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Welcome to Central Illinois' On-Line Broadcast Museum. This website documents in detail the history of each of the viewable TV stations, past and present, across mid-Illinois in text, photos, and videos, as well as each station's current status. This site also includes local radio history and automated analog formats, again told in pictures, videos, and text. 

Note that this website displays best on a full-size monitor, desktop, or laptop computer. If you are using your phone, use the "desktop" view. You can zoom in on the page if needed. Also, you may have to sign in to YouTube to view some videos. Some browsers do not allow some embedded videos to play, so click on the "YouTube" logo on the video to view it from YouTube.

doug_anchor_2021-0723.jpg

Doug as news anchor at WCCU, Ch 27

Doug Quick 
Radio/TV Broadcaster/Historian, Author, Webmaster
complete bio available here.

YouTube Video
Doug Quick On-Line YouTube Channel

Now through April 30, I present another look at the "TV Time Capsule," which will take us back to the week of September 11-17, 1954. On the cover of TV Guide is a movie actress, singer, and performer from Broadway, movies, and TV who is virtually unknown today. I'll give you her backstory.

 

Local TV was young, and programming consisted of a few network shows, syndicated first-run series, and some local productions. Many TV stations didn't sign on daily until noon or even later. There were no late movies, as most mainstream theatrical movies were still unavailable for broadcast. TV listings from Mid-Illinois stations, Peoria, Bloomington, Hannibal, Quincy, the Quad Cities, and St. Louis will be seen, along with some notable omissions.

 

There was no color, even though a Color Spectacular was broadcast that week, but no one saw it in color across Mid-Illinois! I'll show you two videos that aired that week, to give you a feel of how TV was viewed during that era. I'll also show you the names of personalities from most of the stations in the area. Some programs drew my attention, and I'll describe them, including one program that would not be acceptable to today's TV audience, yet it was produced for kids!

Check out the TV Time Capsule during April here at the Museum!

Featured Videos

Now through May 3, there's quite a selection here of TV and radio goodies! You'll see TV shows from various eras, spanning from the 1950s to the 1990s. 

We begin with the first regular episode of "Starsky and Hutch" from 1975.

 

We'll jump into the 1980s with the "Sanford" pilot episode, a spinoff from the original "Sanford and Son" for NBC. The CBS pilot show for "Newhart" will follow that, introducing us to the characters of "Larry, Daryl, and Daryl."

 

Then, there are a couple of TV specials from the 1980s and '90s, including one that pays tribute to Burt Reynolds and a TV movie featuring two "Twilight Zone" segments written by the series creator, writer, and producer, Rod Serling, but never previously produced for the original series from the late 50s and early 60s.

I follow those with two 1950s quiz show productions from producer John Guedel: "People Are Funny," hosted by Art Linkletter,  a program that requires contestants to perform stunts for prizes. Plus, "You Bet Your Life" with Groucho Marx. Both series also include the appearances of each host's daughters. 

The Classic Radio segment is an incredible compilation of over 11 hours of "The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show." It's one Classic Radio sitcom series that, for the most part, is still hilarious today! Don't miss out on listening to these perfect recordings from the late 1940s! 

ABC Starsky and Hutch

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube.

Starsky and Hutch (1975) ABC First Episode

During the 70s, youthful, action-filled police and P.I. dramas were all over the ABC schedule. Detective Dave Starsky, played by Paul Michael Glaser, and Detective Ken "Hutch" Hutchison, played by David Soul, fought crime many times undercover. Their red and white 1974 Ford Torino took them on many car chases through some of the toughest Lost Angeles neighborhoods.

Others in the cast included their supervisor, Captain Harold Dobey, played by Bernie Hamilton, and their informant, "Huggy Bear," played by Antonio Fargas. 

"Starsky and Hutch" premiered on ABC on September 3, 1975, although it had been featured as a prime-time movie earlier. The regular episodes, including the one above, premiered as the first regular episode on Wednesday, September 3, 1975, at 9 pm (CT). It was seen on WAND, WRAU, WIIL and KTVI.

ABC Starsky and Hutch

David Soul and Paul Michael Glaser were the stars of "Starsky and Hutch" in this ABC publicity Picture.

