Home Page
Dishing it out
Man beams 5,000 radio, TV channels with a dozen satellite receivers
Are 20 movie channels on demand just not enough?
Do constant reruns of “I Love the ’80s” on VH1 have you ready to gouge out your eyeballs?
Then come to Al Jessup’s house — where his 5,000-plus radio and television stations from around the world beamed in by his 12 satellite dishes are bound to keep you entertained somehow.
Since 1998, the Beckley resident has amassed a collection of 12 dishes around his James Street home. He said he first just began subscribing to Direct TV and Dish Network, but he later learned that by purchasing special satellite receivers he could receive “free to air” programming from several different satellites swirling the globe. The information on how to adjust a dish and set up a receiver to pick up programming from these stations such as Galaxy 10, AMC 2 and Telestar 5 is included with these receivers.
“Up in the sky, there’s lots of free stuff,” he said.
Over the years, the 54-year-old disabled former ice cream salesman collected more and more dishes so he could pick up more and more “free to air” channels. Neighbors, he said, never complained about his large display of dishes in front of his house. In fact, some of his dishes were hand-me-downs from his neighbors.
The last time he counted, he received more than 5,000 channels. He has stopped counting since.
Now, he picks up local stations from Wyoming, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Tennessee and Ohio, he said. Being a former resident of both Tennessee and New Orleans, he does like to watch the local news from there, just to see what is happening.
“New York, New Hampshire, New Jersey, you name it,” Jessup said. “I get everything but Alaska. But if I pointed something toward Alaska, I’d probably get Alaska.
“... I can scoot one over and see what’s going on in Ohio ... or the U.S. Virgin Islands.”
His Beckley home would likely rival most government communications centers. Not only does he pick up stations from across the country, but across the world as well. He picks up stations from Jordan, Iraq, Iran, Jerusalem and other foreign locations.
“Sometimes they speak English, and sometimes they don’t,” he said. “You never know.
“It’s just interesting to watch stations from far away.”
In his home, Jessup has three television sets, and only one gets the plethora of stations. The other two, he said, just receive his programming from his Direct TV and Dish Network subscriptions.
Because the programming is free, it changes regularly, he noted. Sometimes, a program he likes will disappear and something he dislikes will be put in its place, or vice versa. For example, he once had three ABC stations from Wyoming only to have it reduced to one.
“One day it may be here, the next day it may be gone, the next day it may be back,” he said. “You never know.”
Jessup said some programming includes things he likes, like racing or music, and some of it is, well, “weird.”
Soon, he plans to add a 13th dish to his collection, he said. He may later get a “fancy” satellite dish that is basically like 16 dishes in one. This could eliminate some of the dishes outside his house — or enable him to get even more channels.
“I could point them toward the east where there’s a bunch of satellites running around,” he said. “I don’t know what I would get there.”
- Today's Front Page
-
Bluefield native and serviceman the Rev. Raymond E. Pedigo talks about the Japanese surrender during World War II. Pedigo finished ninth grade in 1943, and with three brothers already in the military, he signed his own enlistment papers and went off to serve his country.
-
Remembering the past
Sixty-five years ago today, Bluefield native and serviceman the Rev. Raymond E. Pedigo stood aboard a ship in Tokyo Bay near the USS Missouri as Army Gen. Douglas MacArthur and Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Mamoru Shigemitsu signed a written agreement called the Japanese Instrument of Surrender.
- A look ahead
- Back of the line
- Patriot ordered to clean up selenium in W.Va.
-
Remembering the past
- Local News
-
-
Country singer to headline celebration
Country music star John Michael Montgomery will headline the Wyoming County Labor Day Celebration in Pineville, according to Sherri Morgan-Ellison, entertainment coordinator.
- Raleigh deputies promoted; certificates given
- Man flees confinement
- Fayette resident sentenced
- Private plane lands safely
-
Country singer to headline celebration
- Today's Sports Front
-
-
Herd prepared for challenge
With the season opener looming, first-year Marshall coach Doc Holliday was asked if he was worried about his team being too jacked up for tonight’s game at second-ranked Ohio State.
- Don’t fault WVU for opening with a gimme game
- Flying Eagles looking for some revenge
- Herd LB making grade on defense
- Oak Hill-Mount Hope: Final battle for ‘Jug?’
-
- Inside Sports
-
-
Sports categories
Click HERE for High School Sports
Click HERE for College Sports
Click HERE for Other Sports
-
Sports categories
- Editorials
-
-
No laughing matter
Failure to vote is a slap in the face of democracy
-
No laughing matter
- Life!
-
-
Make-A-Wish installs play set for girl
Little Sydney Lusk was happily running around, playing with her friends and family on her new Rainbow Play Set that the Make-A-Wish Foundation had installed Saturday.
- Dandelions a good object lesson for life
-
- Money
-
-
Secret Sandwich Society won’t stay secret for long
Owners of new Fayetteville eatery want folks to be surprised at advanced flavor combinations
- Blue Ridge Memorial Gardens building fifth mausoleum
- Family and good food
-
- Sunday Profile
-
-
HOSPICE HOUSE
Over 250 get tour of fundraiser home
- 18th annual Animal Upper Gauley race
- Hatfield-McCoy Trail
-
- The BNI
-
-
Two straight for Brand
With the field in full pursuit, Christian Brand went into defense mode.
- Final-round scores in the 30th annual BNI Memorial Tournament.
- Two-time BNI champ
-





