Ed wrote --
EV> I remember the story about the Plymouth automobile that had a Push-Button
EV> Automatic Transmission.
Chrysler Corp was the first with a push button transmission in the mid-50s
then Ford had it, then Nash and I think someone else. But 10 years later it
was gone, for the most part. I don't think GM ever did.
My father brought a new '58 Mercury Turnpike Cruiser (it was huge, you could
raise a family in it) with push button transmission that gave him all sorts of
problems. I think that car spent more time in the dealers garage than ours.
After two years he was tired of fooling with it and got a Chevy.
EV> The first TV Station in Louisville, Kentucky [WAVE-TV] began transmitting
EV> programs on Thanksgiving Day, 1948.
WSAZ, then channel 5, now 3, went on the air in October 1949. They had
planned on going on the air in 1947 or '48 but the FCC, in their infinite
wisdom, held up a lot of broadcast licenses nation wide because so many places
wanted them. Sometimes it was several years between issuing licenses around
the country.
And WSAZ was powerful, there were reports it reached as far a Havana, Cuba.
Not a very good picture and needed powerful antennas. Rabbit ears wouldn't do
it.
EV> I was in the 2nd Grade of Elementary School when I saw a TV Show.
EV> The TV Set was at a Beer Joint, the owner had mounted the TV Set near the
EV> ceiling, in a corner of the Bar.
I recall seeing colour tv for the first time c. 1957/58 when my folks and I
went too a cousin in the Detroit area.
That was also in a bar.
One had to pass through a bar to the family dining area and a colour set was
on a wall. I remember Perry Como was on, wearing a red sweater, sitting on a
stool, singing "Letters, I get letters" as letters and postcards floated down
around him.
Naturally I started begging and whining and doing other kid things to try
and convince my parents to buy one.
Didn't work.
(Side story. When a little kid in the supermarket something would catch my
eye and my mother simply had to buy whatever it was and I would throw a fit,
laying on my stomach, kicking my feet, crying, etc. She would just calmly walk
away pretending she had no idea who that brat was. After a minute I would look
around and she was nowhere in sight and I felt like a fool with people looking
at me. I think if more parents did that today kids would grow up a bit
faster).
EV> Our first TV Set was a B&W Philco with a 12" Tube in it.
I don't know what our first one was, but a table model with a tiny screen I
was told.
The one I do remember was brought in 1951, an RCA console with a HUGE 12 inch
round screen. We had that one for over 10 years.
EV> I remember watching "Kukla, Fran and Ollie" and "Captain Video".
KFO was one my favourite shows.
As a little kid I was a bit confused (no cracks Daryl!, "was"? I can hear you
asking now) about time and distance. I believed everything on tv was live (a
lot of it was) and it happened right here and how could it be daylight on a tv
show and dark out and dark when it was daylight?
JM>>> .. I also always carry some hidden cash in my wallet.
EV> Hmmm, when I read that in Your original message, I thought:
EV> "he shouldn't ought to write that."
Yeah, may need to re-think this...
EV> But who am I to tell OUR MODERATOR anything such as that?
Ya just did. :)
Joe
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