Madmansam said:Of the big four Los Angeles Independent TV Stations in the 1960's or 1970's, Which one was the best, the one most people watched and had the best movies & programming: KTLA-5, KHJ-9, KTTV-11 or KCOP-13?
Lkeller said:KTLA and KTTV even fought over the infamous anchor George Putnam, who would move between the two stations, depending on which was the highest bidder. It's how he got to be the highest paid anchor in America, reportedly making more than even Walter Cronkite.
...Frost was syndicated by Westinghouse, not Metromedia...ercjncpr said:KTTV (part of the Metromedia syndicated "network" with David Frost
michael hagerty said:Absolutely KTLA. An innovator. First live helicopter, making coverage of the Bel Air Fire and Baldwin Hill dam break stand head and shoulders above any other station. Ditto the Watts riots.
KTTV second. Very nearly as good as KTLA, but they didn't have Gene Autry saying "whatever it takes". Bonus points for "Thriller" and "Chiller".
Third goes to KHJ for shows like Boss City, 9th Street West, Groovy, The Robert W. Morgan Show, The Real Don Steele Show, and Fright Night with Seymour. Otherwise, Channel 9 was pretty grim.
Which leaves KCOP last. Bonus points for Lloyd Thaxton and Bill Burrud, but still...KCOP wasn't even competitive with KHJ-TV, much less KTTV or KTLA.
Ultimajock said:...I'm guessing nobody even noticed KBSC/52 ;-) ...
Lkeller said:michael hagerty said:Absolutely KTLA. An innovator. First live helicopter, making coverage of the Bel Air Fire and Baldwin Hill dam break stand head and shoulders above any other station. Ditto the Watts riots.
KTTV second. Very nearly as good as KTLA, but they didn't have Gene Autry saying "whatever it takes". Bonus points for "Thriller" and "Chiller".
Third goes to KHJ for shows like Boss City, 9th Street West, Groovy, The Robert W. Morgan Show, The Real Don Steele Show, and Fright Night with Seymour. Otherwise, Channel 9 was pretty grim.
Which leaves KCOP last. Bonus points for Lloyd Thaxton and Bill Burrud, but still...KCOP wasn't even competitive with KHJ-TV, much less KTTV or KTLA.
Though KHJ-TV was generally grim, as Michael indicates - some kind of honorable mention should go to Channel 9 for their Tempo programs in the mid and late 60s. They were live talk shows that featured interviews and took callers. It was a tumultuous time (Vietnam War, hippies, etc) and the shows provided a good forum...very low budget, but well produced. Tempo originally aired about 3 hours a day - Tempo I morning, Tempo II early afternoon, Tempo III night - then cut back to only the afternoon show.
Notable hosts on the show included Regis Philbin, actress JoAnne Pflug (Catch 22, M*A*S*H), Stan Bohrman (later a news anchor), Maria Cole (wife of Nat "King" and mother of Natalie), and Robert K. Dornan, who later became the right-wing Congressman known as "B-1 Bob." The verbal battles between Dornan and the liberal Bohrman were especially entertaining.
In the 60s, KCOP's low quality late night movies featured laughably bad commercials for local LA businesses - they were basically slide-shows accompanied by a syrupy announcer. I still recall one for Ramone's Beauty Salon in downtown Carson. They were so bad that they were actually satirized by The Credibility Gap on KRLA. Equally bad was KCOP's Dialilng for Dollars show - no movie - just the host talking to the camera for an hour, and dialing phone calls which were rarely answered...even in those days, when house wives were typically home. And when they did answer, they usually weren't watching the show. Truly sad and pathetic TV.
I have always wondered about KBSC-52? I have heard that they carried The Three Stooges,The Abbott & Costello TV Show, The Little Rascals, Speed Racer & Kimba, a Lou Gordon talk show and ever a horror hosted movie show called "The Ghoul". I don't know what horror movies he showed since the other 4 VHF indies had the rights to nearly every horror film. In fact, does anyone have any old TV Guides so they can post a weeks schedule of what was shown on KBSC when it was owned by Kaiser?Ultimajock said:...I'm guessing nobody even noticed KBSC/52 ;-) ...
probably because there were fewer Independent competitors in their other markets especially on VHF. Kaiser survived in San Francisco because they cornered the kid-vid market by grabbing up the rights to a lot of Cartoons. KTVU ruled mornings (since KBHK didn't sign on until the early afternoons) but KBHK definately ruled the afternoon cartoon market!Marckd said:KBSC was the failure in the market - problem was that 4 commercial indies were on VHF and only a few decent shows those stations passed onw ere available. Kaiser managed to do far better in other markets.