NBC Sanford

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube.

Sanford (1980) NBC Pilot

This spinoff or continuation of the NBC series "Sanford and Son," which aired on the network from 1972 to 1977, was called "Sanford." This urban comedy series starred Red Foxx as Fred Sanford, the same role he played in his first series. 

The original series was canceled, as Red Foxx left to star in his own musical comedy variety series for ABC. That show failed to gain an audience, and he offered himself back to NBC for a reboot of the original series. That took three years to accomplish. 

The most significant difference between the two series was the loss of Demond Wilson, who played his son, Lamont, in the first one. In this reincarnation series, "Sanford," he would again be cast as the cantankerous junk dealer. Lamont, it was explained, was absent as he was working in Alaska on a pipeline. The former friends of Fred's son, Rollo, and Cal, were cast as his partners. Nathaniel Taylor and Dennis Burkley played the partners.

NBC Sanford

Long-time comedian Redd Foxx stars once again as Fred Sanford for NBC in his follow-up series "Sanford."  

(NBC Publicity Picture)

Fred had a love interest in this series, as Marguerite Ray starred as his girlfriend, Evelyn "Eve" Lewis. Suzanne Stone played her daughter Cissy, and Percy Rodriguez played Eve's brother Winston. Cathy Cooper played her maid, Clara. 

 

Aunt Esther's son, Cliff Anderson, a college student, returned to Los Angeles and moved in with Fred. It was a large cast to take some of the performing work from an aging Red Foxx. 

Unfortunately, the show just over one year March 15, 1980, to July 10, 1981. During its run, it aired on Saturdays, Wednesdays, or Fridays and was seen on WICS, WICD, WEEK-TV, WGEM-TV, WTWO, and KSDK. The episode on this video was broadcast on Saturday, March 15, 1980.

CBS Newhart

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube. 

Newhart (1982) CBS Pilot

Bob Newhart, from his classic sitcom "The Bob Newhart Show" on CBS from 1972 to 1978, once again brought his dead-pan humor with a new sitcom called "Newhart." "Newhart" premiered on October 25, 1982, and aired through September 8, 1990, with that shockingly funny last episode now considered a historical epilogue to any series.

In this one, Bob was the author of "how-to" books and later became a local TV host for "Vermont Today." He played the role of Dick Laudon with his wife played by Mary Frann. Tom Poston, actually the husband of Newhart's first co-star, Suzanne Pleshette, played the role of handyman George Utley.

 

Other significant cast members included Julie Duffy as Stephanie Vanderkellen, Peter Scolari as Michael Harris, and the three characters who received the most attention: Larry, Darryl, and Darryl, played by William Sanderson as Larry, and the two mute Darryls, played by Tony Papenfuss and John Voldstad. 

This CBS show also bounced around the CBS schedule, as many did during that era. However, it was most often a Monday night entry, although it appeared at several different time periods. It also aired on Sundays during its first year. It ended its run on Fridays and, during its last month, on Saturdays at 8 pm (CT). You would have seen this classic series on WCIA, WMBD-TV, KHQA, WTHI-TV, and KMOV.   

CBS All Star party for Burt Reynolds

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube.

All-Star Party for Burt Reynolds (1981) CBS 

The "All-Star Party for Burt Reynolds" included guest stars Loni Anderson, Don DeLuis, Monte Hall, Madeline Kahn, Kris Kristofferson, Anne Murray, Dolly Parton, Jerry Reed, James Stewart, Jack Lemmon, and many others. Among the surprises were Sheriff Buford T. Justice (played by Jackie Gleason) and many stars from his movies and TV appearances.

This CBS special aired just before the release of his theatrical film, "Sharkey's Machine," on December 13, 1981. It aired on WCIA, WMBD-TV, WTHI-TV, KHQA, and KMOV. It was recorded from WTOL, Channel 11, Toledo, Ohio.

CBS All-Star Party for Burt Reynolds

This picture and the corresponding publicity story were distributed to local newspapers for the "All-Star Party for Burt Reynolds" broadcast on CBS.

(Decatur Herald and Review)

CBS The Twilight Zone: Rod Serling's Lost Classics

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube.

