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WBZ-TV "Eyewitness News" 1970

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2007
  • This is random 16 mm. film footage that was shot behind the scenes at WBZ-TV/Boston's "Eyewitness News" in 1970. The material was incorporated in a special titled "The Eyewitnesses."
    All rights are acknowledged.

Комментарии • 42

  • @VintageTelevision
    @VintageTelevision  15 лет назад +3

    The Videograph (electronic character generator) seen in the clip was manufactured by A. B. Dick Company. This company is better known as a maker of mimeograph machines.

  • @RCAquadruplex
    @RCAquadruplex 14 лет назад +1

    Great video of period local television production. Thanks for saving this and putting it up!

  • @VintageTelevision
    @VintageTelevision  17 лет назад +2

    Tom Ellis is still an anchorman at New England Cable News.

  • @TheReubenKincaid
    @TheReubenKincaid 11 лет назад +4

    This is Jan 1970. Still the 60's .from a cultural standpoint. The 70's as we knew them kicked in probably 73?? Just like 1980 still had the late 70's feel..as well as the 90's. Not so much with the 2k or I'm just getting old.

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 17 лет назад +2

    Interesting . . . WBZ using RCA TK-42's and TK-44A's in the same studio. I guess they were hedging their bets? And am I correct in assuming WBZ used color bars rather than slide-based test patterns, between sign-off and sign-on - or was it just for internal use?

  • @jptang1701
    @jptang1701 10 лет назад +1

    Wow, even the cameraman was wearing a suit back then!

  • @dgendvil
    @dgendvil 17 лет назад +1

    That night on that film, they were using Tom Ellis as anchor. He also worked at WCVB, WNEV, & NECN in Boston, & also WCBS & WABC in New York. Is he retired now?

  • @VintageTelevision
    @VintageTelevision  14 лет назад +1

    @SalemNHmedia
    35 millimeter slides, art cards and a Videograph (an early electronic character generator made by the A. B. Dick Company)

  • @fdmantube
    @fdmantube 15 лет назад

    Love the good old wood paneling in the control room. It's interesting how sparse the the sets were back then compared with the elaborate studios they construct now, like the sports shows on TBS. It's like comparing someones basement with Time Square.

  • @fvk32771
    @fvk32771 11 лет назад +1

    Very insightful and interesting observations re: culture. I was thinking the 70's kicked in around 72 or so, but 73 is close enough. The 70s were a fun decade except for the inflation, the 55 mph speed limit (imposed in 1973-74), and the crummy cars built at that time.

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 16 лет назад +1

    Depends on whether WBZ produced any local color programming prior to 1965-66.

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 16 лет назад

    One weird example of different cameras in the same studio was in 1966 during ABC News' coverage of that year's mid-term election results. Photos of the studio layout showed a Norelco PC-60 camera placed in one area, and several feet away in the same studio an RCA TK-41C.

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 16 лет назад

    As this was 1970, the newer camera was the TK-44A . . . the TK-45A, from what I could tell, didn't come out until 1973.

  • @dcwarner
    @dcwarner 5 лет назад

    Looks like they had a spot reel. We didn’t have one until we got a new gm in 1994.

  • @RCAquadruplex
    @RCAquadruplex 14 лет назад

    @747400fan
    Actually, that machine is a very early TR-70. Notice the RCA TO-2 waveform monitor instead of the later Tektronix 529. Also, the 70A was the only one of the series that the face of the monitor bridge was not painted RCA blue. Also, the B and C versions have a master warning indicator between the two meters right above the transport.
    Of the two 70As I have, One of them has the RCA logo between the reels, and the other doesn't!

  • @SalemNHmedia
    @SalemNHmedia 13 лет назад

    I didn't realize AB Dick made a CG. Our first CG looked like DOS text and only had one page . Still have it in storage.

  • @dcwarner
    @dcwarner 5 лет назад

    Nice audio board.

  • @VintageTelevision
    @VintageTelevision  16 лет назад

    Two-inch quad VTRs made great pictures but they did require that operators have technical knowledge to run properly. Understanding how to read a scope was a prerequisite.
    Quadruplex VTRs are built upon a lot of mechanical components and discrete electronics. Also, they require an air compressor. Ongoing maintenance is required to keep these machines in service.
    CBS Television City has a collection of quad VTRs that are used for dubbing vintage programming to contemporary video formats.

