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The news media on the "Firing Line": 1971

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Warning: political content ahead. (For Ray G.)

I hope you have time to watch this at some point, because it touches on things we see debated quite a bit in the pages of these TV Guides, most recently with Chet Huntley just over a week ago. It's William F. Buckley Jr.'s Firing Line from 1971: the title is "The News Twisters," the topic is media bias in presentation of the news, and the guests are TV Guide's Edith Efron and CBS's Andrew Rooney. The positions offered are fairly predictable - as one commentator offers, "the more things change, the more they stay the same" - but no less interesting for all that. No matter how you feel about the issue, you should find this discussion enjoyable; it's one thing to read about this in context, but it's always fun to see it play out in real time, as it were, especially with two of the people we read (and read about) so much.


Around the Dial

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GLEN CAMPBELL PREPARING TO TAPE THE GLEN CAMPBELL GOODTIME HOUR/CBS
If you thought that, after last week's massive offering, we weren't going to be able to compete this week, guess again.

I've often thought that in order to have been a successful variety show host, back in the days when the variety show was television royalty, you had to be able to do three things: (1) possess a talent that came across on television, (2) use that talent to attract similar types of talent, and (3) play the foil in comedy skits. This explains, for example, why you never saw The Spalding Gray Comedy Hour on television. Gray was perhaps the most brilliant monologist of his time, and proved himself more than adequate at humor during his turn as the Stage Manager in Our Town, but can you imagine an entire hour of Spuddy Grays talking to each other?* That's one reason why Glen Campbell was so successful. His personality was warm and winning; he was a natural on television, both as a singer and actor; and he had no trouble attracting talent to his Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour. Oh, and by the way he also recorded a ton of hit records. In short, he had all the qualities one needed, and that's why his program was a success from 1968 through 1972. He died this week after fighting a courageous and very public battle against Alzheimers, and the fact everyone knew it was coming didn't diminish the waves of affection that arose in wake of the news. R.I.P.

Jack Seabrook is on to another phase of his Hitchcock project at bare-bones e-zine, this time looking at the writing contributions of the great Charles Beaumont, beginning with the 1960 episode "Backward, Turn Backward" starring Tom Tully, Alan Baxter, and Phyllis Love. Having seen this episode, I agree with Jack's misgivings; nonetheless, even subpar Hitchcock is often far better than nothing.

Speaking of which, Ben Lindbergh's article from The Ringer (more about this next Wednesday) brings up the pluses and minuses of the truncated television season. In a comment last week, RJM linked to this piece that mentions how The Lone Ranger's inaugural season featured a staggering 52 original episodes over the course of 52 weeks!That may have been extraordinary, but it wasn't unusual to have seasons of over 30 episodes per season, and for many years the yearly norm was well over 20 episodes, but that number is now down to, in many cases, about a dozen. It keeps quality high, but do we lose something in the process? Put another way, would we have been satisfied with 12 Hitchcock episodes a year?

I think I've said this before, but if not I'll say it again: Dave Garroway was truly one of the pioneers of television, and he deserves to be much better known than he is. Thankfully, the staff of Garroway at Largeare out to rectify that, and this website is not only a primer to the career of one of television's great communicators, it's also the starting point for what hopefully will become a book-length Garroway biography, which is sorely needed and which I will gladly help promote.

Fire-Breathing Dimetrodon Time (that name just slays me) looks at the thirteenth episode of Logan's Runand mentions an interesting sidelight to the heavy played by Gerald McRaney. Tidbits like that pop up all the time.

If I needed information on TV movies, I can't think of anyone I'd turn to first other than Amanda By Night, and her Made For TV Mayhem. This week it's "An Element of Truth," the devious 1995 con-man meets fem fatale movie starring Donna Mills (who else?). I could easily see a shorter, darker version of this on the Hitchcock Hour, in fact, probably with John Williams showing up as the detective at the end.

At TV Party!, where I've been privileged to publish some of my articles in the past, Billy Ingram reminds us that this is the 30th anniversary of that infamous moment in 1987 when a group of television terrorists took over the Chicago airwaves. It's kinda funny, both then and now (it was, as Billy says, "surely the tackiest terror attack of all time"), but he also points out that the culprits were never apprehended...

Finally, I'll mention this again before the event, but the Mid Atlantic Nostalgia Conventionis coming up September 14-16 in Hunt Valley, Maryland, outside of Baltimore. I know some of you are likely planning on being there, either as fans or vendors or, perhaps, presenters. I had high hopes of being a presenter this year, but real life intervened once again, and so my plan now is to be presenting on my TV book next year. I will, however, be there as a fan, and if any of you are going to be there as well, I'd love to meet up for an in-person visit! Please let me know either through the comments section or, if you'd prefer, through the email address that you can access on the sidebar. I really do hope to see you there!

This week in TV Guide: August 15, 1970

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I almost didn't get this issue when I first saw it; I thought I already had it, was positive I already had it, and even after I failed to find it on my list, I looked two or three more times, checked this website multiple times, so sure was I that I'd seen the issue somewhere before, so afraid was I of commiting that dreaded faux pax of the collector, spending good money on something I already had.

Part of the problem, of course, was that Johnny Carson appeared on the cover of TV Guide 28 times, and there are just so many ways you can arrange a portrait of Carson, or anyone for that matter, before they start to run together. And this article by Merle Miller doesn't even tell us much, except that Carson and Company don't like to talk to people. That's the joke, get it? A talk show whose stars and staff don't talk. Miller, whose career as a movie and television writer was interrupted by the blacklist, spent hundreds of hours in the early '60s interviewing Harry Truman for a television project that never came about and whose best-known work will be the book Plain Speaking, an oral biography of the former president, probably found it ironic to be working on a story about people who wouldn't talk to him. Johnny's all interviewed out, the press agent for NBC explains, and a writer who wouldn't talk on the record said that one reason why Carson doesn't like his backstage people talking is that he likes people to get the impression he's responsible for all the material he uses on Tonight. "Don't ask me why.""I didn't ask him why," Miller notes.

The most interesting aspect of Miller's story is his look behind the scenes at one episode he witnesses up close. For example, James Coco, one of Johnny's guests, fresh from his performance in the play "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" for only a few weeks, has "confidence in every pore of him, and he has a great many pores; he is a chubby man." On the other hand, Maureen Stapleton, a star for over twenty years, sits pale, clinging to the edge of a table with a white-knuckled hand. "I might as well leave right now because I'll never make it. I'll never be able to walk out there on stage, not in a million years." Dennis Weaver, who's been in both Gunsmoke and Gentle Ben, isn't quite that nervous but, writes Miller, "I could tell that, Given a choice between going on stage and wrestling Gentle Ben, he'd take the bear, every time." Of course, they're all just fine with Johnny on stage; Maureen Stapleton was "warm and witty and wonderful. It didn't matter if she had said most of the same things to a talent co-ordinator six hours before or if Carson's best lines had been handed to him four hours before."

