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The 1940s Ralph Renick was hired right out of the University of Miami as the station's first news director, but there was no newscast.
WTVJ stunned south Florida when it carried the first live coverage of the Orange Bowl parade also that same year. In 1949, WTVJ presented The Old Readhead himself, Arthur Godfrey (pictured, left). It was Miami's first network television show. The 1950s and 1960s In 1952, South Floridians had their television sets tuned to "The Gary Moore Show" (pictured, right). It was on Gary's show that a another young star was introduced to the nation -- Miss Carol Burnett. In 1950, the Korean War began -- and so did the Ralph Renick Report, our area's first TV newscast.
Bernie Rosen (pictured, right) also started with Weaver as an intern in 1949 and wound up a nationally-known sports director. "In the '50s... WTVJ had more firsts than the Yankeess had World Championships," Bernie said. 1952 was also the year that WTVJ dedicated a new television studio. At 7,000 square feet, it was the largest TV theater in the south and opened in November 1952.
In 1956, America's most famous TV couple, Lucy and Desi were brought to Miami by WTVJ and the town went wild. The same year, WTVJ presented what was to become one of the most successful and long running series on television -- "Gunsmoke."
Also in 1956, WTVJ went to Sarasota to send back live pictures of the circus with 10 cameras in the Big Top and two on the midway. In 1957, Chuck Zink ("Skipper Chuck") started the first kids show, "Popeye Playhouse," a big event for South Florida kids. More firsts from WTVJ:
WTVJ will be the first digital station in the Miami market, meaning sharper images and more timely information than ever before. But for all that, the underlying commitment to you is one shaped by 50 years of pioneering. Contact Us
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