Posted on 05/03/2014 6:38:37 AM PDT by FlJoePa
Thanks for posting..did you notice the large dirt areas around first and third base that extended well into foul territory..wonder when that changed..
1919 World Series Footage White Sox vs Reds
Watch Rare Footage Of The Black Sox Throwing The 1919 World Series
Possibly at 3:42 mark, where Cicotte has no concern regarding cutoff throw after what appears to be Reuther’s 2-RBI triple, Rath’s RBI double, and Daubert’s RBI single (with Daubert going to second on the throw).
Why the simulator when they could have watched it on TV?
Not sure if that was a serious question or not, but I think the first televised WS was probably in the late 1940’s.
No skin off my apple. I posted a youtube link. You posted a cbs story w/ a link to the youtube link. I just wanted other posters to realize that there was a little more discussion on another thread. That’s all.
Your treatment of me and anything PSU related had nothing to do w/ my response to your initial thread.
Notice the clouds of smoke over the fans. Shows how bad smoking is as almost everybody alive at that time is now dead. /sarcasm.
One last thing. The reason I didn’t link the cbs article (just the youtube link) is because I simply don’t want to give cbs the hits.
The entire organization needs an enema, and the sports department has become a bunch of basement bloggers/local radio idiots who spread lies and untruths w/ absolutely no repercussions. I detest these people and all those who blindly follow them.
I refuse to even go to their websites (including espn, fox, and others) to check a baseball score. I’ll find it somewhere else.
cooler than a block of ice delivered to the house
We should have a long off-thread conversation sometime about PSU prosecutors.
You can freep mail me anytime re PSU. I’ll happily and honestly share what I know. And I know a lot. Not as much as JZ, Blehar, or certainly the true insiders like Lubrano, but lets just say I’ve followed it rather closely.
There were all sorts of things were recorded to film (or transcription audio records) for members of the US military who were stationed abroad. A little bit of home.
I’ve seen lost episodes of the Tonight Show turn up this way as well (from the 1960s).
The Tonight Show epis I'd dearly like to see (NBC recorded over them...), or at least listen to, are the ones of Bill Dana's "Jose Jimenez" appearances during the Apollo 11 mission.
There were also people home taping audio from television and radio.
I did it myself in the 1970s and 80s (no VCR).
I saw one time someone who had a trading/selling list of around 10,000 hours of programming (maybe in one of the record collecting or movie paper collection newspapers). What I recall seeing on that list was pretty amazing (I never got the full list nor did I ever try to get any recordings from him).
Professional sports frown on home recording/sharing of their events.
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