Full description not available
H**H
Brings back many memories...
I found this book when I was searching google for WLW radio history. Google Books showed me the entire first chapter which had a zillion photos. That was enough to get me to buy the book on Amazon.I grew up outside Cincinnati, watched Uncle Al, left the TV to mom when the 50-50 club came on, and heard stories from local electrical engineers about the antenna farm, TV cameras, and TV broadcast signals. Just chapter one stimulated wonderful memories.After the book arrived, I found the subsequent chapters are just as rich in photos and history. The only picture I didn't see was one of Pasquale's Pizza being advertised!
G**Y
More information than I thought it would have
Bought two more copies for friends. Well researched.
J**E
A walk Down Memory Lane
This book was wonderful. I felt like I walked down memory lane. I grew up in Cincinnati and watched the programs that this book describes. I loved reading it and recalling all of the people and programs that are talked about in this book. I would recommend it to anyone who is connected with Cincinnati.
S**Y
Interesting Photos but Incomplete History
Having worked in Cincinnati television for many years, I looked forward to Amazon's prompt shipment of this book.While the pictures contained in this slim volume are interesting, the book almost completely ignores the 1970s, 80s and 90s in favor of Cincinnati's TV golden age 1950 and 60s celebrities.Also, mostly ignored, is public TV, broadcast technology and the ground-breaking engineers who built and oversaw that same star-making technology.But, what prompted me to write this, perhaps, overly picky review, is printed on page 62 of this volume:"Television news today is careful to separate news content from commercial content. That was not the case in the early days..."Television news today cares not one wit if commercial content is hidden within newscasts and Federal regulations that once insured that commercial/content separation have either been gutted or are ignored by the small number of giant telecommunications corporations that control today's local and national broadcast media.Should the author wish I can provide specific examples, in the modern Cincinnati broadcast market, where commercial content is regularly presented within newscasts as news material.Page 62 requires a rewrite and the author should reconsider photos of File 48, Janie Gardner, Jean Beasley, Irma Lazarus, Gwen Conley & Feelings and Steve Hoffman to name just a few important contributors to the Queen City's amazing broadcast past not included in this book.
W**Y
Great book on the eary days of TV in Cincinnati.
I grew up in Northern Kentucky (Across the river from Cincinnati) and got to see allthe great shows and personalities. Uncle Al and Captain Wendy were a favorite atour house.
H**R
A fun stroll through the past
I lived in the Cincinnati area into the early 60s, then made regular return trips to the area to visit relatives through the mid-70s. Much of Cincinnati TV I saw as a "kid," which means kids programming, Saturday monster movies, and "what the grownups watched."When I saw the Amazon ad for Cincinnati Television the first run had already sold out, and I ordered two (one for my sister) and Amazon came through after the second print run was made.Boy, this was fun. It has it all: Uncle Al, Captain Windy (Wanda Lewis rocks), Skipper Ryle, Bob Shreve (who I thought could have had MORE coverage, but you can't please everyone), Paul Dixon (Man, his show wouldn't last five minutes in today's PC environment - Mayor of Kneesville? Can you say lawsuit?), Bob Braun, Ruth Lyons (who was a zen mother for virtually every adult woman in our family), the Bargain City Kid and Willy Thall (and Saturday wrasslin'), Cash D. Amburgy hawking homewares (I still have a Webster's Dictionary - complete with an autograph and rubber stamped company name- his firm was giving away as a promotional item), and of course the newsman's newsman, Al Schottelkotte (I long ago stopped believing Cronkite, but if Al ever came back from the grave, he's still find one loyal viewer).Like all the Images of America series, this isn't an in-depth historical monograph, but a scrapbook that tells the tale of the development of TV in Cincy. When programming formats were only limited by imagination, and when a crazy bunch of characters could "think it up and do it," providing fun memories decades later.Let's hope that somebody is working on a history of radio in the Queen City!
S**S
Fun to read & look at
A blast from the past. Fun to read & look at.
G**N
Great book
I would recommend this for anyone wanting to learn about the history of television in the Cincinnati area.If you get this book look for George Clooney!
Trustpilot
3 days ago
2 days ago