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TEGNA Broadcasting and Digital General Discussion
Samantha replied to ABC 7 Denver's topic in Corporate Chat
Vertigo is the name of a broadcast graphics platform.- 3684 replies
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Smells like a format flip is coming. Caballero seems to be tied to Viacom and its LPTVs broadcast the Tr3s service (on further reading, Caballero and its Más Música network (most of the LPTVs have MM in their callsigns) was acquired by Viacom). WIWN will probably be speaking Spanish soon. They won't do this, but Milwaukee is one of the larger media markets in the country without Univision (others ahead in DMA size: St. Louis, Charlotte, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis*, Baltimore, Nashville**, Columbus). Even more unusually it has MundoFox and Telemundo but not Univision. *Once had Univision (WIIH). **Has UniMás (!!) but not Univision. Pro forma, Pappas will have these remaining assets: WLGA. KBBV-CD, Estrella TV in Bakersfield. While listed by Wikipedia, Pappas sold it to Jaco Communications LLC in 2011. The principal of Jaco is Fernando Acosta. 80% of the license of KAZA, Los Angeles, which Azteca directly controls through LMA. For obvious foreign ownership reasons Ricardo Salinas Pliego can't buy the other 80%, and a sale of this station would be primarily of its license. (It's worth noting that this isn't the only TV joint venture that Azteca's had that went sour really, really quickly.) KDMI and KCWI, Des Moines. WMMF, an LPTV in Vero Beach, Florida. The station appears to be rebroadcasting TBN from WHLV in Cocoa. NTV.
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Something finally interesting, though it's been hard times finding new good news material lately: KGUN story, 1975: (no open, but it's some of the oldest AZ TV news video out there) Well, no news opens in this set, but it's more Arizona material, more recent: KTVK 1992 (notice the bump from break identical to the close): Also, KDFW from June 17, 1994:
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All I was doing was responding to the others' discussion. Because IWCC has mostly been sold off to this point in the last two to three years (to the point that Las Vegas is the last station to be sold), it is probably a topic worthy of discussion to consider a potential near-term sale of KSNV. I believe the station does go to Beverly, but in cases like this, it is impossible to know how much the widow wants to remain in the broadcasting business. In other acquisitions news, from the Virgin Islands, CW affiliate WCVI (channel 23) is clear to be transferred to LeSea Broadcasting of St. Croix, according to the FCC Broadcast Actions from Friday. The sale had been filed at the Commission in April and will convert WCVI into a World Harvest Television transmitter.
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Our condolences to the family of Mr. Rogers. What excellent philanthropy (here in AZ the law college at the University of Arizona is named for him) over his life. The Las Vegas Sun article says he donated 40% of his earnings to higher education. The gift to U of A, his alma mater, totaled $137 million and is the largest donation ever made by one donor to one law school in the US. One fact I want to point out about KSNV: it's another low-VHF station (it's on RF 2 and was one of the first DTV DX catches made via E-skip). If Sinclair wants to spin off a station to a spectrum speculator it would need to close down one of KVMY or KVCW.
