To put my two cents in I believe 5 had more local color shows news etc, but 4 had more NBC shows at that time?mgpt6 said:Which station did more color broadcasts in Boston from 1957-1961? WBZ -4 with NBC programming or WHDH-5 with local programming and NBC programming not cleared by WBZ?
Locally, WHDH-TV (Channel 5) was built for color from "day one" back in 1957. All live/local programming on Channel 5 was in color. WBZ-TV (Channel 4) pretty much did "pass through" color from NBC. Locally, WBZ-TV only did some color film programming from time to time. Otherwise, WBZ-TV did not do any live color until the mid '60's. "Boomtown" was in black and white (except for the color cartoons) until late 1968. WNAC-TV (Channel 7) was the last network affiliate in the market to do any local color in '66. Channel 7 did "pass through" color from ABC since '62 when "The Flintstones" became ABC's first color program.FRM-Yankey said:To put my two cents in I believe 5 had more local color shows news etc, but 4 had more NBC shows at that time?mgpt6 said:Which station did more color broadcasts in Boston from 1957-1961? WBZ -4 with NBC programming or WHDH-5 with local programming and NBC programming not cleared by WBZ?
WBZ-TV pretty much passed through NBC color shows from the beginning. It was a charter affiliate of NBC from 1948 and used one of the early microwave links from New York to Boston. Eventhough WBZ-TV had limited local color from the get-go, they did broadcast all NBC color shows intact.mgpt6 said:Anyone know when WBZ 4 began to pass through color shows from NBC after NBC stated limited color in 1954?
Back in 1956 Dumont has a color system, i have a photo of a color test psttern that was trasmited from new york about that time.Schuyler said:The mechanical CBS Color system, aka Wheel of Misfortune, obviously lost to RCA's all-electronic system, but IIRC it was adapted for use in broadcasting NASA pictures from the moon. (I am not making this up.)
Another interesting but outmoded and gimmicky color trick was something I read about in the early 60s, used at channel 6 in "Providence" (the part that's in Massachusetts). They had not gone to color at all, but they used some sort of pulsation in parts of their B&W picture to register in the brain as being red. This sounds like another "black and white and red all over" joke, but according to an ancient, 15 cent copy of TV Guide Ch 6 tried this, and supposedly some people "saw" the red portions of the ID slide (or 16mm film clip, maybe?) and some didn't. I'm surprised this didn't trigger seizures in some people, or if it did the folks at Triangle Publications of Radnor, PA did not report it in their magazine.
Schuyler said:The mechanical CBS Color system, aka Wheel of Misfortune, obviously lost to RCA's all-electronic system, but IIRC it was adapted for use in broadcasting NASA pictures from the moon. (I am not making this up.)
Another interesting but outmoded and gimmicky color trick was something I read about in the early 60s, used at channel 6 in "Providence" (the part that's in Massachusetts). They had not gone to color at all, but they used some sort of pulsation in parts of their B&W picture to register in the brain as being red. This sounds like another "black and white and red all over" joke, but according to an ancient, 15 cent copy of TV Guide Ch 6 tried this, and supposedly some people "saw" the red portions of the ID slide (or 16mm film clip, maybe?) and some didn't. I'm surprised this didn't trigger seizures in some people, or if it did the folks at Triangle Publications of Radnor, PA did not report it in their magazine.