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Retro: Houston, KLEE-TV, 1/1/49, Day One

From the Houston Post, Jack Harris' book 'The Fault Does Not Lie with Your Set' and other sources.

First test pattern at full power: 12/20/48

The schedule:

6pm - Test Pattern
6:15pm - Allen Dale Show - a musical variety show set in a record shop.
6:30pm - Lucky Pup (CBS) - children's puppet show about a little dog who inherited $5M and what he did with it.
6:45pm - Make Mine Music - Tony Mottola Trio - musical variety show; 'as most video shows are, it is held together with a plot and action.'
7pm - Newsreel
7:10pm - film short - music
7:15pm - Places Please (CBS) - a Barry Wood show which takes place behind the scenes of a Broadway theatre; different guest stars appear on the program.
7:30pm - To a Queen's Taste (CBS) - A French chef takes over to cook a special dish. Mrs. Dione Lucas, employee of the Cordon Bleu, gives out the recipe and shows how it's done. It takes her 30 minutes to demonstrate.
8pm - Winner Take All (CBS) - the audience gets to see the fantastic prizes given away on the Bud Collyer quiz program.
8:30pm - Fashions on Parade - New York and Paris fashions will be shown. A plot and entertainment make this more than a style show.
9pm - Kobb's Korner (CBS) - Spike Jones has competition when the Korn Kobblers make music from balloons, rubber tubes, auto horns, cowbells and washboards.
9:30pm - Doorway to Fame - Danton Walker has a professional talent show. Little known performers get a chance to be on a television show.
10pm - Swing into Sports - a sports lesson, currently golf; Dick Altman, KLEE-TV Sports Director.
10:30pm - Morey Amsterdam Show (CBS) - a variety comic show.
11pm - sign off

What actually happened:

Around 3:20pm, as the owner was showing some dignitaries around, a loud boom was heard and the transmitter shut down. A water line in the transmitter had burst. The GE transmitter used plastic tubing for the cooling system and none was to be found in Houston for repairs. Eventually, copper tubing was substituted and the station got on the air around 9:30pm. It was decided on the spur of the moment that the Chief Engineer, Paul Huhndorff, should go on first to explain what had happened as the station had been besieged with callers. Thus the Age of Television arrived in Houston with the words "There's been trouble...plenty of trouble."

As far as I know at this time, the entire schedule was aired and the station was on the air until about 2am.

In the first week, programs from CBS and DuMont were aired; later, the other networks also supplied programming. KLEE-TV was on the air 6-9pm, five nights a week only for several months, but by the end of the year was broadcasting 4 or 5 hours a night.<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by hrhwebmaster on 01/31/06 07:13 PM.</FONT></P>
 
>This makes me wonder why KPRC became an NBC, rather
than a CBS, affiliate.

From the Houston Post, Jack Harris' book 'The Fault Does Not
> Lie with Your Set' and other sources.
>
> First test pattern at full power: 12/20/48
>
> The schedule:
>
> 6pm - Test Pattern
> 6:15pm - Allen Dale Show - a musical variety show set in a
> record shop.
> 6:30pm - Lucky Pup (CBS) - children's puppet show about a
> little dog who inherited $5M and what he did with it.
> 6:45pm - Make Mine Music - Tony Mottola Trio - musical
> variety show; 'as most video shows are, it is held together
> with a plot and action.'
> 7pm - Newsreel
> 7:10pm - film short - music
> 7:15pm - Places Please (CBS) - a Barry Wood show which takes
> place behind the scenes of a Broadway theatre; different
> guest stars appear on the program.
> 7:30pm - To a Queen's Taste (CBS) - A French chef takes over
> to cook a special dish. Mrs. Dione Lucas, employee of the
> Cordon Bleu, gives out the recipe and shows how it's done.
> It takes her 30 minutes to demonstrate.
> 8pm - Winner Take All (CBS) - the audience gets to see the
> fantastic prizes given away on the Bud Collyer quiz program.
>
> 8:30pm - Fashions on Parade - New York and Paris fashions
> will be shown. A plot and entertainment make this more than
> a style show.
> 9pm - Kobb's Korner (CBS) - Spike Jones has competition when
> the Korn Kobblers make music from balloons, rubber tubes,
> auto horns, cowbells and washboards.
> 9:30pm - Doorway to Fame - Danton Walker has a professional
> talent show. Little known performers get a chance to be on
> a television show.
> 10pm - Swing into Sports - a sports lesson, currently golf;
> Dick Altman, KLEE-TV Sports Director.
> 10:30pm - Morey Amsterdam Show (CBS) - a variety comic show.
>
> 11pm - sign off
>
> What actually happened:
>
> Around 3:20pm, as the owner was showing some dignitaries
> around, a loud boom was heard and the transmitter shut down.
> A water line in the transmitter had burst. The GE
> transmitter used plastic tubing for the cooling system and
> none was to be found in Houston for repairs. Eventually,
> copper tubing was substituted and the station got on the air
> around 9:30pm. It was decided on the spur of the moment
> that the Chief Engineer, Paul Huhndorff, should go on first
> to explain what had happened as the station had been
> besieged with callers. Thus the Age of Television arrived
> in Houston with the words "There's been trouble...plenty of
> trouble."
>
> As far as I know at this time, the entire schedule was aired
> and the station was on the air until about 2am.
>
> In the first week, programs from CBS and DuMont were aired;
> later, the other networks also supplied programming.
> KLEE-TV was on the air 6-9pm, five nights a week only for
> several months, but by the end of the year was broadcasting
> 4 or 5 hours a night.
>
 
> >This makes me wonder why KPRC became an NBC, rather
> than a CBS, affiliate.

Since KPRC radio was affiliated with NBC, the Houston Post may have affiliated with NBC on television for consistency.
 
> > >This makes me wonder why KPRC became an NBC, rather
> > than a CBS, affiliate.
>
> Since KPRC radio was affiliated with NBC, the Houston Post
> may have affiliated with NBC on television for consistency.

That was common in the early days of television. Network-affiliated radio stations that built or acquired television stations would be offered the same network affiliation on a silver platter, as the networks loved having a single owner to deal with for both.<P ID="signature">______________


</P>
 
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