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TEGNA Broadcasting and Digital General Discussion
Samantha replied to ABC 7 Denver's topic in Corporate Chat
The mops are coming out at KING, which is apparently now running a promo featuring mainstay Jean Enersen mopping away the old graphics. Gannett's look is coming June 18.- 3684 replies
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Discovered composers & publishers of music themes
Samantha replied to promoguy98's topic in News Music & Voiceovers
KPHO would have been a new find except that when I found an ID of them with Part of Your Life, I suspected they used MCTYW because WHEN/WTVH, KCMO and WNEM all used MCTYW, then POYL, in the 70s. I then fished up a newspaper ad from 1973 (can't get a good picture thanks to paywall and tiny thumbnails, but I have text) that went like this: The funny thing is that I'd never heard of any of those KPHO personalities. I was also surprised that they continued carrying a 10pm newscast well into their independent days; in the 80s that 10pm became a 9:30 newscast, which was a 9pm for several fleeting months in 1994. KPHO kept the Eyewitness News name until around 1978 or so. Two years later, the name promptly reappeared, on channel 3 when it shed the Total News name and music (KTVK kept it until 1986). I'm half expecting the 5 and 3 combo to brand as Eyewitness News like some of the Nexstar duopolies. -
Here's a new one. WMBD in the late 1990s looked like a Media General station:
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KTVU 10pm news promo, 1992. "The Original Ten O'Clock News" is the tagline from a period when both KRON and KPIX had gone early prime and were competing against KTVU at 10:
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At the same time, repealing it has very little effect because now, unlike then, ABC has a massive kids' cable presence. The CW, through its association with Time Warner and Turner, and CBS, through its cousin Viacom, also do. (Not so coincidentally those are now Litton territory.) Media diversification and conglomeration mean that kids' programming on broadcast TV no longer makes sense because most of those households can get Disney Channel and XD, Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network, etc.
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Things are horribly catalogued in this user's collection, but there's a WBBM promo AND a KPHO bumper in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Zp371ESoGY (what music is that for KPHO?) And speaking of KPHO... The end of this has the proof to something very interesting (but expected) about KPHO, namely that they used Part of Your Life: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQRdntWlZCg There's more Phoenix ID material: a bump with Ray Thompson for KTVK's Total News AND a (clipped) ID from 1979 promoting the KTAR to KPNX call sign change: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RicV94UEQFE
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Today's FCC Daily Digest includes the news that Bob Prather's Heartland Media now has the licenses of the Chambers stations. The licensee is Oregon TV License Company, LLC.
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He also held a Reddit AMA today. Some highlights: I also had my own question for Bruce: Though between Bruce's relationship winding down and Yetta's own decision, I think the winds of change are finally blowing at 5555 North 7th Avenue... (The perfect address for a Channel 5 and 3 combination!)
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Wow. Anything from Charleston pre-Hugo (1989) is very hard to find.
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Here's a far afield story for Out and About, but it's certainly television news: The Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners has unanimously declared (Spanish) the owners of the Venezuelan television network Globovisión to be personas non grata in their county. Commissioner Francis Suarez says that municipal governments like his "have the obligation to take a position against organizations or persons that do not respect human rights in countries whose peoples also live in Miami and whom we represent as the capital of Latin America in the United States". Globovisión, if you might recall, was the last bastion of anti-Chávez sentiment in Venezuelan broadcast television. However, last year, it was sold, and under new management it adopted a more Chávez-friendly editorial line. If you're wondering what these people—Raúl Gorrín, Gustavo Perdomo and Juan Domingo Cordero—are doing in Miami, well, they own several properties in the expensive neighborhood of Cocoplum, including two valued at more than $4 million each
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Tribune: Ready or not, here comes more news! And lots of it!
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On the same day that WGN announces it's expanding to 4pm, no less.
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For more than a year now I've been looking for video of KPNX's 1992 open after they dumped TVbD (the audio is in the NMSA). I've come the closest to that yet today, with this 15-minute reel of Vietnam memorial coverage from KPNX in 1992. Notice the graphics and "12"-without-map logo. Those certainly were not the case when 12 became "Arizona's News Station".
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Boston: WHDH's news helicopter crashed while taking off from the municipal airport in Beverly, Massachusetts. Nobody was injured; the chopper apparently had an engine problem at takeoff. Boston: Too many young people, too many New Hampshire residents. That's what Hearst says is responsible for an unusual ratings decline at WCVB—and at other stations in Boston. Longtime WJHG anchor Joe Moore is retiring after 43 years with the station. The video shows some early WJHG sets including a use of the ABC-style circle 7. In the 6pm video which features an interview with Moore for a moment you can see a red line over a "13" on a door (interesting jab at the competition).
