After CKLW-TV/CBET 9 and WWTV 9 both signed off for the night back in the day, I could swing the rotator to the SW and see WGN-TV 9 many nights on my Allied Radio Colorset 60 antenna in Genesee County, MI.In the late 70s I was staying at a hotel in Reno, Nevada. Apparently the superstations had just started. I wasn't at all aware of them so imagine my surprise when I turned on the TV in my hotel room and received WGN-TV and WTBS from thousands of miles away. The pictures were perfectly clear so I knew it wasn't e-skip. So I called the front desk and asked the hotel manager why I was getting Atlanta and Chicago TV stations from so far away. His reply to me was I guess your TV just has excellent reception. True story!
Recalling the days when most stations eventually signed off for the night, you Chicago area people may remember this line.
"Channel 2 was signing off the air".
"Ariel" by Dean Friedman, 1977, which reached #4 on WLS. Heard once every 46 minutes along with the other Top 4, according to the late great Larry Lujack in a Chicago Tribune interview article from circa 1980. Different color lights would come on for each top record when they were to be played next.
Presumably, WCBS-TV was the station viewed signing off in Paramus, NJ.
