I recall that they did some kind of local origination in Gatlinburg, not just the weather wheel, but I don't recall details. Gatlinburg was a cool place to visit in the 1970s, but now it's so congested that it's barely recognizable as the same place. Much of the tourist trade has migrated out to Pigeon Forge and Sevierville, with Dollywood being the catalyst.My introduction to cable TV was August 1966 in Gatlinburg. I was seven years old. For some reason I always found that local cable access channel with the "weather wheel" fascinating. Grainy black and white picture. Moving left to right and then back right to left. An analog thermometer for the temps ... a card with a local ad ... then the barometer ... another ad ... finally the wind speed. At night they had pre-recorded video full of local ads and an interview show where some old character with a plaid woolen shirt and a bolo tie would interview local merchants. It seemed like one interview in particular aired for years. A husband and wife who operated the "Paintin' Place." Get it? A play off of "Peyton Place" the novel / movie / TV series.
My son and I took a long weekend trip to Travelers Rest last week, and if you really use your imagination, you can get a small-scale version of a mountain resort vibe. Don't ever take US 176 up to Sassafras Mountain, it's a horribly winding and twisty road with two very narrow lanes, and for some crazy reason, they allow trucks 30 feet or shorter to use it (thankfully, we didn't encounter any). Quite the white-knuckle experience, and we couldn't wait to get off of it, and over the mountain into the relatively flat North Carolina High Country. I didn't even attempt to make it up to the top of the mountain so I could do some DX with my Zapperbox and small RCA yagi antenna.
