J
John-Summers
Guest
This isn’t a TV board but we can’t have the passing of former Channel 27 newsman Mike Ross go without mention. He worked at the original WTPA Channel 71, which became Channel 27, which later became WHTM, from 1956 through 2002. ABC27 has a nice tribute on their web site that centers on his years as a news reporter, but that’s not all he did at 27 back in the early days. He was a booth announcer (the guy who did the station IDs and read commercials) as well as an on-camera spokesman. You had to be a jack of all trades back then. Later he went into news full time, and was at various times a street reporter, anchor and News Director. He spent years as 27’s Capitol Hill reporter until his retirement at the age of 80.
Can you imagine the versatility of Mike Ross? He started when TV was barely a flickering image on a 13 inch screen and stayed through countless developments and changes, always keeping up. That’s a real broadcaster! Even the physical plant changed from a small one floor building to its present two floors plus additions. Imagine going to the same address for work every day for 46 years! In the Broadcasting field, that’s unheard of. I heard he started his career at WKBO. Who didn’t? Seems like a lot of Harrisburg’s prominent broadcasters of those days spent some time at 31 North Second.
On a personal note, I grew up a couple of blocks from where he lived and used to see him all the time. Everyone in Paxtang knew Mike Ross, he was a local celebrity, though he never acted like it and was friendly and involved in his community. My parents knew him and I recall meeting him when I was about 7 years old. He was helping out at the elementary school May Fair, running a booth, playing records and joking with people on a PA system. (His stepdaughter was a year older than me.) I had seen him on TV and could barely talk when I met him, I was so impressed. Just like Mike, he was friendly and gracious to a starstruck young fan.
You were one of Harrisburg’s great broadcasters, Mike. We’ll miss you.
Can you imagine the versatility of Mike Ross? He started when TV was barely a flickering image on a 13 inch screen and stayed through countless developments and changes, always keeping up. That’s a real broadcaster! Even the physical plant changed from a small one floor building to its present two floors plus additions. Imagine going to the same address for work every day for 46 years! In the Broadcasting field, that’s unheard of. I heard he started his career at WKBO. Who didn’t? Seems like a lot of Harrisburg’s prominent broadcasters of those days spent some time at 31 North Second.
On a personal note, I grew up a couple of blocks from where he lived and used to see him all the time. Everyone in Paxtang knew Mike Ross, he was a local celebrity, though he never acted like it and was friendly and involved in his community. My parents knew him and I recall meeting him when I was about 7 years old. He was helping out at the elementary school May Fair, running a booth, playing records and joking with people on a PA system. (His stepdaughter was a year older than me.) I had seen him on TV and could barely talk when I met him, I was so impressed. Just like Mike, he was friendly and gracious to a starstruck young fan.
You were one of Harrisburg’s great broadcasters, Mike. We’ll miss you.