Lucky 7 (pirate TV station)

Lucky 7 was a pirate television station, believed to be the first ever to operate in the United States, that aired for three nights in the spring of 1978 in Syracuse, New York.

"Lucky 7"
Syracuse, New York
ChannelsAnalog: 7 (VHF)
BrandingLucky 7
History
Founded1978 (1978)

Operation

Lucky 7 (operated by the "Renegade Broadcasting Company") aired for a total of 25 hours during the evenings of April 14–16, 1978 (Friday, Saturday and Sunday) on VHF channel 7, an otherwise-unoccupied frequency in the Syracuse area.[1]

Programs aired by Lucky 7 included episodes of such TV series as Star Trek and The Twilight Zone, as well as several films unavailable on broadcast television at the time. These included Oscar-winners Rocky and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, plus pornographic fare such as the infamous Deep Throat and Behind the Green Door. (Deep Throat, making its TV debut, was on two reels of 2” film; an unknown person told jokes while the second one was being loaded.) According to a New York Times report, a man with a gas mask and a noose around his neck was seen on-screen occasionally, editorializing and claiming that half the TVs in the Syracuse area were able to see the broadcasts. Station identification featured a pair of dice rolled to seven, backed by female singers (reportedly from Syracuse University's (SU) Crouse Music School). Lucky 7 made national news, with the real Syracuse TV stations featuring bits of the pirate broadcasts on their own news shows.[2]

Aftermath

As of 2020, the identity of the pirates remains unknown. At the time of broadcast, a Federal Communications Commission engineer theorized that the broadcasters tapped into Home Box Office and other networks to acquire programming, and that the transmissions probably originated from the SU area because Lucky 7 came in strongest near the campus. Subsequent speculation is that Lucky 7 was the brainchild of SU communications students (allegedly from the Newhouse School of Communications) who used equipment normally available for closed circuit broadcasts on Channel 7 on the University's cable system, and transmitted the over-air signal using a standard VHF reception antenna.[3][4]

References

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