I don't know how people looked at talk shows back in 1970*, whether they were aware of the extent of the work that writers and talent coordinators did. (After all, I can't recall ever thinking that Johnny came up with all those lines himself, and I think a lot of people knew Dick Cavett himself had worked as a writer.) Still, perhaps there were people who were surprised to find out that this is how talk shows operated. Perhaps Merle Miller wanted to let Carson and his people know what happens when you don't cooperate with the press. Or maybe it was just a case of plain speaking, of telling it like it is.

*I know, I know: they looked at them on their television sets. (Rim shot.)

◊ ◊ ◊

SOURCE ALL: HADLEY TV GUIDE COLLECTION
The ad on the right is for Richard Doan of the Doan Report, the feature that for many years ran at the front of the programming section of TV Guide and from which I frequienty quote. I mention it because it shows how different TV Guide is in 1970 from the fanmags of the day, as well as the TV Guide of today.

The emphasis is on Doan as a serious journalist - the black and white photograph, grainy, with Doan in his shirtsleeves, probably a white shirt and tie, taken in the newsroom. The stark text with the pronounced whitespace, listing his credentials in the industry: columnist, critic, program director, research company vice-president. An encyclopedic knowledge of television. Most important, a trusted source of news and insight into the television industry for the 32 million adult readers who turn to TV Guide every week.

No discussion about how many celebrities he hangs with, how chummy he is with the insiders, how with-it and down he is. In short, everything that a writer from today's TV Guide would be.

◊ ◊ ◊

As some of you may have noticed, I now have my own personal troll; I can't even say that the troll belongs to the blog, because said troll seems to have picked out me personally. He goes by the handle of Ray G., and in last week's "This Week" comment section he proudly proclaimed that "When you let your rightist political views enter into your articles, I can't stand you. I will not be reading your blog, and will spread the word about it." Now, I'd probably have been more bothered by this if, as I mentioned in my reply, he hadn't said essentially the same thing on June 6, when he also called me "revolting." My crime, apparently, was that I'd attacked PBS, and for that I deserve to lose the right to write about classic television forever.

With this in mind, I'm a bit hesitant to include this next item, which happens to be about PBS. Yes, I know Ray G. said he's not reading the blog anymore, but he said that once before and you all know what happened, so who knows? Anyway, the reason I mention this is that PBS has been controversial almost from the very moment it was created, and prior to the actual creation of the network the idea of a government-funded Corporation for Public Broadcasting was controversial, so any discussion of television that includes the political and cultural dynamics of the time is bound to include it.

SOURCE: CTW
The item is from the aformentioned Doan Report (written for the vacationing Richard Doan by Andrew Mills), and mentions an attack on Sesame Street from Arnold Arnold, an educational consultant speaking recently at a conference of the American Management Association. Arnold "called the program a failure and quoted a number of other authorities who agree with his opinion." One of those who agreed with him elaborated, saying that Sesame Street "is not imagination; it is more acurately labeled as fradulent." For example, while chldren from poverty homes did know their numbers, they didn't know what they meant; "They couldn't relate the numeral '3' to a group of three apples." Says Arnold, this type of learning is equivalent "to that achieved by a fairly bright parrot."

In an argument that could be made today with respect to how children learn through computers and cellphones, Arnold argues that "preschool children learn primarily 'through direct contact with people and by active manipulation of materials.'"Sesame Street doesn't provide this opportunity; there's no chance "to conjecture, to solve problems, to be creative." Thus, says Arnold, it doesn't teach - however, not only does it pretend it teaches, it spends big money telling people it does. "It's a promotional campaign without parallel," Arnold says of the $6 million spent on ads and PR, with the end result that moms no longer feel guilty about letting TV act as a babysitter because they're convinced Sesame Street is educational. It's not right, because as far as innovation goes, concludes Arnold, Sesame Street "stands on a par with the invention of the dunce cap."

SOURCE: PBS
I don't get any particular pleasure out of all this. As longtime readers know, I've written about Sesame Street before; it wasn't on when I was of proper viewing age, and didn't start to really watch until I was in high school in The World's Worst Town™, when I watched itout of self defense because there was absolutely nothing else worth watching. I enjoyed the program's wittiness and jokes designed to amuse the parents, I have enormous affection for the Muppets, including an abiding love for Ernie, Bert, and the Cookie Monster, and even today I get a big charge out of bits like "Monsterpiece Theatre."

Sesame Street first premiered in November of 1969, so the show's less than a year old at this point and this may be one of the first negative stories to feature in the popular press. As such, it's significant, and it deserves to be mentioned here. Now, if Ray G. has a problem with it, that's his perogative. I love my readers, all of them, even the ones who disagree, because they (1) care enough to read, and (2) care enough to comment. In Ray's case, though, he's already quit reading for the last time twice, so if he decides to come back again I hope one of you will get ahold of me and tell me what I'm doing wrong.

◊ ◊ ◊

While we're on the education front, on Sunday afternoon, it's a repeat of the controversial ABC documentary "The Eye of the Storm" on teacher Jane Elliott's "blue-eyes-brown-eyes" experiment in racial hatred with her Riceville, Iowa class of third graders. As this article details, the experiment began on the day after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination, as an effort to explain to her small charges why somoeone would want to kill the man they had recently made their "Hero of the Month." By dividing the class into two groups based on eye color, and by rewarding and punishing the two groups accordingly, Elliott hopes to demonstrate to the children what it was like to live in a society plagued by discrimination. During the course of the two-day experiment, she sees "children who were cooperative and thoughtful turn nasty and vicious," and she realized that she had “created a microcosm of society in a third-grade classroom.” This is the third year that Elliott has conducted the experiment, and the first time that it has been filmed for television; PBS's Frontline will return in 1984 to visit with members of that class to see how the experiment affected their lives.

I'm of two minds about this kind of experimentation, especially in elementary schools. On the one hand, I'm all for teaching critical thinking in schools rather than what often takes place in the classroom. On the other hand, I'll admit to being very uncomfortable with the idea of experimenting on third graders, when their minds are particularly impressionable to whatever you happen to be teaching them (I'm thinking here of James Clavell's The Children's Story as an example) and especially if their parents don't know what's going on. There's a fine line between education and indoctronation, and it doesn't only happen when you're nine years old.

In the meantime, Jane Elliott remains a controversial figure to this day, becoming nationally renown as a facilitator of diversity training and an anti-racism activist. Ironically, a 2003 study at the University of Georgia suggested that the Blue-Eyes-Brown-Eyes exercise could exacerbate problems that didn't previously exist, and "can also lead to anxiety because people become hyper-sensitive about being offensive or being offended." I ask you, who could have imagined that people today would be hyper-sensitive about being offended?

And to think it all begain with this experiment. Ah, that's the '70s for you.

◊ ◊ ◊

Sue Bernard is called the Starlet's Starlet, and so that should be worth at least a moment's notice. Dick Hobson describes her as a rarity, the starlet "who actually works at her trade" with a regular daytime role on General Hospital and nighttime gigs on shows such as Room 222 and "The Joe Namath Special." She was a child actress, appearing on Playhouse 90 and Father Knows Best. Oh, and as was the case with last week's starlet, Carol Lynley, she's graced the pages of Playboy, this time as December, 1966 Playmate of the Month. (Again, I'm taking their word for it.)