  • @MSTS1
    @MSTS1 14 лет назад

    At 0:27 the frame shows the 4s set bkgrd, which was used for many years (well into the mid-70's..). When WBZ decided to finally stop using it (I don't recall what year that was), I do remember that they offered on-air to break it up and give away pieces to anyone who wanted to come down to get one. I don't think it was any type of auction, just a give-away. I wanted one, but couldn't get there.. At the same time spot, I wonder if that is anchor Steve Shott.. Looks like him to me..

  • @mrceleb2006
    @mrceleb2006 9 лет назад

    Westinghouse Broadcasting launched WBZ-TV from the day it first went on the air (as the Bay State's first-ever TV station) until CBS took over that said company by 1995 (and changing networks in the process).

  • @SalemNHmedia
    @SalemNHmedia 14 лет назад

    Were they using key cards or slides? This is a great piece of history. Thanks for posting it.

  • @RyanSchweitzer77
    @RyanSchweitzer77 12 лет назад

    @VintageTelevision Ah, I was wondering what make of CG they were using, I assumed it was one of Chyron's first models (wasn't the Videograph licensed & resold by Chyron as well?)

  • @Ampex196
    @Ampex196 16 лет назад

    I don't have any experience of the TR70, though I'm sure that vtoldboys would be happy to answer any queries if you contact them via the website. I gather that tape damage problems were mainly due to fast spooling.
    There was at least one publication that covered Quad in detail but it'll be long out of print by now - probably since the early 70's.

  • @VintageTelevision
    @VintageTelevision  14 лет назад

    Yes, that person is (the late) Steve Schatz.

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 16 лет назад

    Looks like the original 1967 RCA TR-70. There was a slight difference in appearance between this and the subsequent updates (TR-70B - which came out in 1969 - and TR-70C - which wasn't introduced until c.1975). Certainly isn't a TR-22.

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 16 лет назад

    NBC. From its sign-on in 1948 until early 1995. In that context, it figures they'd use RCA's TK-42 and TK-44A's and TR-70's (as RCA owned NBC then). Whereas KPIX in San Francisco, a CBS affiliate, used Norelco PC-70's.

  • @caseyg5
    @caseyg5 16 лет назад

    It is indeed from Bond's "Thunderball" at least.

  • @DanConroy78
    @DanConroy78 16 лет назад

    No audio for the first 40 seconds. Was it supposed to be that way?

  • @tvnetdude
    @tvnetdude 16 лет назад +1

    I don't miss Quads at all!

  • @guimbadriver
    @guimbadriver 16 лет назад

    hey did you see two cameras in this video? a tk 45 and a tk 42, i dont understand why some peoples tell bad things about the video quality of tk 42, last month i restored all my tk 42,its amazing the 4 tubes pickup system called M channel independent chrominance and luminance channels, in my point of view it procuces natural colors and rich gray scales, my test was make a shot video of the street, the picture was perfect in all the senses..

  • @wmbrown6
    @wmbrown6 17 лет назад

    There was sound in the second half of the film . . .

  • @leshaunfossett
    @leshaunfossett 16 лет назад

    They probably placed music over that portion of the film.

  • @tvnetdude
    @tvnetdude 16 лет назад

    Editing on them was absolutely a horror show.

  • @danpetitpas
    @danpetitpas 13 лет назад

    I wouldn't say this is random footage. It looks more like raw footage for a documentary of what goes into a newscast. All it needs is narration and some canned music.

  • @tvnetdude
    @tvnetdude 16 лет назад

    Reminds me of my days at Grahm.

  • @iamnomad101
    @iamnomad101 12 лет назад

    Does anyone have any pre-1976 WBZ news video?

  • @tvnetdude
    @tvnetdude 16 лет назад

    Yes indeed both Ampex and RCA

  • @MSTS1
    @MSTS1 14 лет назад

    Steve Schatz, right. Schott would be Marge Schott- Cincinatti Reds..

  • @GEMINITREKKER
    @GEMINITREKKER 13 лет назад

    Thats cool!

  • @swami1
    @swami1 16 лет назад

    Who's the director?

  • @staylor3440
    @staylor3440 14 лет назад

    Wow, talk about mis-matching cameras! An RCA TK-42 & TK 44A. Not a good idea!

  • @bobandrayfan1
    @bobandrayfan1 15 лет назад

    Their film editor was a guy named Jack Percoco.