Tim L said:
In Cleveland, WEWS was basically a 4 network station.. from December 1947-October 1948. While they were considered primary CBS they picked out some DuMont and ABC and the rare NBC program..
WXEL-9 considered themselves primary DuMont, secondary ABC..Despite that, by the early 1950's, they carried a large number of CBS shows, particularly some daytime soaps..The 1955 affiliate swap put channel 5 on ABC and now-WXEL channel 8 on CBS..
WFMY was a four-network station in Greensboro/Winston-Salem/High Point from September 1949-September 1953, primary CBS, but some of its choices would seem puzzling by today's standards; for example, on Sundays at 8 it carried the "Colgate Comedy Hour" (NBC) instead of Ed Sullivan's "Toast Of The Town" (CBS). When it finally did pick up Sullivan, in 1952, it was on Tuesdays at 10, replacing "Ted Mack's Amateur Hour," which had gone on (as it turned out) a sabbatical, returning in April 1953. When Mack returned, it was as a half-hour, Saturday 8:30-9 PM, on NBC. WFMY was already carrying Jackie Gleason from 8 to 9, and ran Mack on Sunday afternoons (shades of things to come) in the spring and summer of 1953; the Triad got its NBC affiliate, WSJS (now WXII), in September 1953, which solved the problem since it aired Mack in pattern.
But before Channel 12 came on, WFMY did something that still puzzles me. I can understand picking "Colgate" over Sullivan, as "Colgate" was the higher-rated on Sundays at 8 in the early 1950s, but carrying "Voice Of Firestone" instead of the top-rated "Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts" on Mondays at 8:30? I can think of only one possible reason for this: Greensboro did not have an NBC radio affiliate; to hear "Firestone" meant turning to WPTF Raleigh or WSJS Winston-Salem. OTOH, both shows were simulcast, and Godfrey could be heard on Greensboro's WBIG (a similar situation prevailed on Saturdays as WFMY, logically, picked "Your Show Of Shows" over such short-lived CBS entries as "Sing It Again" and "Songs For Sale," which were heard locally on WBIG). Again, however, the Godfrey/"Firestone" problem was cleared up with the advent of Channel 12, at which point Channel 2 began airing Godfrey in pattern.
There were, however, occasions when a station would keep a show it had aired when there were only one or two stations in a market. WSB, at the time NBC primary, carried ABC's "The Lone Ranger" and "Super Circus" from their beginnings in 1949. Atlanta got its ABC affiliate, Channel 11 (originally Channel 8), in 1951 but it never got those two shows; they stayed on Channel 2 all the way.