Category Archives: advertising



’80s TV – Seattle radio promos

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KOMO 4 News 1984

[TV Guide]

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KTNT TV new fall lineup 1961


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[TV Guide]

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KMO – KTAC ads 1952




[1952 Tacoma Rockets Hockey advertising flyer]

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1936 KVI Tacoma promotional ad


[Tacoma News Tribune]

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Live! From our Bon Marche studio…



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Before there was a radio studio in the Space Needle (used at various times by KING, KIRO and KAYO), KVI had a broadcast facility in the early 1960s on the 8th floor of the Bon Marché.

If you could read it, the sign in the window says that on Friday, July 1, Dick Keplinger would do a noon newscast from the booth — located near the Skybridge — and that Buddy Webber’s show would air from the studio from 2-5:45 p.m.

[photo and story courtesy of Bill Taylor]

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Late nite flicks on KTVW 13

Circa 1964

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Tacoma’s one grand station

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J.P. twice daily

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PRESS STRIKE Sees Tacoma Radio Boom

PRESSMEN’S strike which stopped publication April 12 of the Tacoma News Tribune, the city’s only daily, has expanded news and feature coverage on Tacoma’s radio stations and made business “awfully good,” according to station executives. A week after the strike hit Tacoma’s afternoon and Sunday publication, all local stations reported success in (1) meeting the community’s need for news, and (2) serving advertising requirements of local business. To its normal 12 daily newscasts, KMO Tacoma swiftly added special commentary programs, two extra news shows Saturday and Sunday, and an extra sportcast daily, Jerry Geehan., general manager, reported. Notices of club meetings, Philharmonic concerts and other public events, and a quarter-hour of funeral and obituary notices, were being aired as a public service. Mr. Geehan said advertisers who heretofore have used radio consistently found business up to standard, although department stores and others who threw in a quick spot schedule to substitute for their normal newspaper ads were not having equal success. KTNT (FM), the transit-radio station owned by the News Tribune, took over the AP bureau for Pierce County (Tacoma) and -added two persons to its news staff. Burke Ormsby, KTNT director of news and special events, reported the station also launched a Sunday program with eight actors dramatizing the weekly comics. Over-all spot business at KTNT doubled after the strike began, he said. KTAC (formerly KTBI) Tacoma, which began a concentrated news coverage when it went fulltime February 11, augmented its news schedule tremendously, according to H. J. Quilliam, president. Business at the station boomed after the strike began, he said. [1952--Broadcasting Magazine]

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