Tag WHDH

On The Air

This is all kinds of awesome sauce: WGBH has announced a massive project to digitize a portion of their immense video library of news broadcasts from 1959-2000, including clips from the archives of WHDH and WCVB, as well as Cambridge Community TV. WGBH had its own local newscast for a number of years, which is a little unusual for a public television station, and there are still a lot of locals who would love to see it back. This, however, is pure heaven for broadcast history enthusiasts, as much for the snapshots back into the past of local TV as much as American history. For the time being, the other major local station, WBZ, is not involved in the project, but here’s hoping that they’re able to include them as well. Considering how poorly local television is usually documented, this is nothing short of amazing.

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Linkapalooza – Miscellaneous

  • The “I Do Not Think That Word Means What You Think It Does” Department — the annual RTNDA Edward R. Murrow Awards were recently announced and among the winners were CBS Evening News With Katie Couric for best national newscast and Boston’s WHDH (Channel 7, NBC) for its 11:00 p.m. newscast. Either the RTNDA has a great sense of humor or a very poor grasp of the term “Excellence In Journalism”….or standards have gone WAAAAAY downhill.
  • The “Did I Say That?” Department — Writing at 3QuarksDaily recently, Morgan Meis came clean and admitted his complete and utter hatred for journalist/author/trendspotter Malcolm Gladwell. Well, you can probably guess what happened next. Malcolm Gladwell heard about it and got in touch with him. A couple of days later, Meis had to eat a little crow and publicly apologize, proving once again you should never say anything about someone on the Internet that you wouldn’t say to that same person face-to-face (or under oath in a court of law).
  • The “One Man’s Terrorist Is Another Man’s Freedom Fighter” Department — The mainstream media pretty well underplayed the story that the Bush Administration celebrated Nelson Mandela’s 90th birthday the other day by finally removing him from their list of Most Wanted Terrorists. So the questionto the Bushies is: what changed?
  • The “But How Are We Going To Put That On The Big Map?” Department — the recently-demised Saint Tim Russert usually gets the credit for popularizing the “Red State vs Blue State” meme with his live analysis (not to mention his little whiteboard) during the 2000 Presidential Election; even though all three major networks had been using red and blue to distinguish between the two political parties on their election coverage maps for years (NBC has been using their big light-up map since 1976), after that evening the red = Republican/blue= Democrat identification set itself in stone like the donkey and elephant symbols years before. Now, politcal pollster John Zogby has come up with a new metaphor to help keep us divided into two polarized, intractable camps: he says we should think of ourselves as either “Spring-Forward” voters or “Fall-Back” voters. While the clock metaphor is cute, what he’s saying is that some Americans have been able to prosper in spite of George Bush’s best attempts to destroy the economy (okay, that’s my editorializing) even in places that typically vote conservatively and these “Spring-Forwarders” may be far more amenable to a Democratic message this year than in elections past. Meanwhile, the people who have “fallen back” are more likely than ever to vote for the Republican triple-play of God, guns, and old white guys. So maybe the networks can come up with some kind of graphic of a clock set either to 11:00 or 1:00 depending on which group wins a state…or something…
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Now THAT’S Breaking News!

Oh My

So, I posted this picture yesterday, thinking it was from our own local Channel 7 as they were providing live coverage of the gas truck explosion yesterday, but it’s actually a screencap from KABC in Los Angeles (which is also Channel 7 and uses the same “7″ logo), covering the recent wildfires that were such a problem in Southern California. My apologies for the earlier misleading post, which I pulled as soon as I discovered the mistake. I’ve put the picture back up because it’s just too damn good not to post at all.

Oh, and EEUUUWWWWWWWWW!

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The FARK Station

channel7.jpg

Hey, local-area readers — is it me or has Channel 7′s 11:00 p.m. newscast turned into a live version of FARK?

I know that it was Channel 7 who dumbed down local news in general when Ed Ansin bought the station back in the early 1990s with their “if it bleeds, it leads” approach to news, but since he bought Channel 56 a few months ago and rolled the newscast into both stations (56 at 10:00, 7 at 11:00), it’s like they just threw out any semblance of a “newsroom” and just cherry-pick stories off of goofy Internet news sites. Especially if there’s video. Some nights the LEAD STORY will be some lame-ass piece of satellite video of something that happened in Ohio or Alabama or some other place thousands of miles away. For me, though, I think they crossed a line on Wednesday night when they ran JibJab’s “Star Spangled Banner” video as news.

Lately, I also notice that they’re trying to have the anchors and reporters shtick it up with dialog and little bits of stage business. Last night they tried it with their “story” about the study that showed that women don’t really talk that much more than men by trying to get Randy Price, the male anchor, to say he’s interested in talking about “sports and carburetors” with other guys. Unfortunately, a) Randy is totally unable to ad-lib and 2) he’s gay, so the whole thing went over like a lead balloon (that’s not to say that gay men can’t be interested in sports and carburetors, but ol’ Randy ain’t fooling anybody).

I can’t really explain why we watch Channel 7 except that I have some deep-seated thing about watching NBC News (even when I was very little I was a big fan of the Huntley-Brinkley Report), and it has carried over to usually watching the local NBC station newscast. Of course, years ago that meant watching WBZ, who still have the best news programming in this market (perhaps even one of the best in the country), and there’s no reason we couldn’t switch except that we’re middle-aged and set in our ways about these sorts of things. But, sheesh! When I can predict the order of news stories on their program based on the most number of comments on FARK, it’s getting a little out of hand.

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