Since this article, most of her work has been in the form of documentaries and as the author of six books, and works at promoting the work of her late father, the photographer Bruno Bernard; her Playboy photos were taken by one of her father's apprentices, the famous Mario Casilli. Although I don't partake of the portfolios of these men's work, I don't look down on them; after all, Felix Unger took pictures for Playboy as well, remember?

◊ ◊ ◊

And now the week in viewing pleasures.

The honors in sports go to ABC's weekend coverage of the PGA Championship from Southern Hills in Tulsa. We read about the PGA a few weeks ago when it was played in July, but by this time we're seeing the tournament settle in to its traditional mid-August spot. Dave Stockton, known today as one of the great putting doctors in golf, wins the first of his two PGA titles; he's the only player to break par in the brutal 100⁰+ heat, finishing at -1 and defeating Arnold Palmer and Bob Murphy by two shots. On Sunday, Chet Atkins is the guest on Evening at Pops (PBS, 10:00 p.m.), and on the replay of Friday night's Merv Griffin Show which several affiliates offer (having preempted the Friday airing), longtime announcer and sidekick Arthur Treacher says farewell to Merv; the show's preparing to move to Hollywood, and Treacher, who loves New York, doesn't want to move with it.

Monday night at 8:30 p.m., Channel 4, WTAE in Pittsburgh, has a British film I quite admire, from the "Kitchen Sink" era of realistic drama. It's the 1961 black-and-white movie The Mark, which garnered the first and only Best Actor Oscar nominaton for Stuart Whitman as a convicted child molester now rehabilitated and out of prison but struggling to acceptance in the wider world. Maria Schell co-stars as a sympathetic woman who becomes his girlfriend, and Rod Steiger turns in a surprisingly effective performance as the humane psychiatrist who treats him. Whitman has never been what I'd call a great actor, but I've never seen him give a better performance. If it's not your cup of tea, tune in to CBS at 10:00 p.m. for The Wild Wild West, as Sammy Davis Jr. and Peter Lawford guest star in the story of a town terrorized by a ghostly rider. And on a replay of NET Festival (10:00 p.m., NET), it's a report on how movie music is no longer for background only. Examples include the use of "Eleanor Rigby" as a sequence in the Beatles'Yellow Submarine.

Tuesday's first run of NET Festival (8:00 p.m.) is "In the Name of Allah," a "colorful" documentary of Moslem life in the city of Fes, Morocco, includng "a look at modern French-build areas of Fes, where young Moslems are rebelling against the traditions of their ancestors." Were this documentary to be done today, I rather suspect it it might have a slightly different tone. Later on NET, Firing Line (9:30 p.m.) presents a debate over capital punishment with Truman Capote, who comes up with the provocative suggestion that all murder cases be tried in Federal courts.

Wednesday the race issue appears again, in the Group W special "The Man Nobody Saw," (KDKA, 7:30 p.m.) It's based on the Kerner Commission Report on race relations, and under the guise of a courtroom drama tells the story of a man (Arthur French) repeatedly rejected by "a white society that ultimately impelled him to commit crimes against that society. As the drama unfolds, it becomes evident that it is not Richardson who is on trial, but rather the 'white establishment.'" The drama is followed by a discusion between blacks and whites about the questions raised by the play, and one of the things these programs makes clear is that for all the discusions about race today, (1) they're nothing new, and (2) you get the feeling nothing's changed. Whether or not that is, in fact, true, is another matter. It is, however, all-pervasive in 1970,

Also on Wednesday, NBC's The Virginian presents "High Stakes," an episode from 1966 starring Jack Lord. Why, you may ask, would they present a four-year-old rerun? Well, for a series that's been on the air since 1962, they've got quite a stockpile of episodes to choose from, and during rerun season you're not going to simply rely on the last couple of years. Additionally, when you just happen to have an episode that features an actor who's now starring in a very popular TV series of his own, even if it is on another network - well, that doesn't hurt, does it?

On Thursday the guests on This is Tom Jones (ABC, 9:00 p.m.) are Anthony Newley, Peggy Lipton, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, and John Byner. Newley's singing some of his songs, including "What Kind of Fool Am I,""On a Wonderful Day like Today," and "Who Can I Turn To?"; the man wrote a hell of a lot of hits, didn't he? Dean Martin Presents the Golddiggers (NBC, 10:00 p.m.) features "Marty Feldmen as a traffic cop who things he's a matador and Charles Nelson Reilly as a matchmaker who runs his place like a used-car lot," and Joan Rivers is the guest host for the week on The Tonight Show, a reminder of how her relationship with Johnny Carson went south, and how as much as we might enjoy Johnny in front of the camera, he really was not a very nice man.

Herman's Hermits star in the CBS Friday Night Movie "Hold On!", which Judith Crist describes as "11 numbers barely connected by plot," and goes on to add that "This is a film designed for teen-agers who undoubtedly wouldn't be caught dead watching such teeny-bopper stuff." She feels unsophisticated seven-year-olds might tolerate it.

◊ ◊ ◊

Finally, an article by Dr. George Weinberg on those one-parent shows. They're nothing new to television, although in 1970 the single-parent family is never the result of divorce; it's always because the parent is widowed or comes into custody of the children through unusual means. But what do they tell us?

Well, we find that single-parent families are affluent. The fathers are rich, the mothers have good jobs, they all live in comfortable surroundings with helpful friends and neighbors and often employ live-in help. They also enjoy remarkably healthy social lives; although permanent relationships often escape them, their romantic escapades provide fodder for storylines and humorous situations.

The children of single-parent families are well-behaved and intelligent, and they enjoy loving relationships with their sole parent, often bordering on that of two adults. Rarely do we see the territorial possessiveness of a parent that children demonstrate in real life when they feel their position threatened by the appearance of an interloper; the son in The Courtship of Eddie's Father who actively looks for a mate for his dad is an outlier indeed. Only occasionaly, as in Family Affair, do we see the children struggle with the memory of the deaths of their parents.

It sounds as if this is a negative review of the single-parent show as unrealistic, preposterous, existing merely to provide easy plot devices for the writer, but in fact there are many worthwhile aspects to these shows as well, Dr. Weinberg points out, among which is an example of what parenting should be and too frequently isn't. He cites an episode of Mayberry R.F.D. in which Sam (Ken Berry) "discovers from small signs that  his son is removing himself and losing zest for their relationship, [and] he sets out systematically to recover the boy. The story is the father's struggle to make contact again - perhaps a struggle that should be more familiar to us than it is." It is, says Weinberg, an episode that stands "in contrast to shows that thrive on depicting neurosis and violence."

