Tag Archives: KTVW



KLAY Radio: A piece of the Clay Huntington Legacy

Clay Hungtington has operated stations KFHA-Lakewood, KLAY FM Tacoma, KQLA-Lakewood and now KLAY 1180-Lakewood, serving the Tacoma and South Sound area for well over 50 years. [pictured: Clay Huntington, voice of Tacoma Tigers baseball 1946-1951;] Huntington’s early sports broadcast career includes stints at KTBI, KTNT and KMO radio stations and both KTVW and KTNT television. All of this, as well as sports broadcasts on a 14-station network that covered Washington, Oregon, and Alaska. His vast record of community involvement includes helping to fund the construction of Cheney Stadium in 1960 and bring Triple A baseball back to Tacoma.
KLAY 106.1 FM was the first STEREO FM station in the Puget Sound region. At that time, KLAY FM was a Beautiful Music station. Ahhh…the sounds of Mantovani, Enoch Light and Richard Claydermann. Beautiful music orchestrations, programmed as background music, pleasant, relaxing and suitable for the office, home or in the car. Listeners stayed with KLAY FM for hours each day at work and at home. This format was relaxing and almost hypnotic when programmed right.
Competition for this format grew during the 60s and early 70s, with several stations adopting the format for some period. Over time there was KEZX, KBRD, KSEA, KIXI and KBIQ. Oceans of Beautiful Music emanated from some great Puget Sound area radio channels.
KLAY FM switched to a very different sound in the latter part of the 60s, Progressive Rock. Again, the station performed well and many people still recall that era and the DJs of KLAY. For example, Steve Slaton, who went on to a career at Album Rock stations in Seattle.
The FM was sold in the early 80s and became KRPM FM [now KBKS]. Clay Huntington continues to operate the AM, located in Lakewood at 1180 AM. He is still at the helm each day as 1180 KLAY broadcasts a talk radio format. Featured are many local hosts, such as well known civic leader Mike Lonergan and longtime horse racing expert and broadcaster, Vic Cozzetti, known as Victor the Predictor.

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Paul Herlinger

We have mentioned Paul Herlinger in a couple of stories related to KTNT Channel 11. He had quite a career in broadcasting, TV and radio both.
[Excerpted from the Tacoma News Tribune] Paul Herlinger was born in New York City on May 1, 1929. Herlinger moved to the Pacific Northwest in 1956. Paul knew he would be a broadcaster from the time he was a high school student at New York’s Stuyvesant High School. Chosen to attend an all-city radio workshop, Paul soon discovered he not only had a talent for radio-TV producing, but he was also blessed with a golden voice which he would use throughout his career as an actor in radio dramas and as a narrator for scores of documentaries and commercials. Settling in Tacoma, he indulged his love for the great outdoors. While working for KTNT-TV (1956-67) and KTVW-KCPQ-TV (1967-1980), he pursued skiing, hiking, and mountain climbing (twice scaling Mt. Rainier), and even fused his passion for the environment with his work, producing documentaries on such important regional topics as whether the Nisqually Delta should be preserved as a wildlife refuge or become a supertanker port, and the controversy surrounding the old Tacoma smelter. Paul and his wife traveled extensively in Europe and the two teamed up to produce several seasons of TV travelogues called “Blue Horizons,” broadcast locally on KTNT-TV (1965-72). Paul’s voice gave him special distinction. He was called upon to narrate regional and national documentaries, had numerous commercial clients, appeared in radio dramas, and for more than 10 years, until recently, played the leading role of John Avery Whittaker in the radio drama series “Adventures in Odyssey”, earning him fans worldwide. Most importantly, Paul Herlinger is remembered by his family as a man of peace and humility who genuinely believed in the goodness of the human spirit, who always had a listening ear and a word of encouragement, and who truly lived the words he taught his three children: to treat others the way you would want them to treat you. He passed away peacefully at his home in Tacoma on Feb. 2, 2010.