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Sit through an anti-smoking commercial and you'll find a freeloading KPNX open from the fall of 1994: https://archive.org/details/tobacco_lcw27a00 The headline on the newscast: 29 football players will miss a Friday night football game. (Said football players wound up winning a state championship that year.)
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The traffic lights portion when the toned-down version was introduced by WBBM.
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KSEE in the mid-90s ripped off WBBM's 1994 series of opens:
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Discovered composers & publishers of music themes
Samantha replied to promoguy98's topic in News Music & Voiceovers
Their last ad in Broadcasting magazine was in 1983, for a package of movie opens for stations. In USPTO's trademark database, their logo is listed under Hayes Productions, with a First Use in Commerce date of June 23, 1978. The logo trademark was cancelled in 1990. Hayes also apparently had a large commercial production business, so there's that. Records for two people that worked there (including someone on LinkedIn) both have them leaving by 1984. It appears Hayes Productions was the primary name of this business. -
Discovered composers & publishers of music themes
Samantha replied to promoguy98's topic in News Music & Voiceovers
More ads out of Broadcasting magazine... The first one ran in 1979 and the second one, which is from the same time frame, appeared in 1981. These incredible finds, including We're Putting It On, correlate to , the demo reel (the "Package of Packages") from this company (Hayes Broadcast Promotion and Syndication aka Hayes Productions). Combined with that video, San Antonio-based Hayes can be said with confidence to have produced the following news themes: KMOL 1979 KTVY 1980 (also: KMOL, KTPX**) WAGA 1977 (also: KSAT, KTVK, WCMH, WJAR, WSOC) (also: WTLV)* From top to bottom, the items featured in the second image are WTLV ActionNews from 1980 (presumably from when they joined ABC), KMOL from 1979, and a "Campaign 80" bumper that probably is from CBS. It's worth noting that in the demo reel a WAGA open is overlaid with KMOL's news set for the demo—this explains why, since Hayes was based out of San Antonio and had KMOL as one of its clients. *Listed as X Belongs; WAGA debuted X Belongs from Peters later in 1979. WTLV used the same theme as WAGA and so it is mislabeled. Notice the San Antonio usage of KTVY 1980 and WAGA 1977; Outlet owned KSAT at the time. **Known only by the demo reel, which features an animation with the slogan "There's a New 9 Coming"; I asked what it was on an earlier version of the video and I got this answer. KTPX later became KWES. -
KING 5 newsbreak with Aaron Brown, 1984: A whole *unused* WBNB news open made in the mid-1980s: And WSVI in 1989, again: And since there are photos here, why not some more! A little background: Some of the worst flooding in Arizona history took place in February 1980. A dam was inches away from bursting and collapsing upstream, but as it was, the Salt River was at flood stage. At the time most river crossings were either bridges prone to erosion or they weren't bridges, since the Salt River was all dammed up. Only two road bridges were open to connect Mesa and Tempe with Phoenix. There were 10-mile-long backups to get across these two bridges. With relief more than necessary, the state, Amtrak and other entities cobbled together an emergency train service, called the "Hattie B." for governor Bruce Babbitt's wife. It was a smashing success in its short run (February 25-March 7), carrying nearly 25,000 passengers in twelve days (it quickly earned the name "Sardine Express", ferrying 5,350 passengers on its most successful day while running 17 hours a day), but as an emergency service with dollar one-way fares it lost $30,000 a week. Keep in mind the Valley had (and does not have) NO commuter rail service*, and it was operating out of disused stations. So enjoy these photos. Unfortunately I can't link them in: KTVK news cameras film passengers waiting at the Phoenix station: http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/singleitem/collection/histphotos/id/27639/rec/168 — notice the KIII-type circle 3! KPNX reporter conducts interview at Phoenix station: http://azmemory.azlibrary.gov/cdm/singleitem/collection/histphotos/id/27546/rec/132 *We got light rail, which at least is something, but we don't have any other heavier commuter rail system.