These one-parent shows are watched more or less equally by men, women and children because, Weinberg posits, they offer some promise of the daily life that we once envisioned, a life that seems increasingly "gone and irretrievable." There's an honesty, a devotion to value, a kindness that is generally the chief motive of one or another of the charactors. Weinberg has hopes that programs like these can help reduce the gap between the generations, can improve the relationships between parent and child. There has been a sudden increase in their number on America's TV screens, and they will have ain increasing influence on the next generation of childhood television viewers.

What's on TV? Thursday, August 20, 1970

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A while back - quite a while, now that I think of it - someone mentioned here that I didn't have very many issues from 1970. And by golly, they were right - at the time, I might have had one, or none at all. Although you probably know my affinities don't lay with the 1970s for a number of reasons, I have no particular animus against 1970 other than aesthetics: I don't like the TV Guide redesign. Otherwise, as I've pointed out before, the first part of the decade more closely resembles the end of the '60s than it does the rest of the '70s. For those of you who'd like to see this rectified, you'll be glad to know that this recent increase in 1970 issues (this is the second in a month) is going to continue through this year and into next year. It won't be an every-other-week kind of thing, but I'll be ramping up the frequency a little more. Right, Kenneth?

Today's issue, by the way, is from Pittsburgh, with added assistance from the surrounding areas.

 2   KDKA (CBS)

MORNING


     5:55
FARM REPORT  -C- 

     6:00
FAIR ADVENTURE

     6:30
SUMMER SEMESTER  -C- 

     7:00
NEWS  -C- 

     7:30
CBS NEWS – Benti  -C- 

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children  -C- 

     9:00
CONTACT – Marie Torre  -C- 

   10:00
LUCILLE BALL  -C- 

   10:30
HILLBILLIES  -C- 

   11:00
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy  -C- 
         
   11:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  -C- 

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS  -C- 

   12:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial  -C- 

     1:00
MIKE DOUGLAS  -C- 
Guests Mickey Rooney, Tony Curtis, Melanie

     2:30
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial  -C- 

     3:00
SECRET STORM – Serial  -C- 

     3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial  -C- 

     4:00
GOMER PYLE  -C- 

     4:30
DAVID FROST  -C- 
Guests Zsa Zsa Gabor, Barbara Barrie, Tom Poston, Dana Vallery

EVENING


     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:30
CBS NEWS – Walter Cronkite  -C- 

     7:00
NEWS  -C- 

     7:30
FAMILY AFFAIR – Comedy  -C- 

     8:00
HAPPY DAYS – Variety  -C- 

     9:00
MOVIE – Adventure
“Operation Amsterdam” (English; 1959)

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
MERV GRIFFIN – Variety  -C- 
Guests Count Basie, Helen Gurley Brown

     1:00
MOVIE – Drama
“Crash Landing” (1958)

You've obviously figured out that Happy Days, at 8:00 p.m., is not the same as the sitcom with Richie, the Fonz, and the Cunninghams. It's a variety show, a summer replacement for The Jim Nabors Hour, and it showcases big band performers and singers from the era, along with comedians and other acts.


 4  WTAE (ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
SEA HUNT – Adventure

     7:30
THREE STOOGES – Children

     8:00
ROMPER ROOM  -C- 

     8:50
FASHIONS IN SEWING  -C- 

     9:00
MOVIE – Drama
“Cell 2455, Death Row”

   10:30
GALLOPING GOURMET  -C- 

   11:00
BEWITCHED  -C- 
         
   11:30
THAT GIRL  -C- 

AFTERNOON

   12:00
CANDID CAMERA

   12:30
WORLD APART – Serial  -C- 

     1:00
ALL MY CHILDREN  -C- 

     1:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL  -C- 

     2:00
NEWLYWED GAME  -C- 

     2:30
HE SAID! SHE SAID!  -C- 
Guests Alan Alda, Shelley Berman, Art James and Gene Rayburn

     3:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL  -C- 

     3:30
ADVENTURE TIME  -C- 

     4:30
HAZEL – Comedy  -C- 

     5:00
PERRY MASON – Mystery

EVENING


     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:30
ABC NEWS – Reynolds/Smith  -C- 

     7:00
MISTEROGERS – Children  -C- 

     7:30
ANIMAL WORLD  -C- 

     8:00
THAT GIRL  -C- 

     8:30
BEWITCHED  -C- 

     9:00
TOM JONES  -C- 
Guests Anthony Newley, Peggy Lipton, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, John Byner

   10:00
SURVIVORS  -C- 

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
MOVIE – Comedy
“The Four Poster” (1952)

     1:30
DICK CAVETT  -C- 

The 9 a.m. movie, Cell 2455, Death Row, is based on the book of the same name by Caryl Chessman, one of the few people in American legal history to be executed under the "little Lindbergh" law that did not require a murder in order for kidnapping to be a capital offense. William Campbell, who for a time was married to JFK inamorata Judith Exner, plays Chessman in this movie; in a later Chessman TV movie Kill Me If You Can, he's played by Alan Alda, one of the guests on He Said! She Said! at 2:30 p.m.


 5  WDTV (CLARKSBURG) (CBS)

MORNING


     7:30
CBS NEWS – Benti  -C- 

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children  -C- 

     9:00
DING DONG SCHOOL

     9:30
JIM BOWIE – Adventure

   10:00
LUCILLE BALL  -C- 

   10:30
HILLBILLIES  -C- 

   11:00
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy  -C- 
         
   11:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  -C- 

AFTERNOON

   12:00
WHERE THE HEART IS – Serial  -C- 

   12:25
ALMANAC NEWSREEL

   12:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial  -C- 

     1:00
NEWS – Wade Dotson

     1:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial  -C- 

     2:00
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING  -C- 

     2:30
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial  -C- 

     3:00
SECRET STORM – Serial  -C- 

     3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial  -C- 

     4:00
GOMER PYLE  -C- 

     4:30
UNCOVERED – Crime Drama

     5:00
RAWHIDE – Western

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:30
CBS NEWS – Walter Cronkite  -C- 

     7:00
WILBURN BROTHERS – Music

     7:30
FAMILY AFFAIR – Comedy  -C- 

     8:00
HAPPY DAYS – Variety  -C- 

     9:00
MOVIE – Adventure
“Operation Amsterdam” (English; 1959)

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
MERV GRIFFIN – Variety  -C- 
Guests Count Basie, Helen Gurley Brown

Count Basie and Helen Gurley Brown on with Merv - the sublime and the ridiculous.