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KTVW – We don’t need no stinkin’ color TV

Channel 13 Tacoma, will be remembered for broadcasting in black and white from the time the station first went on the air as KMO-TV in 1953, right up until 1971, when the Blaidon group bought the station.
Programming consisted of sitcoms, westerns and dramas from decades earlier. Most of the movies shown on KTVW were from the 40s and 50s. It was a real wasteland, but there were occasional gems among them.
We watched KTVW due to curiosity. You never knew what was going to happen next. Many of the live interview or news programs were subject to technical errors. Channel 13′s live programming was usually good for a laugh. When there was a goof up, the logo card would be brought up on the screen and by it, the phrase, “Please Stand By…”
The Bob Corcoran show was live and ran for a couple hours each night. Viewers could call in to speak about subjects ranging from local politics to the building of the new Kingdome in downtown Seattle.
There would often be a prank call. Some teenager would get through the call screener and throw out a curse word or say something lame to the host. Corcoran took most of this in stride, knowing his show was prone to all that live television had to deal with. Some of his guests were major celebrities of the day. I recall an interview with comedian Professor Irwin Corey. The Bob Corcoran show had arrived!
Though the signal was beamed from the hill at 5544 North 35th Street, Tacoma, much of the Puget Sound region saw only shifting, blurry pictures from the low-power station. Most people were still using rooftop antennas.
Unfortunately, I know of no video of KTVW Tacoma available these days. That’s too bad. Channel 13 was a real kick! There’s nothing like “live & unscripted” television.

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1960s – The Golden Age of Children’s Television

It is that time, just before the “new Fall Season” of TV. 500 channels of entertainment in HD, and there is nothing to see. We didn’t have all these options years ago. “Back in the old days”, in Seattle-Tacoma, we had 7 channels, if you counted KTPS Channel 62, which was totally in black and white and featured only educational programming. KCTS Channel 9 wasn’t much better, both were affiliates of NET, the National Educational Television network (1963), which later became PBS (1969). Mr. Rogers Neighborhood and Friendly Giant were the only childrens programs I can recall from NET. Sesame Street, ZOOM and Electric Company were developed during the 70s.

The three main network stations were KOMO (ABC), KING (NBC) and KIRO (CBS). The CBS affiliation went back and forth between KIRO and KTNT Channel 11 (now KSTW CW 11) in the late 50s, early 60s, then again in the mid-90s, due to ownership changes and some national station swapping by the corporate owners of these stations.
KOMO 4 had a program for children called Captain Puget. One recurring guest on the show was Ivar Haglund, owner of Ivar’s restaurants, local personality and singer of old sea shanties. This was #4 on my list of favorites. I found the emphasis on travel and Pacific Northwest folklore to be kind of boring. I was watching TV for the cartoons. That was the name of the game before and after school. Captain Puget was on in the afternoon block of childrens programming that was observed by most stations in the period after school and before the 6 O’Clock news. Milt Furness, Bill Brubaker, Jim Harriot and Ruth Walsh were the local news anchors during the early years. The fastest talking weatherman in history was Ray Ramsey. You just looked at the graphics and tried to keep up with the words Ray Ramsey spoke with his machine gun style delivery. Bruce King was the sports anchor and he was a big guy. He looked like he had done some boxing or pro football in his time.

KING 5 had the Stan Boreson show, known as King’s Klubhouse, every afternoon. #3 on my list of favorite kid shows, Stan Boreson and his dog Nomo were entertaining and kind of corny, but good fun for kids and some great cartoons. Local news that followed the show was anchored by Ted Bryant and Charles Herring. The weather was presented by Bob Cram. Bob was one of the early “cartooning weathermen” rather than the fancy weather graphics we see today, Bob Cram would quickly draw a picture as he gave the weather forecast. It was usually a caricature of some funny-looking guy walking through water puddles on rainy days or laying on the beach on sunny days. Following the local news, NBC had the nightly Huntley-Brinkley Report. Chet Huntley [who started his career in Seattle] and David Brinkley were Walter Cronkite’s competition. As I recall, we watched KING 5 local news, but then switched to Channel 7 for old, trustworthy Uncle Walter.

