[quote name=\'JCGames\' date=\'Mar 26 2005, 06:44 PM\']Randy, you mention that Don Pardo's first assignment was 'waming up' the network lines before the Hour of Charm started. He must have been the duty announcer that Sunday night in 1944. He must have just came on at the end of the American Album of Familiar Music to say "This is NBC the National Broadcasting Company" and then pressed the button that started the chime machine. His 'warmup' was perhaps the local WEAF station break(10 PM B-U-L-O-V-A Bulova Watch Time.....).
......Oh, the Hour of Charm was a musical show that featured Phil Spitalny and his All-Girl Orchestra, featuring Evelyn and her Magic Violin. Oh, the sorbiquets they gave radio performers back then! The show was sponsored by Howard Reig's original(and last) employer, GE.
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Kudos JC for the research! Yes, the amazing and legendary chime machine. For those unfamiliar, NBC's 3 note signature (G-E-C for
General
Electric
Corporation) was not struck with a mallet by hand like a high school principal doing the public address announcements. It was generated by a huge rotating drum device. Weird, wild, wacky stuff!
And thanks for the info on "Hour of Charm"! Don Pardo made it clear that he was not the announcer on that show, but that his first non-news assignment was keeping the net phone lines warm with chatter and countdown so affiliate stations would know the line was hot (phone lines were far less dependable than the distribution systems now in place).
And to the earlier comment about Mel Brandt being the voice on the peacock "living color" show open, I know there were several versions of that animation and voice-over before they settled on the one that was burned into our memory. But is anyone familiar with which of those were voiced by staff announcer Bill Hanrahan?
As Bob Hope would have sung to Pamela Anderson, "Thanks for the mammaries"!
Randy
tvrandywest.com