 9  WDTV (CLARKSBURG) (CBS)

MORNING


     7:00
CBS NEWS – Benti  -C- 

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Children  -C- 

     9:00
ROMPER ROOM  -C- 

     9:30
JACK LaLANNE  -C- 

   10:00
LUCILLE BALL  -C- 

   10:30
HILLBILLIES  -C- 

   11:00
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy  -C- 
         
   11:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  -C- 

AFTERNOON

   12:00
WHERE THE HEART IS – Serial  -C- 

   12:25
NEWS  -C- 

   12:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial  -C- 

     1:00
TEL-ALL  -C- 

     1:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial  -C- 

     2:00
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING  -C- 

     2:30
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial  -C- 

     3:00
SECRET STORM – Serial  -C- 

     3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial  -C- 

     4:00
GOMER PYLE  -C- 

     4:30
BATMAN – Adventure  -C- 

     5:00
BEN CASEY – Drama

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:30
CBS NEWS – Walter Cronkite  -C- 

     7:00
COUNTRY CARNIVAL  -C- 
Guest George Riddle

     7:30
FAMILY AFFAIR – Comedy  -C- 

     8:00
HAPPY DAYS – Variety  -C- 

     9:00
MOVIE – Adventure
“Operation Amsterdam” (English; 1959)

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
MERV GRIFFIN – Variety  -C- 
Guests Count Basie, Helen Gurley Brown

     1:00
TV PARTY LINE  -C- 

I've read many laments that Ben Casey isn't available in DVD; although I've never been much of a Vince Edwards fan, I agree that a program like Casey should be out there, and if the rights holder isn't willing to do anything with it, they should have to give it up to someone who will. I know that might be a controversial interpretation of copyright - use it or lose it - but these programs weren't meant to spend time gathering dust, were they?


 11  WIIC (NBC)

MORNING


     5:55
FARM REPORT  -C- 

     6:00
QUEST – Lessons

     6:30
TV PARTY LINE  -C- 

     7:00
TODAY  -C- 
Guests Nancy Mitford, Roy Anries de Grott

     9:00
PORKY PIG – Children  -C- 

     9:30
MOVIE GAME  -C- 
Guests Bob Crane, Andy Devine, Kirk Douglas, Stu Gilliam, Shirley Jones, Nancy Walker

   10:00
DINAH SHORE  -C- 
Guests Mary Jane Hungerford, Irene Hirose

   10:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C- 

   11:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C- 
         
   11:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C- 
Guests Jim Backus, Lohman & Barkley, Jan Murray, Suzanne Pleshette, Vincent Price, Bill Reynolds, Connie Stevens

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS C

   12:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C- 

   12:55
NBC NEWS – Floyd Kalber  -C- 

     1:00
ANOTHER WORLD/SOMERSET – Serial  -C- 

     1:30
LIFE WITH LINKLETTER – Interview  -C- 
Guest Sammy Davis Jr.

     2:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C- 

     2:30
DOCTORS C

     3:00
ANOTHER WORLD/BAY CITY – Serial  -C- 

     3:30
F TROOP – Comedy

     4:00
MOVIE – Adventure  -C- 
“Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon” (Italian; 1965)

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:30
NBC NEWS  -C- 

     7:00
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

     7:30
DANIEL BOONE – Adventure  -C- 

     8:30
IRONSIDE  -C- 

     9:30
DRAGNET  -C- 

   10:00
GOLDDIGGERS – Variety  -C- 

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
JOHNNY CARSON – Variety  -C- 
Guest host Joan Rivers, guest Jane Howard

     1:00
HOTLINE – Ron Jaye  -C- 

Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon would have been a perfect afternoon movie, whether after-school or on a Saturday afternoon. I'm looking for the silhouettes at the bottom of the screen now.


 12  WBOY (CLARKSBURG) (NBC, ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY  -C- 
Guests Nancy Mitford, Roy Andries de Grott

     9:00
CARTOONS – Children  -C- 

     9:30
JACK LaLANNE  -C- 

   10:00
DINAH SHORE  -C- 
Guests Mary Jane Hungerford, Irene Hirose

   10:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C- 

   11:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C- 
         
   11:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C- 
Guests Jim Backus, Lohman & Barkley, Jan Murray, Suzanne Pleshette, Vincent Price, Bill Reynolds, Connie Stevens

AFTERNOON

   12:00
VIDEOSCOPE  -C- 

   12:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C- 

   12:55
NBC NEWS – Floyd Kalber  -C- 

     1:00
JEOPARDY – Game  -C- 

     1:30
LIFE WITH LINKLETTER – Interview  -C- 
Guest Sammy Davis Jr.

     2:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C- 

     2:30
DOCTORS  -C- 

     3:00
ANOTHER WORLD/BAY CITY – Serial  -C- 

     4:00
ANOTHER WORLD/SOMERSET – Serial  -C- 

     4:30
MIKE DOUGLAS  -C- 
Guests Roger Williams, Dana Valery, Maxwell Maltz

EVENING


     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:20
AROUND AND ABOUT  -C- 

     6:30
NBC NEWS  -C- 

     7:00
CALL OF THE WEST  -C- 

     7:30
DANIEL BOONE – Adventure  -C- 

     8:30
IRONSIDE  -C- 

     9:30
DRAGNET  -C- 

   10:00
GOLDDIGGERS – Variety  -C- 

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
JOHNNY CARSON – Variety  -C- 
Guest host Joan Rivers, guest Jane Howard

Don't forget at 7:30 that Daniel Boone wasn't just a man - he was a real man.


 13  WQED (NET)

AFTERNOON

     4:00
SESAME STREET  -C- 
Guest Lou Rawls

     5:00
MISTEROGERS – Children  -C- 

     5:30
WHAT’S NEW – Children

EVENING

     6:00
SUMMER FUN

     6:30
MISTEROGERS  -C- 

     7:00
NEWSROOM  -C- 

     8:00
WASHINGTON REVIEW  -C- 

     8:30
EVENING AT POPS  -C- 
Guest Chet Atkins

     9:30
WORLD PRESS

   10:30
BOOK BEAT

   11:00
NEWSROOM  -C- 

It would have been a treat to see Chet Atkins, not just on Evening at Pops but any chance you got. Mr. Guitar, indeed.


 21  WFMJ (YOUNGSTOWN) (NBC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY  -C- 
Guests Nancy Mitford, Roy Andries de Grott

     9:00
FASHIONS IN SEWING  -C- 

     9:15
TELE-VIEW  -C- 

     9:25
NEWS  -C- 

     9:30
SESAME STREET – Children  -C- 

   10:30
CONCENTRATION – Game  -C- 

   11:00
SALE OF THE CENTURY – Game  -C- 
         
   11:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES – Game  -C- 
Guests Jim Backus, Lohman & Barkley, Jan Murray, Suzanne Pleshette, Vincent Price, Bill Reynolds, Connie Stevens

AFTERNOON

   12:00
JEOPARDY – Game  -C- 

   12:30
WHO, WHAT OR WHERE – Game  -C-   

   12:55
NBC NEWS – Floyd Kalber  -C- 

     1:00
GALLOPING GOURMET  -C- 

     1:30
LIFE WITH LINKLETTER – Interview  -C- 
Guest Sammy Davis Jr.

