jwgreek8606 said:Anyone know why KXTV and KOVR in Sacramento switched that's what I've been wondering
Jamey, KXTV 10 wanted more money from ABC than they were getting from CBS, and at the time, KOVR's loss of Monday Night Football was KXTV's gain.
jwgreek8606 said:Anyone know why KXTV and KOVR in Sacramento switched that's what I've been wondering
bpatrick said:As for American Bandstand, I lived in Dallas from 1976-79,
and we had just two independents: KTVT/11 and KXTX/39.
The latter was owned by Pat Robertson then, so dancing was
virtually out of the question. Channel 11 did a lot of public-
affairs programming on Saturday mornings (Bandstand was
on at 11:30 AM Central) and probably wouldn't have risked
the FCC brownie points.
newsmark said:I'd love to read more about the Birmingham network shuffle of the late 60s some posts have mentioned. Sounds interesting.
dhett said:Lkeller said:I don't know the reason for the Sacramento switch, but it may be similar to San Diego. In the mid-70s, ABC became the number 1 network (think Happy Days, Laverne & Shirely, Kotter, etc.) and NBC had dropped to a distant 3rd. In San Diego, KOGO-TV 10 had been the NBC affiliate, but seized the opportunity to become an affiliate of the more popular network. It was probably an advantage for ABC too, since their programming had been run on XETV 6 out of Tijuana, Mexico. NBC ended up on a UHF station, and XETV became independent - now FOX, naturally.
That was also the reason in 1989, when in Rochester NY, WHEC-TV took the NBC affiliation away from WROC. NBC was then the #1 network, plus they had AFC football, meaning the NBC affiliate in Rochester got to broadcast Buffalo Bills football, just in time for their Super Bowl run. WROC had to settle for CBS, which I think was the #3 network at the time. It was actually fitting - WROC was a mess then (and still is). Ironically, CBS has AFC football now, so the Bills are back on WROC.
Mike Sheridan said:I saw a rumor once that WROC's news at one time was being beat by the local cable news station. You can't get much lower than that! As far back as 1976 when WROC was TV-AM-FM (WPXY) I auditioned for a job at WROC-AM. Believe me I wanted no part of them after my weekend try out. Some places are just jinxed must be bad Karma in the building they have been through a couple of owners since then. Sorry to hear the TV station is still a mess.
KML-224 said:Are there any markets where no station ever changed its affiliation unless the network they carried folded, merged or became a syndication service?
cowboybud said:KML-224 said:Are there any markets where no station ever changed its affiliation unless the network they carried folded, merged or became a syndication service?
Houston.
Scott Fybush said:Mike Sheridan said:I saw a rumor once that WROC's news at one time was being beat by the local cable news station. You can't get much lower than that! As far back as 1976 when WROC was TV-AM-FM (WPXY) I auditioned for a job at WROC-AM. Believe me I wanted no part of them after my weekend try out. Some places are just jinxed must be bad Karma in the building they have been through a couple of owners since then. Sorry to hear the TV station is still a mess.
It may have been in 2007, but channel 8 is in very good shape right now. It went HD last month, a year or so after market-leading WHAM-TV 13 but well ahead of WHEC-TV 10, which is still in SD (and was still shooting in Beta just a few weeks ago!). They've settled down on a solid anchor team that's found traction in the market, and they're at least a regular contender for second place in most dayparts and have won at 11 on occasion.