http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/ also the CW 44/Cable 12 has a new website http://cwbayarea.cbslocal.com/
travisl5678 said:http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/ also the CW 44/Cable 12 has a new website http://cwbayarea.cbslocal.com/
DavidKaye said:The LA TV should have always been KNX-TV to tie in with their historic KNX branding.
oldiesfan6479 said:BTW...Happy Columbus Day to those of you in Berkeley! ;D
oldiesfan6479 said:The El Lay O&O was KNXT(TV) for years, before the FCC allowed like calls to be shared
in different markets, thus KCBS-TV Los Angeles.
Lkeller said:Remember that unlike KCBS radio, KPIX was not a CBS owned and operated station - it was owned by Westinghouse. It became an O&O when Westinghouse acquired the CBS network in 1996. KNXT had become KCBS-TV 12 years prior to that - in 1984.
Though I may think the Bay Area is the greatest place in America, I can't argue with the practice of using the network initials as call letters in the number 1 and number 2 markets.
DavidKaye said:oldiesfan6479 said:The El Lay O&O was KNXT(TV) for years, before the FCC allowed like calls to be shared
in different markets, thus KCBS-TV Los Angeles.
Yes, I know all that. But it still should have been KNX-TV all these years, like KGO's TV station became KGO-TV. The KNXT callsign dates to the era when NBC and CBS distinguished their TV from their radio operations. So, instead of WNBC-TV, it was WNBT, etc. But still....
Lkeller said:Yes - just adding the "T" to 3 letter calls was quite common for early TV stations.
DavidKaye said:It's interesting how different this era is from the last. Used to be that group owners made all their station logos look alike or similar, thus ABC's Circle Seven logos and the original Anklepants font on the Westinghouse stations. But since Westinghouse bought CBS they haven't changed anything to unify the logos. KCBS is still in CBS Font (actually a variation of the Didot font) and KPIX is in the Anklepants font. This is true of the other pre-merger stations as well.
oldiesfan6479 said:Lkeller said:Yes - just adding the "T" to 3 letter calls was quite common for early TV stations.
As in WLWT Cincinnati for Crosley, a pattern used with sister stations WLWD, WLWC, WLWI
and WLWA.
This makes me wonder...by the early 1950s had the FCC stopped issuing three-letter calls
for new TV stations owned by existing three-letter AMs? That might explain the KNXTs of
the world, however WJZ-TV New York (now WABC-TV) went on the air as such in 1948,
and KGO-TV in 1949. The KTSL-TV > KNXT(TV) change was not until late 1951.
Scott Fybush said:Obligatory rant from an ex-Westinghouser:
The Westinghouse font is not "Anklepants." That's the name of a cheap ripoff of the font that was introduced a decade or so ago by a guy named Ray Larabie. Several characters in "Anklepants" are distinctly different from the actual Westinghouse characters - the M, in particular, is really badly drawn.
The Westinghouse font never had a name, at least not one that I was ever able to discern, and I've asked a lot of people who would have known.
And for whatever it's worth, the "5" that KPIX uses today is not quite the same one they used in the Westinghouse era. The shape of the lower bowl of the 5 is different.
Scott Fybush said:FM stations had it even worse: in their earliest years of commercial authorization, they had to use letter-number calls: WOR's FM station in New York was W71NY, "71" for its frequency (47.1 mc), "NY" for New York.
So why did we end up with "WLWT" and "KNXT" and "WBTV," rather than WLW-TV and KNX-TV and WBTV? It wasn't an FCC mandate...so the best I can discern is that the stations in question wanted to brand their TV outlets separately from their radio stations. Maybe they thought TV would eventually supplant radio, and they wanted to be able to sell the radio stations with their branding intact?