     2:00
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial  -C- 

     2:30
DOCTORS  -C- 

     3:00
ANOTHER WORLD/BAY CITY – Serial  -C- 

     3:30
BRIGHT PROMISE – Serial  -C- 

     4:00
ANOTHER WORLD/SOMERSET – Serial  -C- 

     4:30
THE GAME GAME  -C- 
Celebrities Chelsea Brown, Alejandro Rey, Kaye Stevens

     5:00
MR. ROBERTS – Comedy  -C- 

     5:30
WHAT’S MY LINE? – Game  -C- 
Panel Alan Alda, Arlene Francis, Anthony Roberts, Gail Sheldon

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS  -C- 

     6:30
NBC NEWS  -C- 

     7:00
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

     7:30
DANIEL BOONE – Adventure  -C- 

     8:30
IRONSIDE  -C- 

     9:30
DRAGNET  -C- 

   10:00
GOLDDIGGERS – Variety  -C- 

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
JOHNNY CARSON – Variety  -C- 
Guest host Joan Rivers, guest Jane Howard

I enjoy seeing programs like Mr. Roberts pop up in these listings, because you don't see them too often. It was a one-season series, on NBC from 1965-66, starring the always-likeable Roger Smith in the role made famous by Henry Fonda. I suspect it was probably packaged with a group of other WB productions for syndication.


 33  WYTV (YOUNGSTOWN) (ABC)

MORNING

     8:00
DENNIS THE MENACE – Comedy

     8:30
FLINTSTONES – Children  -C- 

     9:00
ZANE GREY – Western

     9:30
DIAL DATELINE  -C- 

   10:00
NEWS – Joe Shafran  -C- 

   10:30
MOVIE GAME  -C- 
Celebrities Gyan Cannon, Phyllis Diller, David Janssen, Hugh O’Brian. Host Sonny Fox

   11:00
BEWITCHED  -C- 
         
   11:30
THAT GIRL  -C- 

AFTERNOON

   12:00
BEST OF EVERYTHING  -C- 

   12:30
WORLD APART – Serial  -C- 

     1:00
ALL MY CHILDREN  -C- 

     1:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL  -C- 

     2:00
NEWLYWED GAME  -C- 

     2:30
DATING GAME  -C- 

     3:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL  -C- 

     3:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE – Serial  -C- 

     4:00
DARK SHADOWS  -C- 

     4:30
BARNEY BEAN – Children  -C- 

     5:30
OUTDOOR REPORT  -C- 

EVENING

     6:00
CHEYENNE – Western

     7:00
CAN YOU TOP THIS?  -C- 
Guests Steve Allen, Morey Amsterday, Stu Gilliam

     7:30
ANIMAL WORLD  -C- 

     8:00
THAT GIRL  -C- 

     8:30
BEWITCHED  -C- 

     9:00
TOM JONES  -C- 
Guests Anthony Newley, Peggy Lipton, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, John Byner

   10:00
SURVIVORS  -C- 

   11:00
NEWS  -C- 

   11:30
DICK CAVETT  -C- 

Carlos Montoya, Dick Cavett's guest tonight, is one of the great flamenco guitarists of all time. You can catch one of his performances here.


 53  WPGH (Ind.)

AFTERNOON

   12:00
CARTOONS – Children  -C- 

   12:30
BOZO THE CLOWN  -C- 

     1:00
JACK LaLANNE – Exercise  -C- 

     1:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial  -C- 

     2:00
LOVE IS A MANY-SPLENDORED THING  -C- 

     2:30
DATING GAME  -C- 

     3:00
ROCKY AND FRIENDS  -C- 

     3:30
MARINE BOY – Children  -C- 

     4:00
MARVEL SUPERHEROES  -C- 

     4:30
EIGHTH MAN – Children  -C- 

     5:00
SPEED RACER – Children  -C- 

     5:30
SUPERMAN – Children  -C- 

EVENING

     6:00
FLINTSTONES – Children  -C- 

     6:30
PATTY DUKE – Comedy

     7:00
GILLIGAN’S ISLAND

     7:30
MOVIE – Adventure
“The Naked Street” (1955)

     9:30
WHAT’S MY LINE? – Game  -C- 
Panel Jack Cassidy, Arlene Francis, Soupy Sales, Gail Sheldon

   10:00
HEY LANDLORD! – Comedy

   10:30
HONEYMOONERS – Comedy

   10:55
NEWS

   11:00
CAN YOU TOP THIS?  -C- 
Guests Milton Berle, Henny Youngman, Morey Amsterdam

   11:30
COMBAT! – Drama

As is the case with so many independents, WPGH is the clearing house for network programs that aren't carried for one reason or another by affiliates - see As the World Turns, Love is a Many-Splendored Thing, and The Dating Game. And I have to wonder about that 7:30 p.m. movie - you'd have to think that The Naked Street is a street in The Naked City, wouldn't you?

The long and the short of it

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More, as we know, is not always better; in the immortal words of Captain Kirk, “Too much of anything, Uhura, even love, isn’t necessarily a good thing.” And so it’s understandable how, as Ben Lindbergh pointed out in this recent article at The Ringer, there are some definite positives in the continued shrinking of the average television season. That season, which once ran as long as 39 episodes for some series, now averages about 12 or 13, and that’s just an average, mind you; it can be even shorter for some. Given this culture’s proclivity for binging nowadays, that means that, whereas most dramatic series of the ‘70s used to combine new and repeat episodes to fill out an entire 52-week calendar run, today’s short-run series can be wrapped up over a weekend, leaving avid viewers with 51 weeks (at least) to wait before the story picks up again.

In 1967, when Quinn Martin decided to bring to a conclusion Dr. Richard Kimble’s four-year chase after the one-armed man, The Fugitive chose a unique way in which to wrap up the series.* The final episode came not at the end of the first-run cycle of episodes, in May or June, but in August, after the rerun season had concluded. The final episode of The Fugitive would, in fact, be the final episode. It was an extraordinary way to end the series, and one which viewers would never stand for today. Or maybe they would – when you consider the hype that series like Mad Men and The Sopranos were able to create over the final half-season, imagine what an enterprising network could to do promote a one-off (or, in the case of The Fugitive’s final two-parter, a two-off) finale.

*It’s possible that, given the relative lateness with which the decision to end the series was made, a conventional airing date of May/June just wasn’t possible, and the network decided to go with the next best thing.

There are, to be sure, a few clunkers in the 120 episodes that comprise the original run of The Fugitive (an average of 30 per season), but through the course of those 118 stories that led up to the final two-parter, a tremendous amount of suspense built up. Yes, we knew that our hero would escape the clutches of Lieutenant Gerard, or whatever ham-fisted local policeman happened to have Kimble in his sites, but that didn’t prevent the viewer from experiencing the sense that Kimble was on a type of epic journey, an Odyssey if you will, crisscrossing the country in search of a goal so elusive that it was only the occasional glimpse of the one-armed man that convinced Kimble it wasn’t all just a dream. The Harrison Ford big-screen version of The Fugitive was swell and all, but it all happened just too fast; it lacked that sense of ordeal that Kimble had suffered. I wonder – could this sense of time and journey, could the epic nature of it all, have been done in just 30 or 40 episodes?