The Twilight Zone: Rod Serlings's Lost Classics (CBS) 1994 Special with James Earl Jones

According to the IMDb site, this TV movie special includes two stories written by Rod Serling. The first segment is about a young girl attending the theater to watch the 1940 film "His Girl Friday." In watching the movie, she witnesses scenes from her own life instead of the original film. She watches the film a second time and sees her own scary future.

 

In the second story, "Where the Dead Are," a medical professor conducts surgery in front of medical students, but the patient dies after the operation. The doctor professor finds that the dead patient had suffered a deadly skull fracture years before. He then investigates how he initially survived such an injury.

This special TV movie aired on May 19, 1994. The theater featured in the first storyline was located at 16 North Front Street in Wilmington, North Carolina.

The movie, narrated by James Earl Jones, starred Gary Cole, Amy Irving, Patrick Bergin, Jack Palance, Michael Burgess, Heidi Swedberg, and others.

"The Twilight Zone: Rod Serling's Lost Classics" aired on May 19, 1994, and was seen over Mid-Illinois on WCIA, WMBD-TV, WTHI-TV, KHQA, and KMOV.

NBC People Are Funny

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube.

People Are Funny (1955) NBC Art Linkletter

People Are Funny" aired on NBC Television from September 19, 1954, through April 2, 1961. The series also aired on NBC radio in 1942, hosted by Art Baker during its first year. Art Linkletter replaced Baker during the second year. The series was similar in its outrageous stunts to "Truth or Consequences," as people would win prizes for performing specific actions. 

In this episode, Art Linkletter has a woman sew a patch, blindfolded, on the seat of a man's pants while he is still wearing them. That's just one example of what's included in this edition of "People Are Funny."  One studio contestant was from South Willmington, Illinois (about 25 miles west-northwest of Kankakee, Illinois), and another was from Quincy, Illinois. 

Art Linkletter's daughter, Sharon, participated in the main stunt during the show. Art had five children, including sons Jack and Robert (both deceased) and daughters Dawn, Sharon, and Diane. Daughter Diane died in 1969 from jumping from a sixth-floor window, allegedly after a drug-induced flashback. As far as I can determine, Dawn and Sharon are still living and probably are in their upper 70s or early 80s. Art died in 2010 at the age of 97.

This episode also features some interesting cars, including a prize of a Nash Metropolitan that achieves 40 miles per gallon. It also offers Papermate Pens in matching colors of the two-tone 1955 Chryslers and Plymouths. I also discovered that Orange Julius was established in 1955.

NBC Art Linkletter

Art Linkletter, who hosted "People Are Funny" for NBC, also hostred "Art Linkletter's House Party" on CBS from 1952 through 1969, making it the longest running daytime variety show in broadcast history. It began in 1944 on CBS radio. He also hosted the opening broadcast from Disneyland for ABC in 1955. 

(picture from "People are Funnfy")

WCIA and WICS listings from Decatur Herald

Although the exact date of this particular installment's airing is unknown, "People are Funny" aired on primary NBC affiliates WICS, WEEK-TV, and probably WGEM-TV. It also aired on the secondary NBC affiliate, WCIA, on Sundays at 6 pm (CT). It did not air on KSD-TV at that time. See the TV listings here.

The video above is a great black-and-white print of a classic show that shows Art Linkletter's folksy personality. I was a fan of his when I was around 4 to 6 years old, and I watched "Art Linkletter's House Party" on CBS at my grandparents' house every afternoon on WCIA.

Check the listings for both stations at 6pm when both aired the same program, "People Are Funny."

(TV listings from Decatur Herald)

nbc_youbetyourlife50s_edited.jpg

Click on the image to watch the video directly from YouTube.

You Bet Your Life (1955) NBC Groucho Marx

"You Bet Your Life" was considered a quiz program, but Groucho's conversation with the guests supplied most of the entertainment. This installment, from January 13, 1955, featured the winner of the "America's Prettiest School Girl" beauty contest, a Hollywood makeup artist from Texas, a former boxing champion, and Groucho's real-life daughter, Melinda. Melinda is still with us and is now 78 years old. 

