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Joe Cicerone, Harry Booras and Rich Clements founded The Channel in 1980, [1] choosing the name because the club sat at the edge of the Fort Point Channel, which separates South Boston from the Financial District. The club was on the other side and a little south of where the Boston Tea Party took place (old Griffin's Wharf) in 1773.
The Channel (nightclub) Concert Hall (Boston, Massachusetts) F. Fenway Theatre; H. Harpers Ferry (nightclub) Harvard Musical Association; Hatch Memorial Shell; I.
Life On The V: The Story Of V66" is a documentary released in 2014, about the channel. Following the end of his first television venture, Garabedian returned to radio. In 1987, Garabedian restarted the Open House Party show as a Saturday and Sunday evening, all-request program on Boston station WXKS-FM. Over the next twenty years, the program ...
The Boston Tea Party was a concert venue located first at 53 Berkeley Street in the South End neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, and later relocated to 15 Lansdowne Street in the former site of competitor, the Ark, in Boston's Kenmore Square neighborhood, across the street from Fenway Park. It operated from 1967 to the end of 1970.
C. Castle Square Theatre; The Channel (nightclub) Charlie's Sandwich Shoppe; Cheers; Cheers Beacon Hill; Joyce Chen (chef) Chickering Hall (Boston, 1883) Chickering Hall (Boston, 1901)
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This included a running tradition of children's programming. In the 1970s and 1980s, "Uncle Dale" Dorman (also a popular Boston radio personality) hosted the cartoons via off-screen announcements. [34] A WLVI Kids Club was established in January 1990; by that July, it had 65,000 members across New England and as far as Long Island. [35]