Maybe it could – The Prisoner ran just 17, and yet created one of the most bizarre worlds television has ever seen, one that left viewers and actors alike utterly exhausted when it was done. Had the series lasted longer than it did, I’m not sure anyone could have stood it. For it to have come back for a second season would have been ridiculous. There’s a key difference, though, one that might help answer the question, at least in part. Number 6 (or John Drake, if you prefer) was never someone we actually were supposed to know; it was the enigmatic quality of the show that made it work in the first place. The Fugitive, on the other hand, succeeded precisely because of our ability to know and trust Kimble, to believe that he was innocent of his wife’s murder, and to put our rooting interest in his escape from authority. Therefore, while brevity was an asset to The Prisoner, familiarity was essential to The Fugitive.

These are just two examples, the long and the short of it you might say, but they do raise interesting points about the relative merits of long vs. short television seasons. There’s another aspect to this which Lindbergh mentioned only in passing in his fine article, which I think bears a paragraph or two, and that’s the miniseries. The original concept of the miniseries was to tell a story in an epic amount of detail, far more than could be handled in a traditional movie (even a three-hour or two-part movie), but a story that nonetheless fell short of filling the space necessary to occupy a multiseason series. Rich Man, Poor Man was a huge success at 12 episodes of varying lengths (the sequel was somewhat less successful, possibly because it was written entirely for television); Roots, at eight consecutive nights, was Roots was a success beyond all expectation and triggered an avalanche of miniseries, from Shogun to Holocaust to The Winds of War and the incredibly ambitious War and Remembrance. What these all had in common was that they had literary sources, were of limited duration, and told stories that had finite endings.

Speaking of which: television's approach to storytelling has changed dramatically over the past decade or two. Whereas the classic structure of a season involved a series of self-contained episodes, with the odd two-part storyline but otherwise with no particular order from episode to episode or (barring cast changes) even season to season, this gradually evolved to encompass story arcs that covered multiple episodes (Wiseguy and Crime Story were two of the first series I can remember to successfully utilize this technique, although I'm sure there are other examples), cliffhanger endings that left viewers guessing as to how the next season would begin (effective especially if certain cast members were up for contract renewals), and eventually serialized storylines more reminiscent of soap operas than anything else. With these new constructs providing less and less flexibility in terms of the shape a series takes, it's easy to see why a shorter season might look more attractive. 

Today's modern series all seem caught up in providing a finite ending as well, suggesting the existence of one final episode that promises to tie all loose ends together. In other words, they’ve copped the MO of the miniseries, but with the advantage that they’ve not limited to one six or eight week season, but can keep coming back for years and years. The drawback to this, as anyone who’s read the original source material for shows such as, say, The Man in the High Castle, Orange is the New Black, and House of Cards is that the book generally runs out of material before the series runs out of time. House of Cards, for example, is actually the first book of a British trilogy (the other two titles being To Play the King and The Final Cut). When it was made into a TV series (which appeared in the United States on Masterpiece Theatre), it was over three series, each one bearing the name of the book which it adapted. I don’t know what season the U.S. version of House of Cards is in now.

So where have we gotten from this shorter season mania? It is true, as Lindbergh points out, that writing and production quality can be higher when resources don’t have to be stretched as far as they did over the course of a long season. It is also true, in all likelihood, that it is easier to get big-name stars to commit to longer arcs that it used to be, although one of the pleasures of the classic era was in seeing a big-name star appearing in a one-off guest spot, and in the age of the self-contained episode that was usually good enough. In the pre-VCR era the reruns gave you the chance to catch up on what you might have missed during the regular season, which made the 52-week season practical in more ways than one – it kept the show foremost in the mind of the viewers, keeping them poised for the show’s return during the always exciting Premiere Week in September.

What we’re missing is a commitment to our favorite show as viewers, and a concurrent commitment by those shows to us. There was something comforting to being provided with a guaranteed hour of entertainment at the same time every week all year long, save an interruption or two for specials or something unexpected. Yes, as I said at the outset, not all of them were winners, but a lot of them were pretty good, and most of them were at least entertaining. At the end, they usually gave you what they wanted, which was all we usually asked from our shows. The summer season, when some of the series went off the air to give prospective new series a tryout, was what brought shows like The Prisoner to television in the first place

Sometimes I think too many television shows today try to operate on too grand a scale, as if every episode was the second act of Tosca, where the diva gets to sing the show-stopping aria before plunging the dagger into the chest of the villain, thus setting the stage for the grand finale. That kind of emotion is unsustainable over a protracted season, one reason for the truncated seasons. But not every series needs to be Tosca; sometimes it's enough to simply provide, as my friend David Hofstede calls it, Comfort TV. We burn through a season a weekend and look for more, we catch up on a decade's worth in a month, we text and talk and our attention spans grow ever shorter, and then we wonder why our comfort turns to indigestion.

Around the dial

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A while back Lileks made an observation; I'm not going to go back and look it up now, but the gist of it was about when you find watching a favorite show has become a chore, an obligation, rather than something you want to do. At Comfort TV, David is thinking along similar lines when he looks at the legacy of Norman Lear and asks whether classic TV always serves as comfort TV. For him, it doesn't; furthermore, to say that just because a program is edgy and controversial means it is also substantial and important - well, it reminds me of Dick Cavett's rejoinder to Ashley Montagu, which has been quoted variously but amounts to "Do not assume that because I am frivolous that I am shallow, any more than I assume that because you are grave that you are profound.”

At The Horn Section, Hal returns to Crazy Like a Fox with "Some Day My Prints Will Come" from 1985, with guest star Norman Fell, and isn't it a treat to see two old pros like Fell and series star Jack Warden. I can appreciate there's a lot of good young talent out there nowadays, but I really do miss the added excellence of veterans and character actors in today's series.

Martin Grams, reviews Chuck Harter's book on Mr. Novak, one of the acclaimed TV series of the 1960s, a show that's been heard about more than seen and probably will stay that way due to music rights. But, as Martin says, until that day comes along, this book is probably the next best thing.

The Land of Whatever picks up the story of yet another attempt to reboot The Munsters. Now, I don't want to suggest that every attempt to reboot a classic television series has been an abject failure, but it's true that you can probably count the number of successes on one hand (Battlestar Galactica, although perhaps I could think of others if I spent more time on it), and it really does begin to feel as if they're the exceptions that prove the rule, doesn't it?

The Twilight Zone Vortex looks at Volume 1, Number 3 of The Twilight Zone Magazine, and this issue ought to look familiar to me, because I owned this very copy! I'm quite sure at the time I had no idea who Stephen King was (ah, ignorance is bliss, isn't it?), and while I recall parts of the interview with Robert Bloch and portions of Marc Scott Zicree's episode guide, I could be thinking more of the latter's Twilight Zone book. Otherwise, I'm afraid the rest of the issue's a blank with me. Dumb kid.

Continuing at bare-bones e-zine is a look at Charles Beaumont's work with the Hitchcock TV series; this week, Beaumont's second and final contribution,"The Long Silence," from The Alfred Hitchcock Hour in 1963. Since I haven't seen this episode, I've wised up and didn't read what I'm sure is Jack's typically excellent summary; instead, I'm bookmarking it to read after I've purchased the DVD set to play in my region-free player. See, I'm not always a dumb kid.