"You Bet Your Life," like "People Are Funny," also began on the radio. This comedy quiz show was a vehicle for wisecracking, ad-libbing Groucho Marx, which started on ABC radio in 1947, moved to CBS in 1949, and then aired on NBC Radio from 1950 through 1956.

NBC "You Bet Your Life"

The move to TV was made in 1950, when "You Bet Your Life" was filmed. The show almost always ran long because the conversations with the guests were not scripted or rehearsed. Many conversations were quite raucous and unsuitable for broadcast. Being on film allowed the show to be edited to fit the 30-minute time slot, which included commercials. 

Another production issue you may or may not notice was the overexposed glare over the microphone at Groucho's desk. The "NBC" mic flag was removed from the video, as this show was shown in syndication through the early 1970s. 

"You Bet Your Life" announcer, George Fenneman, and the host, Groucho Marx, in this NBC publicity picture.

John Guedel produced "You Bet Your Life" and "People Are Funny" and briefly appeared with Art Linkletter in the latter episode, shown above.

Classic Radio

NBC Radio "Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show"

Click on the image to listen to the video directly from YouTube.

Phil Harris and Alice Faye Show (1940s) NBC  Over 11 hours of shows!

There are many fine comedies from the Golden Age of Radio, but unfortunately, many don't hold up after 70+ years. This one, for the most part, is an exception. It does, though, contain outdated cultural depictions of alcohol abuse and at least a reenactment of one obsolete entertainment form that may be offensive to some. 

This radio sitcom stars Phil Harris, the former "band leader" from the Jack Benny Program. He wasn't the real bandleader after the first few years in the 1930s; the real band leader was Mahlon Merrick. The fictitious band, led by Phil, was a group of motley musicians, including one left-handed guitar player, Frank Remley, who in this series was played brilliantly by Elliot Lewis. His character was lazy, not particularly bright, an alcoholic, and he also consistently tried to get Phil into trouble. Phil Harris, meanwhile, was egotistical, sarcastic, loud, brash, a gambler, and financially dependent on his wealthy, famous movie-star wife. Plus, like Remley, Phil wasn't too bright either. 

Frank and Phil were portrayed as hard-drinking goofballs who got themselves into trouble with the show's sponsor or Phil's wife, Alice. Phil and Frank got into predicaments similar to those that Lucy and Ethyl encounter later in "I Love Lucy." Since it was on the radio, some were outrageous and depended greatly on the listener's imagination. 

Phil's real-life wife was 20th Century Fox musical star Alice Faye. Phil and Alice had two children, both girls, named after each star: Alice Jr. and Phyllis. Alice's brother, the bookkeeper of their fictitious show's production, a wimpy character named William "Willie" Faye, was played by Robert North.

Like the original "Jack Benny Program," this was a show within a show. The married couple were the stars of a musical variety radio show sponsored by the real show's sponsors, including Rexall Drug Company and later RCA Victor. Gale Gordon played both sponsors and became a regular character in the show. 

Another standout was the neighbor boy, Julius Abbruzio, played by Walter Tetley, who also voiced Sherman in the Jay Ward cartoons "Peabody and Sherman." Phil and Frank try to con the young Julius, but Julius outsmarts the duo every time. 

Phil Harris was still a part of the "Jack Benny Program" during the production of his show. During the first half of the Benny program, he would join the cast at the CBS studios on Vine Street in Hollywood, exit the show, get into a waiting limo that would take him a couple of blocks to the NBC studio for his show with his wife.

One dated element in this series was the musical numbers performed by Alice Faye, a popular actress, dancer, and recording artist, and the novelty songs performed by Phil Harris, another popular recording artist. As you listen to the musical numbers, remember that those performances, although now often corny, were popular with audiences at the time.

Another aspect of these classic radio recordings is that they were performed live but recorded on audio tape for broadcast in the Western time zones. Because they were live, they often ran long. That's when the NBC announcer cuts in and says, "This is NBC, the National Broadcasting Company," while the show is seemingly still underway.

TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 INTRO
00:37 DINNER FOR TEACHER
30:20 MOVIE ROLE
59:59 SPRING HOUSECLEANING
1:29:44 MOTHERS DAY PRESENT
1:59:22 CADILLAC IN THE SWIMMING POOL
2:29:03 PHIL'S BOAT
2:58:38 THE PICNIC
3:28:21 THE TONSILLECTOMY
3:58:02 THE FRENCH ORPHAN
4:27:48 FRANKIE'S FOSTER SON
4:57:28 CONCERN ABOUT CONTRACT RENEWAL
5:27:09 KEEPING REGULAR OFFICE HOURS
5:56:48 FRANKIE BORROWS PHILS NEW CAR
6:26:28 THREE GREY HAIRS
6:56:29 A FIGHT IN THE MARKET
7:26:20 SPONSOR'S FORMAL PARTY HONORING HARRIS'S
7:55:59 THE UKULELE
8:26:00 THE TELEVISION TEST
8:56:04 THE ENGINEER
9:26:06 TALENTED CHILDREN SCREEN TEST
9:56:12 INVESTMENT IN FEMALE WRESTLER
10:26:14 SPONSOR TO HIRE MYRTLE
10:56:19 DISHWASHER AND GARBAGE DISPOSAL

NBC Phil Harris-Alice Faye

Phil Harris and Alice Faye at NBC Television in Burbank in the late 1950s.

(NBC)

This compilation was posted by "Dino's Duck Soup," a classic radio collector with his own YouTube Channel. Visit his channel, available here, to view his collection of classic shows. 

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Click on the NWS logo above to get the Lincoln, IL site and/or

click on the links below the logo for the latest weather story and current radar view of Mid-Illinois.

Support the National Weather Service!  Contact your Congressional Representatives

Latest Updates

2025-0311 Added the news item that Sinclair Broadcast Group has sold five Midwest TV stations, including ones visible across Mid-Illinois. The complete story is on this page.

2025-0313 Updated an unavailable video to replace with a video of one of the most popular TV shows of the 1950s on the WCIA history page. Now you can see the opening titles of "The Phil Silvers Show, You'll Never Get Rich" from 1955-1959. It also includes some rare commercials with Phil Silvers and other cast members. 

2025-0313 Added a picture of Wolfman Jack with the Classic Radio video/audio selection. It was taken in 1974 as he made an appearance at KSLQ, 98.1FM, St. Louis. His syndicated show would air a couple of years later on KADI, 96.3FM, St. Louis. That's where the aircheck below is taken from.

2025-0319-20 I found some additional pictures in my file from radio and TV stations that I added to the various pages. Included more pictures of the history of WICD and WJJY-TV and radio stations WDBR, WDAN, WTIM and within the Radio Automation page. 

2025-0324 Updated several subchannels in TV Today in the Mid-Illinois and Chicago pages. More updates are likely in the other markets over the next week or so.

2025-0331 New TV Time Capsule posted, opening the capsule to September 11-17, 1954.

2025-0331 I returned "Cutting the Cable/Satellite" page to the site.

2025-0331 Each of the "TV Now" pages of the TV markets includes a link to get the local TV schedule grid. The former source went out of business last week, so the source is now to the Channel Master antenna people. Just click on the logo for "Channel Master" and insert your zip code to see what off air channels are available in your area. Note that many of the low power stations will not reach the entire market. Check the coverage area maps of each to see if you're included.

2025-0405 Updated TV Today pages for all of the different markets to add and replace new networks., mostly for "Busted."

2025-0405 Added a newly found TV Guide ad for "WFIL's Bandstand" to the TV History, Historical TV Highlights page under "American Bandstand" with a picture and name of the show's original host, Bob Horn.

2025-0419 The FCC is seeking comments from the public on ATSC 3.0 broadcasts. That would include the choice many broadcasters have made encrypting the signal, making it unavailable for many newer sets and set top box tuners for ATSC 3.0 broadcasts. See more details on the "Cutting the Cable" page on this site, or click here to watch the video on the page from Tyler the Antenna Man.

