WKBS final sign off 1983

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  • čas přidán 28. 09. 2021
  • R.I.P. WKBS (1965-1983)

Komentáře • 47

  • @willmack5909
    @willmack5909 Před 2 lety +24

    To this day I am heartsick that we no longer have Channel 48. :'(

    • @MIKECNW
      @MIKECNW Před rokem +3

      Why did it sign off for good?
      Is another station on ch. 48 now?

    • @tammylewis2408
      @tammylewis2408 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@MIKECNW The reason was a bitter feud between the Field brothers, who owned Field Communications, the station's owner, over the future of the company, and decided to get out of the TV and radio business by selling off all their stations. All of the stations owned by Field were purchased, except WKBS, and it was forced to go dark.
      As for Ch. 48, it is now WTGW, owned by Trinity Broadcasting Network, and based in Millville, NJ.

  • @Lisa-di1wi
    @Lisa-di1wi Před 8 měsíci +3

    Unfortunately, I was out in Los Angeles when they finally went off the air. In fact, was my first night out there. I believe that the last program that they aired that night was a Penn State football game.
    I also heard that Field Communications was selling all of their stations, and they couldn't find a buyer for Channel 48.

  • @MisterB2eternity
    @MisterB2eternity Před 2 dny

    Sadly on the 4th of July Mr. Vincent F. Barresi has passed away. He will always be remembered.

  • @chriswideman1218
    @chriswideman1218 Před 2 lety +13

    Looks like we'll never see what the actual sign off looks like.

  • @MMacG1167
    @MMacG1167 Před rokem +5

    Wow' its been 39 and a half years since I watched this. My memory was that it was a bit different from this and I can see from other comments that it actually was. I thought there were two videos in a row for the sign-off, and then the signal was turned off and it went to snow.

  • @johnmiller8123
    @johnmiller8123 Před 2 lety +7

    "Goodnight & good-bye wkbs-tv channel-48 you'll be missed by everyone in philadelphia & all of the deleware-valley always & forever amen" 🇺🇸📺🎤🎥.

  • @user-qv3wb2gy1f
    @user-qv3wb2gy1f Před 10 měsíci +6

    On August 29, 1983 (Mon.) that original Ch. 48-TV in Phila., Penna. metro. area had its swan song bcst. day. At 12:45 AM local time on August 30, 1983 (Tues.), sta.'s Gen. Mgr., Vincent Barresi had commentary on sta. signing off for last time

    • @user-qv3wb2gy1f
      @user-qv3wb2gy1f Před 10 měsíci

      0:09-2:00. Gen. Mgr. Vincent Barresi's closing commentary on last "sign-off" for original Ch. 48-TV, Phila., Penna. metro. area's heard

    • @user-qv3wb2gy1f
      @user-qv3wb2gy1f Před 10 měsíci

      Ironically, on August 30, 2023 (Wed.), exactly 40 yrs. to day that original Ch. 48-TV in Phila., Penna. metro. area went dark, l lost my step-mother, late Gwynne ("Gwynnie") Linton-Hagee as she succumbed to M.A.C. lung disease. She was well in her 70s at time, her death

    • @user-qv3wb2gy1f
      @user-qv3wb2gy1f Před 10 měsíci

      I watched last "sign-off" for original Ch. 48-TV in Phila., Penna. metro. area in late-Summer, 1983. In mid-July, that same yr. sta.'s parent co., Field Communications announced that it would cease operations, Phila., Penna. metro. area's original Ch. 48-TV unless license to operate sta. would return back to Wash., D.C.-based Federal Communications Commission (F.C.C.)

    • @user-qv3wb2gy1f
      @user-qv3wb2gy1f Před 7 měsíci

      My step-mother, late Gwynne ("Gwynnie") Linton-Hagee outlived my mother, late Mrs. Mary C. Hagee by well over 2 decades

    • @user-qv3wb2gy1f
      @user-qv3wb2gy1f Před 5 dny

      B.T.W., late Mrs. Mary C. Hagee, my mother tragically succumbed to liver cancer ♋️ in December, 1985. She was only in her early-50s at time, her death 💀. Me/my 4 siblings (incl. since-deceased brother, mine) have outlived my mother

  • @luisreyes1963
    @luisreyes1963 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This is the first time I ever watched a station sign-off that's literally an "Out Of Business" declaration.

  • @krisstarring
    @krisstarring Před 2 lety +16

    The real sign off just had the standard WKBS 48 sign off film with "The Sound Of Silence" by Simon & Garfunkel playing instead of the National Anthem.
    The "Star Spangled Banner" film seen here isn't the one that WKBS used at the time the plug was pulled. This was the one they used by 1983. czcams.com/video/xqxRACzx3gg/video.html

  • @milesthepeacefulinkling286

    Currently only in Audio form, without the goodbye montage with "The Sound Of Silence" by Simon & Garfunkel playing.

    • @keithmoon3190
      @keithmoon3190 Před 8 měsíci +1

      An account of Flickr posted a reconstruction of the final sign off and he has the recording of the sound of silence playing after the sign off announcement.

