiting Lake Tahoe, Reno, Yosemite on the weekend.
Evidently King Videocable (which had cable systems in several states) was the provider for the Mammoth Lakes area at the time. That would also explain why they purchased the KSBY translator.