 

 

WAND  1978 Ice Storm

2025-0419 Easter Weekend 1978 was a significant event for two communities and their current and former TV stations. It was the day their broadcast towers were destroyed by an unusual ice storm that covered Mid-Illinois with ice.  See the pictures and read the story of how WAND recovered from the catastrophe and what occurred with the tallest broadcast tower in Illinois, with the former WJJY-TV

 

I posted new images of ads placed by WAND in the local newspaper, and noted the help given by one central Illinois TV station to WAND and the fact that another apparently didn't. 

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"Pictures on the Prairie: The First Ten Years of Central Illinois Television" by Doug Quick

Much of the information on the history of TV pages on this site comes directly from my 2016 book "Pictures on the Prairie: The First Ten Years of Mid-Illinois Television." There are many more pictures on this site than in the book as space was limited. 

Latest TV 
Headlines

Tom Llamas NBC News

2025-0306 NBC Names Replacement for Lester Holt on the NBC Nightly Newscast

Tom Llamas has been named the next anchor and managing editor NBC Nightly News, beginning this summer.

He takes over for Lester Holt. Llamas will also continue anchoring Top Story with Tom Llamas on NBC News NOW each weeknight, which is available by clicking on NBC News Now above.

Sinclair Broadcast Group

Sale of Five Television Stations including Mid-Illinois Stations WICS and WICD Announced

Tuesday, March 11, 2025  One thing you can say about Central Illinois Television and the Springfield-Decatur-Champaign market is that change is slow and rare. Not since the turn of the 21st century have we seen any major ownership changes of the heritage TV stations in the market. Recalling the shift of WICS/WICD from Guy Gannett to Sunrise, then quickly to Sinclair, then the WAND ownership change from LIN Broadcasting to Block Communications, and about the same time Nexstar purchased WCIA/WMBD from Midwest Television. Those were seemingly set in stone over the last 20 years, but now another change is taking place.

 

Sinclair, Inc. has sold five Midwest TV stations to Rincon Broadcasting. The stations include Springfield's WICS (ABC), Channel 20, and Champaign's WICD (ABC), Channel 15. The other stations are KHQA (CBS-ABC), Channel 7 Hannibal, MO-Quincy, IL; KTVO (ABC-CBS), Channel 3 Kirksville, MO-Ottumwa, IA; and WVTV (CW), Channel 18, Milwaukee, WI. The Springfield (IL) Business Journal reported that the purchase price was $29.4 million. Rincon Broadcasting is based out of Santa Barbara, CA.

Rincon's principal owner is Todd Parkin, a former executive of Bally Sports regional sports networks who most recently was the Senior Vice President of Sports Operations. Sinclair, Inc. was a partner that operated the Bally Sports networks, Diamond Sports Group, which filed for bankruptcy Chapter 11 in 2023 and emerged from bankruptcy in 2024. Sinclair is no longer a part of that regional sports operation. Parkin is also the managing director of media and vice president of growth at Think Consulting in Atlanta, GA.

 

According to CNBC, just last year, Sinclair announced it was selling 30% of its 185 owned or operated stations and working with an investment bank to help with the sale.  

Although the operations of the GOCOM stations FOX affiliates WRSP, Channel 55, Springfield, and WCCU, Channel 27, Urbana, or CW affiliate WBUI, Channel 23, Decatur, are under a local management agreement with WICS, there's been no official word as to that continuing after the sale. 

Sources:

Capitol City Now, Springfield, IL

Dun & Bradstreet

The Desk.net

Muddy River News

Radio and Television Business Report

Protect My Public Media

2025-0419 The current administraton has a plan to eliminate almost all federal funding to PBS (Public Broadcasting Service) and NPR (National Public Radio). Now is the time to contact your congressional representative and senators to maintain federal support for Public Media. For more details visit NPR-WBEZ Chicago.

For the latest on the plan to cut funding for NPR and PBS click here.

MeTV FM 87.7-Chicago

Now Streaming Nationally

Click on the image above to listen to MeTVFM. It's the popular music companion to MeTV, Memorable Entertainment Television, America’s #1 all classic television network. Launched at 87.7FM in late February, 2015, MeTVFM features a unique mix of timeless and memorable music incorporating a wide variety of classic hits, deep tracks and softer sounds spanning several decades of popular music.

Previously on Videos of the Week...

