KCND was the name of a television station in Pembina, North Dakota, which first signed on in 1959. KCND was purchased by Winnipeg, Manitoba businessman Izzy Asper in 1974 and relocated to Winnipeg; the station signed off as KCND for the final time on September 1, 1975 and signed back on as CKND later that day.
OK, that's the very short, official history of KCND. But MY history of the station runs a bit more like this...
- Chiller Thrillers! Mom and me, Saturday night, stay up to midnight, scared silly and loving it, chomping away at homemade buttered popcorn; we couldn't get enough of Vincent Price, Boris Karloff, or the old Hammer films with Christopher Lee & Peter Cushing, all thanks to scratchy old films KCND ran.
- Saturday & Sunday afternoon movies! All the classics from Errol Flynn's Robin Hood to Abbott & Costello Meets Frankenstein (I have never laughed harder before or since...); we didn't need cable or Turner Classic Movies - we had KCND programmers who got ahold of bad copies of great films and we the audience were all the beneficiaries.
- Christmas Concerts! All area schools would be invited to come and present mini-concerts on "Live TV", as a community service to the viewers at Christmas time.
- I met my first best friend! Thanks to KCND, I met a great friend when her Dad moved their family from Indiana to take an announcer job in Pembina where we met at a church youth group.
KCND Trivia: A modern pop band named Typewriter - once known as The Lucy Show - one of whose members lived in our area and grew up listening to KCND, eventually wrote a song directly relating to KCND, an homeage to their beloved Saturday night horror film series. It is aptly named, Channel 12 Chiller Thriller (KCND 10:30)!
Holy catz! I thought I was the ONLY person who watched Chiller Thriller! I loved the opening animated sequence (it would be fantastic to find that opening somewhere...). KCND showed the best stuff. I graduated high school in '79 from Thief River Falls. I remember watching House on Haunted Hill too--yay!
ReplyDeleteI watched it too! Great stuff on a late night in "Scary-peg".
DeleteYeah, that animated sequence was great:, the haunted house's door opening, a swarm of bats rushing out.. can't remember what came after that.
ReplyDeletePrior to the animated opening, it was a sequence of stills from assorted monster movies: the Frankenstein monster, Dracula, a big ol'hypodermic needle, clutching hands, etc etc.