Zoom Shot
One day in L.A., a helicopter changed television news forever.
- By Stephen Joiner
- Air & Space magazine, May 2009
In 1958 the first TV news helo, KTLA’s Telecopter, debuted in L.A.
Courtesy John Silva
(Page 6 of 6)
On morning and afternoon flights, Horton's flying has to avoid angles at which the California sun can zap the lens. Bright white buildings and rooftops play havoc with color balance, so she maneuvers those out of the shot too. Through it all, the helicopter must be oriented so the belly-mounted microwave beam clears the skids and camera pod.
Another necessary skill: "parked" hovering, high above a protracted incident (like an all-day hostage drama). Long-duration hovering can be draining. "It's really an odd sensation to hover out of ground effect at high altitude for so long," says Horton. "Sometimes we'll hang there for two or three hours on a story, then go refuel, and come back and hover some more. And though you're only hovering, you're still flying that aircraft every second. But it's really more mentally tiring than physically."
With every major L.A. television station having a news helicopter (there are eight total), the pilots are rivals, but they're amiable too. Horton maintains air-to-air chatter with the competition. "When you're flying news in L.A.," she explains, "you've got eight other helicopters racing you to get to the scene first. We're talking all the way." Pilots know their stations are monitoring live images from other channels' helicopters. "Basically we're expected to get that same shot, or something better," Horton says.
In John Silva's Los Angeles home, an Emmy award for inventing the Telecopter stands next to a model of little Telecopter 1. Only days from the golden anniversary of that first airborne broadcast, 88-year-old Silva is not looking back—or down. I wonder how he feels watching high-def coverage beamed 24/7 from news choppers like Desiree Horton's today, and knowing every one is a direct descendant of his 1957 brainstorm.
"I never thought about being a pioneer," he laughs. "All I ever wanted to do was get us there and get the picture—before the competition got it."
Contributor Stephen Joiner writes about aviation from Southern California.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6





Comments (8)
If anyone is interested in reading about the Telecopter by the gentleman who invented it, John Silva, I direct your attention to an article by him in Tech-Notes #137 published on March 5, 2007. The link is: http://www.tech-notes.tv/Archive/tech_notes_137.pdf. The story begins on page 3 but the detailed part about the Telecopter begins on page 5.
Larry Bloomfield, KA6UTC
1980 25th St.
Florence, OR 97439
(541) 902-2424 (everything number)
www.Tech-Notes.TV
See you on the Taste of NAB Road Show
Posted by Larry Bloomfield on March 31,2009 | 05:05 AM
Fascinating article, thanks.
Posted by The Sanity Inspector on June 5,2009 | 11:44 AM
My Uncle "Mo" is a hero in our family!!! I am so proud to be part of a family that was such an important part of history!
Posted by Susie Morby Shoemaker on August 30,2009 | 08:20 PM
Nice to remember all this. Growing up I'd always be at the hangar in burbank, helping my dad. He was the chief mechanic there: Edward Ochwatt. He's passed now, but never forgotten in my heart.
Bobby.
Posted by ROBERT OCHWATT on November 16,2009 | 02:34 PM
What ever happened to KTLA's telecopter pilot Larry Scheer, who did the reports from the air in the 1970s?
Posted by elliott alper on December 14,2009 | 04:51 PM
I have great memories of watching the Channel 5 News Telecopter Reports, on the Channel 5 News. Living in Burbank, California as a young boy I really enjoyed watching these newscasts.
Posted by Carl Swirkal on December 24,2009 | 05:07 PM
I worked at KTLA from the mid 60's to the early 80's and remember the development of the "World's only Color Jet Telecopter." In one instance, they landed the Jet Ranger on a mountain top. Pilot/Reporter Larry Scheer got out with a cabled microphone and did an interview. That was unusual. Much excitement was generated in the news room when the word went out: "Chopper's up." Something now heard at many stations around the country.
Posted by Don Whittaker on October 17,2010 | 06:12 PM
This is a great article, encompassing the passion for news and aviation. This guy's determination is wonderful. Sorry he's gone.
Posted by Doug Gerash on December 22,2012 | 03:16 AM