If you've missed any of the "Videos of the Week" or "Classic Radio" recordings, you'll find them here. Unfortunately, there's no written narrative to go along with each. You have to visit each week for that.

Classic Radio

WLS AM/FM (1985) Animal Stories Larry Lujack, Tommy Edwards

 

WAND (1982) ABC-Aircheck

 

WCIA (late 1970s) Paul Davis and Mr. Roberts

WICS (1996) News segment Mel-O-Cream

 

WBAK-TV (1982) ABC-Aircheck

 

WEEK-TV, 70 Years-Captain Jinks and Salty Sam

WCIA (1983) PM Magazine-Complete Show

WICD-TV (1984) Aircheck of NBC Movie of the Week

WAND (1982) ABC Late Night-Vegas aircheck
 

WICD (1992) Complete Newscast
 

WEEK-TV (1989) Weather Bill Houlihan

WICD-TV (1984) Aircheck of NBC- Bosom Buddies/Mama's Family

WHOI (1993) 6 pm News

 

WICS (2013) Home for the Holidays Promo

 

Classic Radio

WDNL (1987) Doug Quick

Tonight Show (1954) NBC Steve Allen

Tonight Show (unknown date) NBC Steve Allen

Steve Allen Show (1958) NBC

Interview with Steve Allen (1977)

The Tonight Show (1960) NBC Jack Paar

Dorothy Kilgallen vs. Jack Paar Video

Dorothy Kilgallen Story Video

The Tonight Show (1960) NBC Jack Paar with guest Sen. John F. Kennedy

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1962) NBC

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1964) NBC

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1965) NBC New Year's Eve Show

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1971) NBC

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (1982) NBC 20th Anniversary Show

Ten Commercials from the early 1950s (1950s) Variety

TV Commercials from the 1950s and early 1960s, Variety

1950s-1960s TV Commercials, Variety

TV Commercials (1960s) Variety
 

70s Commercials (1977) ABC
 

TV Commercials from Oscar Broadcast (1978) ABC
 

80s Retro TV Commercials (1980s) Variety
 

Wendy's Hamburgers (1985) Russian Fashion Show

Commercials from the 90s (1990s) Variety

TV Commercials from the 2000s
 

Radio Classics
WLS 890AM Chicago (1973) Charlie Van Dyke/Fred Winston/JJ Jeffries/John Landecker/Bill Bailey

 

KPNX-TV, NBC 12 News, Phoenix, Arizona

Bonanza (1960-61) NBC 14 Episodes

Bewitched (1964) ABC Pilot

Gidget (1965) ABC Pilot

​Rango (1967) ABC 

All in the Family (1972) CBS "Sammy's Visit"

What's Happening (1977) ABC "Doobie or Not Doobie"

​Carol Burnett Show-The Family (1977) CBS "Elephant Story" segment

Classic Radio

WLS-FM (1982) Chicago Steve Dahl and Garry Meier

The Disco Demolition Film

Starsky and Hutch (1975) ABC First Episode

Sanford (1980) NBC Pilot

Newhart (1982) CBS Pilot

​All-Star Party for Burt Reynolds (1981) CBS

The Twilight Zone: Rod Serlings's Lost Classics (CBS) 1994 Special with James Earl Jones
 

People Are Funny (1955) NBC Art Linkletter

 

You Bet Your Life (1955) NBC Groucho Marx
 

Classic Radio

Phil Harris and Alice Faye Show (1940s) NBC  Over 11 hours of shows

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

WTVH, Channel 19, Peoria, IL
wics_53_testpattern01-small_edited.jpg
WEEK, Channel 43, Peoria
WCIA, Channel 3, Champaign, IL
WTVP (WAND) Channel 17, Decatur, IL
WBLN, Channel 15, Bloomington, IL
WDAN,Channel 24, Danville, IL

Coming in May

The next addition to the Museum site will be another "TV Time Capsule," scheduled for May 1st. 

Then the next Featured Videos will be updated on May 3rd. 

 

Check back often for more details! 

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Central Illinois On-Line Broadcast Museum and dougquick.com supports the work of the St. Louis Media History Foundation. 

Visit their website at:

stlmediahistory.org

 

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