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Fifty years ago, KPBS took the airways on September 12, 1960. And a small group of pioneers
in broadcasting, in public broadcasting, filled with energy, excitement, creativity, were
the ones who launched KPBS. Those individuals we’re honoring as the charter members of
the KPBS Hall of Fame are: Ken Jones, John Witherspoon, Tom McMantis, Paul Marshall,
and Paul Stein. At the very beginning of kpbs television the
man who really is responsible for starting it, I was the first general manager, but the
guy who really got it going was professor Ken Jones here at San Diego state. Ken put
the ideas together put some of the money together from various sources including the university
and including the school system and invited me to be general manager and I was needless
to say delighted to accept. I’m offly glad that I was around, and the
guy that was first in line. I can remember when I first came in and saw what I had to
work with, what amounted to a closet in the back of a little theater, oh boy, so the development
has been fun and I’m terrible terribly proud of that.
Ken really was the father of KPBS. It was his fiery determination, his vision, and his
commitment to get KEBS off the ground. And he pushed, and he pushed, and he pushed- and
it wasn’t easy, but on September 12, 1960 Ken reached his dream and got KEBS off the
ground. One of the really memorable events of the
very early days of kpbs right after television came on the air, was that a number of us were
invited to come to the white house for the signing of the public broadcasting act by
president Johnson in 1967. Before that we had kind of a loose organization of stations
and programs that were zipped around by various means but we didn’t really have proper programming
networks and we didn’t have a national organization to make the whole thing go. And the corporation
for public broadcasting was the way to make that happen and they in turn of course created
national public radio and the public broadcasting service, and I was just delighted to shake
hands with president Johnson at the time he signed the public broadcasting act.
Tom McMantis worked for John Witherspoon, but in reality, Tom was KPBS’ first full
time employee. And running the radio station, Tom created a program schedule that included
jazz music, folk music, news, classical music, Spanish language programming, and a group
of community producers that he cultivated to produce programs and segments about the
place we call home. Paul Marshall was KPBS’ first Director of
Production, and launched the KPBS Documentary Film Unit.
He really transformed us into an organization beyond news and information by showcasing
the arts and cultural organizations of our community. And he ended up being KPBS’ most
prolific producer, receiving 12 Emmys for his incredible work. He was an artist in his
own way and his easel was the television screen. It’s been a great 25 years for me working
at kbps prior to retiring, and well I’m particularly proud of the club date series.
I did over 60 of these half hour club date programs and they played nationally they were
distributed to about 2 300 public TV stations, then beyond that it got into international
distribution, so it was quite well known, right now the library of congress has jazz
archives and they contacted us and were interested in having club date in their jazz archives
and they are there now. So I feel good about that that we preserved them.
Paul Stein deserves to be in the KPBS Hall of Fame because it was under his leadership
that brought us the state-of-the-art telecommunications center that we now call home. But he also
made a very, very important decision in 1991, when we changed our radio station to a mixed
format to focus on just on news and information. And we’ve never looked back because we’re
now a news based organization and it was his decision that started us going in that direction.
Being in the kpbs hall of fame is to me is a great honor, more than I can even talk about,
and while I get the honor I can only say thank you to all of the people with whom I worked.
It was a wonderful time to be here, I think anytime that you can be in on the beginning
of something and then watch it as it develops and grows, it’s the best time to be there
in many ways.