F
FreddyE1977
Guest
The other evening, the new MLB Network was running a replay of Game 2 of the 1968 World Series between Detroit and St. Louis. Lots of fun to watch and see the old classic names take the field (Roger Maris, Bob Gibson, Curt Flood, Tim McCarver, and inning break interview with Casey Stengel in the stands). The annoucers were Harry Caray, Curt Gowdy, and Tony Kubek with sideline reports, an early version of the NBC Game of the Week crew. The game was a black-and white kinescope, and was pretty much a real-time, pitch-by-pitch repeat of Game 2.
Does anyone know why they were kinescoping entire World Series games as late as 1968? The game ran more than 2 1/2 hours, so it seems like an awfully expensive undertaking unless you have a real good reason. Also, was the Series that year being broadcast in black-and-white, or is it just a copy on black-and-white film? (I watched most of it, and there were not any mentions of "coming to you in living color" that I heard.) If so, was it the last year that they broadcast in black-and-white? I think I have seen footage of the Amazin' Mets 69 Series in color..and on tape for that matter. Any guesses on how far back they have complete, real-time kinescopes of World Series games?
Does anyone know why they were kinescoping entire World Series games as late as 1968? The game ran more than 2 1/2 hours, so it seems like an awfully expensive undertaking unless you have a real good reason. Also, was the Series that year being broadcast in black-and-white, or is it just a copy on black-and-white film? (I watched most of it, and there were not any mentions of "coming to you in living color" that I heard.) If so, was it the last year that they broadcast in black-and-white? I think I have seen footage of the Amazin' Mets 69 Series in color..and on tape for that matter. Any guesses on how far back they have complete, real-time kinescopes of World Series games?