The Ultimate kid show was JP Patches, the mayor of the city dump. This TV clown entertained the kiddies mornings and afternoons, with cartoons, Superman re-runs and humor. Some of the jokes were over the heads of the kids, but had adults rolling on the floor. JP and sidekick/girlfriend Gertrude the telephone operator, were #1 with most baby boomer kids that grew up in the Pacific Northwest. KIRO 7 local news was anchored by Cliff Kirk and a little hottie named Sandy Hill. She would have been the only reason any teenage boy watched the TV news. KIRO was owned by the Mormon church and the newscasts featured editorial commentary from Lloyd Cooney. Bob Hale was the cartooning weather man in the early years, before Harry Wappler enetered the picture. Sports anchor was Ron Forsell. Ron also anchored one of the early Northwest wrestling shows on Saturday afternoon.



KIRO also had a vampire that hosted the late-night thriller-chiller movie. Joe Towey was The Count, rising out of his coffin to scare us and talk about the scary movie we were watching. There were some corny gags and some pretty boring movies, not really scary. But, we stayed up late and watched it, because it was still good late night TV entertainment. Joe Towey was also the director of the JP Patches show for over 20 years. Channel 7 had a lot of local talent over the years.

The Brakeman Bill Show with sidekick [hand puppet] Crazy Donkey (the creation of announcer Warren Reed), was a close second to JP Patches on my list. This KTNT TV 11 program featured the classic Popeye cartoons and Bugs Bunny, plus a huge electric train set in the studio that Brakeman Bill operated. Channel 11 was just up the street from my elementary school in Tacoma in the 60s. We could walk to the station and some lucky kids got to be in the audience or part of the show.

Also in the building at 11th & Grant, was KTNT 1400 AM & 97.3 FM (later KNBQ, KBSG and now KIRO FM) I had the chance to hang out there on weekends talking to Bruce Vanderhoof and some of the other DJs. They, like Robert O. Smith of KTAC, and Big Ed Dollar and Chuck Ellsworth of KMO, were kind enough to let me watch them play the records, and they took the time to answer my questions about the radio business.

KTVW Channel 13, was low-budget, black and white programming with a few kid shows and some very ancient cartoons. The afternoon show was Penny & Her Pals. Puppets again. This show never really appealed to me. The picture on Channel 13 seemed grainy or washed out, probably due to the ancient equipment of the station, which eventually went bankrupt. KTVW became KPEC, a property of Clover Park Vocational Technical Institute. The call letters later changed to KCPQ and the station was sold to a California broadcaster who brought COLOR cameras and quality programming to the Tacoma station. The station later became an affiliate of FOX and is now owned by the Tribune company (WGN Chicago, among other properties).

KTVW Channel 13’s Stu Martin hosted the late-night movie called the Double Date, which featured two movies and Stu usually appeared with two lovely ladies by his side on each show.

The concept was altered a bit when Lee Perkins took over hosting duties years later. Perkins’ witty and sometimes corny humor punctuated the breaks during the feature presentations. Again, these late-night movies were B-grade at best, but we watched mainly to see the local personalities that hosted these shows. These local celebrities had a following. They could gather a crowd of fans at every personal appearance they made.

Another late-night host on Channel 13 was Bob Corcoran. His controversial talk show was sponsored by the B&I Circus Store and other local businesses. The callers were either fans or haters. I am not certain there was a call-screener on duty, or whether every caller was automatically put through to the host. Some of the comments were rude and the technicians in the booth would have to hit the kill button on the sound quite often. Teenagers loved to call the show and give him a bad time. It was very entertaining, LIVE, local television.

Mornings, after school and late at night, there always seemed to be something cool to see on TV, back in the good ol’ days.

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