A Rare Look At The WNEW Control Room…Sonny Fox ‘Wonderama’ Tour


A Rare Look At The WNEW Control Room…Sonny Fox ‘Wonderama’ Tour

This clip is from the early 1960s and was sent to us from Barry Mitchell with this interesting note. “I’ve had this rare clip for years: it was on a reel of 2” tape that had been donated to my college, most likely by WNEW-TV. ‘Wonderama’ host Sonny Fox guides us through the Channel 5 control room at the Metromedia Telecenter, 205 East 67th Street, New York City. Last time I passed by the studio a couple of years ago, the front door handles still bore the old “MM” emblems.”

Thanks for the clip Barry! Enjoy and share! -Bobby Ellerbee

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfo5wCwai2Q

Sonny takes his young viewers into the control room of his Sunday morning WNEW-TV program to see how a television show is made. Check out the 1950s DuMont br…

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23 thoughts on “A Rare Look At The WNEW Control Room…Sonny Fox ‘Wonderama’ Tour

  1. I like hearing the “clunk” each time the technical director punches a button on the switcher. The first switcher I worked with had those heavy duty all mechanical switches and made that same sound.

  2. And the director Arthur Forrest is still going … is the EP/director of NBC’s Rose Bowl parade coverage. Amazing career, from DuMont in NY to 2015’s HD digital world.

  3. I sat in this Control room watching them Direct Romper Room when I was 10 or 11. My first intro to TV Tech. A friend of my parents was a manager at NEW, he brought me in one day. My brother had been an audience member on Wonderama a few weeks earlier. We both ended up in the TV Biz, me doing what I do, my brother helping to build and manage the Fox network.

  4. The most innovative local station and group owner in television. As a kid growing up in NJ, channel 5 was it. Actually bought stock in Metromedia – that’s how much of a fan I was. Should have held on to it, the stock went to $500 a share when they invested in a new thing called cellular telephones.

  5. I met Sonny Fox once as a kid, but not on Wonderama. He had a home in Westchester near a day camp I went to every summer. He came by one day to say hi to all the campers. Years later, when I interned at WNEW-TV, Wonderama was still on the air, hosted by Bob McAllister, whom I bumped into occasionally in the hallways. He was a great host but that show would always belong to Sonny Fox.

  6. We were one of the first families in my neighborhood to get cable. Growing up in Binghamton NY, our cable offerings besides the three local network affiliates included Channels 5, 9 and 11 from New York. What a treat it was for us to be able to watch Wonderama with Sonny Fox on WNEW-TV!

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