  • @fayettebrown2312
    @fayettebrown2312 Před rokem +3

    This national anthem remind me of a different station did the same thing ,it was wsns channel 44 in Chicago in the 70's and 80's

    • @MisterB2eternity
      @MisterB2eternity Před 22 dny

      WFLD was the sister station of this former station when they both was owned by Field Communications.

  • @connielonskey8561
    @connielonskey8561 Před 2 lety +1

    I Love It

  • @hilarioph
    @hilarioph Před 11 dny

    I can not believe they signed off very early during the '80s. But what could be the replacement for WKBS since they are off the air?

  • @zacheryalderton6699
    @zacheryalderton6699 Před 2 lety +2

    THIS YEAR 57 YEARS

  • @IulianSendrea
    @IulianSendrea Před 16 dny

    Goodbye WKBS Channel 48

  • @kurtkauffman4326
    @kurtkauffman4326 Před měsícem

    WKBS is now in Altoona.

  • @zachalderton2057
    @zachalderton2057 Před 2 lety +4

    NEXT YEAR SHOULD HAVE BEEN 58 YEARS LONG TIME

    • @alexlee6487
      @alexlee6487 Před 4 měsíci

      2025 would be have been 60 years

  • @alexlee6487
    @alexlee6487 Před 2 lety +1

    Where did you get the USA anthem clip from?

  • @Jerseysson27
    @Jerseysson27 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I like this version of the national anthem , who sang this???

  • @alfonsogreen2722
    @alfonsogreen2722 Před 2 lety +4

    They lasted only 18 years. Wow

    • @nissangt-restrella2413
      @nissangt-restrella2413 Před 2 lety +1

      Shortest living TV channel

    • @MisterB2eternity
      @MisterB2eternity Před rokem +2

      However, WKBS made a comeback in Altoona in 1985 and going strong almost 38 years later.

    • @bytearchives
      @bytearchives Před rokem

      @@nissangt-restrella2413 No, not really.

    • @jimtrue1465
      @jimtrue1465 Před 10 měsíci

      @@MisterB2eternity In name only. There is no real relation to Burlington/Philadelphia's WKBS

    • @MisterB2eternity
      @MisterB2eternity Před 10 měsíci

      @@jimtrue1465 You're right. However, the antenna that Cornerstone brought was once WKBS's in Philly.

  • @chriswideman1218
    @chriswideman1218 Před 2 lety +4

    Is this the video of the actual sign off?

    • @johnissoevil
      @johnissoevil Před 2 lety +4

      The speech is from the actual sign off. The SSB isn't. They played Simon and Garfunkel's "Sound of Silence" instead, then shut the xmitter off for good.

  • @PPGH-BandAnimaniacsFan
    @PPGH-BandAnimaniacsFan Před 2 lety +2

    Can you reupload your grounded videos?

  • @1L6E6VHF
    @1L6E6VHF Před rokem +6

    It's so odd that TWO Full-service TV stations in the Philadelphia market threw their licenses in the fire.
    Storer station (Channel 12) had a Full-service *VHF* station, and decided that independent television could never be profitable. If they had waited a few years, they could have had a decent run. They may have eventually been the Fox station.
    I wonder why WKBS threw the towel in.

    • @jameshouston4644
      @jameshouston4644 Před rokem +2

      Family squabble. What I read about it in Wikipedia, it was actually a pretty robust presence in the Philly/NJ market among indies. Kaiser Broadcasting exited the broadcast biz and it sold out to Field Enterprises, publisher of the Chicago Sun-Times, World Book Encyclopedias, Parade Magazine, Simon & Schuster, ad nauseum. Marshall Field V and his half-brother Ted waged a nasty legal battle against each other (Think HBO's "Succession"). FCC said "crap or get off the pot" (sell by July 15th, '83 or take it off the block and continue broadcasting. No one was able to meet the Fields' high ask, so they scuttled it on August 30, 1983. The casualty of a typical '80s rich kids' brewhaw.

    • @Justin-Hill-1987
      @Justin-Hill-1987 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The reason why some of these TV stations went off the air is because low viewership equates to lost money resulting in the station either finding a buyer or filing for bankruptcy...

    • @davidmatthewvinotjr8396
      @davidmatthewvinotjr8396 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Officially, it was due to a nasty fight between the two Field Brothers over the future of their company, and it resulted in the breakup of their holdings. While most stations were able to find new owners, including WKBD, KBHK, and WLVI (WKBG), WKBS wasn’t able to find a new owner, and as a result Field returned their license for ch 48 to the FCC.

    • @MisterB2eternity
      @MisterB2eternity Před 22 dny

      @@davidmatthewvinotjr8396 Most of what you've said is true. However, there were several companies that offered Field money for WKBS but their bids were too low for Field. Providence Journal (back then owners of WPHL TV 17) offered Field $35 million for 48 and Field was strongly considered it. But they changed their minds and decided to shut WKBS down for a 42.5 million dollar tax write off.

  • @Allison_XypprZ
    @Allison_XypprZ Před 2 lety +2

    The USA anthem sounds like the CCCP anthem.

  • @jetjack74
    @jetjack74 Před rokem +1

    How sad we can’t put this on anymore without sheer outrage from wokesters.