James Day, co-founder of San Francisco's KQED and host of the influential weekly interview program
Kaleidoscope, died last Thursday from respiratory failure. He helped establish public television's reputation for in-depth, serious programming and blazed the trail for pubTV on-air pledge drives and auctions. In 1995, he penned a history of public television,
The Vanishing Vision: The Inside Story of Public Television.
Current contributing editor David Stewart drew from Day's account for
this feature on KQED's early years.
Variety, the
San Francisco Chronicle, and the
New York Times have each published obits.
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