Scott Fybush said:That's not correct. Only a handful of former Westinghouse stations still use the original font. WJZ in Baltimore is the last one to use the font in its original form; KYW radio and KDKA radio use an italic version that was created late in the Group W era, while KPIX uses a "5" that's similar to the Westinghouse font but more angular and vertical.
KYW-TV doesn't use any form of the Westinghouse font anymore; it now uses a sans-serif "3" that's more closely related to Helvetica than anything Group W ever did.
I've only seen the Anklepants version used on a handful of stations. KXNT in Las Vegas used it for a while (you can see a low-res version at http://radio-info.com/in3_src/images/newsletter/logo_kxnt.jpg), and WOWO in Fort Wayne had an odd hybrid logo for a while that combined the "WOWO" calls in their proper Westinghouse font, unchanged since Group W sold the station in 1982, with "NEWS-TALK 1190 AM" in Anklepants next to it.
You can get a pretty good idea of the difference between the "real" font and Anklepants by comparing the 2000 WOWO logo, seen here: http://web.archive.org/web/20000301004253/http://www.wowo.com/ to the 2004 logo, seen here: http://web.archive.org/web/20040610201344/http://wowo.com/
The Anklepants letters are grossly out of proportion to each other; the Westinghouse font, having been designed by trained graphic designers, flows much more smoothly.
Scott Fybush said:Not easy to do in a forum that doesn't allow embedded images, but the most obvious difference is the "M," which is stretched out to an almost grotesque width in "Anklepants." The differences are a little more subtle on some of the other lettering. The Westinghouse "O," for instance, is somewhat wider and has a more graceful curve to the bottom of the letter than the Anklepants O, which is more rectangular and has a less graceful transition from the thick vertical strokes to the much thinner strokes on the side of the letter.
Some of the angles are off in some of the other letters, too - the Anklepants "Y" has an odd backward-angled cut in the basin of the "Y" that doesn't exist in the Westinghouse "Y," for instance. (Compare "KYW" as rendered in Anklepants to the KYW 1060 logo; this also shows some of the differences in the Anklepants numerals from the Westinghouse font, where the curves and angles on the Anklepants "3" and "6" in particular aren't quite right.)
Scott Fybush said:Not easy to do in a forum that doesn't allow embedded images, but the most obvious difference is the "M," which is stretched out to an almost grotesque width in "Anklepants." The differences are a little more subtle on some of the other lettering. The Westinghouse "O," for instance, is somewhat wider and has a more graceful curve to the bottom of the letter than the Anklepants O, which is more rectangular and has a less graceful transition from the thick vertical strokes to the much thinner strokes on the side of the letter.
Some of the angles are off in some of the other letters, too - the Anklepants "Y" has an odd backward-angled cut in the basin of the "Y" that doesn't exist in the Westinghouse "Y," for instance. (Compare "KYW" as rendered in Anklepants to the KYW 1060 logo; this also shows some of the differences in the Anklepants numerals from the Westinghouse font, where the curves and angles on the Anklepants "3" and "6" in particular aren't quite right.)