Although it's not about television, I have to link to Ivan's piece at Thrilling Days of Yesteryear, "The appalling thing about fascism is that you've got to use fascist methods to get rid of it," because it's made me curious enough to want to purchase the movie in question, It Happened Here, the "what-if" story that proceeds from the assumption that England was defeated at Dunkirk in 1940. Watch Christopher Nolan's movie to see how close that came to happening, follow up with this, and take it from there.

At Christmas TV History, Joanna has some great stories from her trip to the Detroit Festival of Books. I always love going to events like that, and it's always invigorating to see crowds of people looking at the written word. Reassuring to see there are still a few of us dinosaurs left, and a few fans of Christmas at that.

And another reminder - if you're going to be at the Mid Atlantic Nostalgia Convention, let me know - love to see you there!

This week in TV Guide: August 22, 1964

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It's the first of back-to-back issues to end the month of August, and this week we're in frantic Atlantic City to see Lyndon Johnson receive the Democratic nomination for President of the United States. John F. Kennedy's memory hangs heavy over the convention city, nine months after his death; for all of the talk of party unity and tradition (large portraits of Kennedy, Roosevelt, Truman, and Johnson hang over the podium, with the motto "Let Us Continue"), anxious Johnson aides are said to be keeping track as to whether or not pictures of Kennedy are outselling those of their boss. Although Johnson, in his memoirs, says that he remained uncertain about seeking election until close to convention time, there's little doubt about the outcome, with the largest question being the selection of Johnson's running mate.

And for all we know, LBJ could have chosen Walter Cronkite to be his veep. After all, Uncle Walter isn't busy this week; after having been trounced in the ratings by the Huntley-Brinkley-led NBC at the Republican convention in San Francisco, CBS decides that a anchor duo is the answer, and replaces Cronkite in the booth with the team of Robert Trout and Roger Mudd. It's a move that leaves everyone looking bad; Cronkite handles the demotion with grace (The New York Timesquotes Cronkite as saying, "We took a clobbering in San Francisco, and it seems perfect­ly reasonable that management at C.B.S. would like to try something else to regain the audience. This is their decision as to what should be done," which shows he knows how to be a team player in public), and NBC still dominates the ratings anyway.

One of the great moments of convention coverage comes not on television but radio, while Minnesota Senator Hubert Humphrey is appearing on a phone-in show with listeners back home on WCCO, the "Good Neighboor" station we all grew up listening to, and the program is interrupted by a CBS bulletin essentially announcing that President Johnson is trying to reach him regarding the Vice Presidency, after which Humphrey tells the audience he'd probaby better get off the phone, It's a wonderful moment of radio, which you can hear here.

The emotional highlight of the convention is undoubtedly Robert F. Kennedy's appearance to introduce the memorial tribute film to JFK. The younger brother of the late president received a 22-minute ovation from delegates, most of it, I would say, as a living representation of John, whose portrait was visible all week. Then again, although Bobby wouldn't fully come into his own until the presidential campaign of 1968 he did have a charisma all his own, a charisma that didn't pass all the way down to Ted, who might not have gotten the same kind of reception, It was precisely the kind of response that Lyndon Johnson had feared, which was why he had insisted the tribute film be moved to the end of the convention to prevent a possible delegate stampede during the vice presidential voting. You can see part of NBC's coverage here; it is the last time RFK will be present at a Democratic National Convention.


◊ ◊ ◊

During the 60s, the Ed Sullivan Show and The Hollywood Palace were the premiere variety shows on television. Whenever they appear in TV Guide together, we'll match them up and see who has the best lineup..

Sullivan: The Beatles headline the show in a routine taped before their return to England. Other guests are Gordon and Sheila MacRae; singer-dancer Cab Calloway; English comics Morecambe and Wise; clarinetist Acker Bilk; comedians Dave Barry and Morty Guty; and the Pinky and Parky Puppets.

Palace: Tony Martin and his wife Cyd Charisse introduce gospel singer Mahalia Jackson; pianists Ferrante and Teicher; comedian Corbett Monica; the Berosini Chimps; the Amandis, teeterboard act; the three Bizasrro Brothers, musical group; and comics Gaylord and Holiday.

It's been a long time since we've had one of these - back to June, I think; well, it's about time! We might as well get this out of the way, because no show with the Beatles as headliners is going to lose the week, so let's get beyond that and look at the rest of the lineups. Ed has a very deep show this week, with the MacRaes and Cab Calloway, and anyone who reads these TV Guides will recognize Morecambe and Wise. On the other hand, once you get past Mahalia Jackson, the Palace has too much vaudeville. It's a lineup that might win some weeks, but this is not one of them. Sullivan is the big winner.

◊ ◊ ◊

One of the big DVD releases of recent times was season one of The Defenders, E.G. Marshall's seminal legal series. I've got it, although it's yet to reach out and grab me; I always felt The Defenders was one of those series that crossed the line between discussion and advocacy of controversial issues. Interestingly enough, as the series prepares for its fourth season, Marshall feels it's lost its edge, "this show broke fresh ground in its early days; now the atmosphere in television has developed so that even more areas can be dramatized: abortion, pornography, Negroes' problems. You have to give The Defenders at least part of the credit for that. But, as I said, we don't do much of it any more ourselves."

What are the reasons for the slump in quality, at least according to Marshall's perception? "I don't know who makes policy for the show...We're using the hunt-and-poke system, and throwing out samples to see how people react. Next season, for example, we're sprinkling in a few romances to see how they'll work. But is controversy old hat? I don't believe it is." One of the problems is that The Defenders never developed writers the way other shows did; Reginald Rose, the mastermind behind the series, did a lot of the heavy lifting early on, but there's only so much one man can do. Herbert Brodkin, the producer, "sat in his office waiting for writers to come to him." And while many did, "we could have done more real harvesting gone out in the field and farmed these writers...any writer in the country ought to be eager to work for us." There's also a tendency, if I can put Marshall's words into current-day vernacular, to focus on the micro rather than the macro; he cites a recent story in which a woman failed a blood-alcohol test in which the story focuses on whether or not the woman's test could have been tainted by the alcohol swab used by the nurse who administered the test, rather than the larger question as to whether or not requiring a defendant to submit to such a test was a violation of the Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination.*

*If I'm not mistaken the laws on this vary from state to state, but generally the Fifth Amendment is not held to protect one in such a case, although personally I tend to agree with Marshall that it should.

Marshall's contract on The Defenders runs out at the end of this, it's fourth season, and while Brodkin is confident it can run indefinitely, Marshall comments dryly that "Barry Goldwater is confident he'll be the next President of the United States." The show's also moving to a new night, Thursday, where it will be up against The Jimmy Dean Show on ABC and Kraft Suspense Theater on NBC. Marshall thinks Robert Reed could carry the show without him, though I'm not sure about that, but it's a moot point, as the fourth season will be the final one for The Defenders before it settles into television history. And while I'm not what you'd call a big fan of the show, I can think of nothing more appropriate than seeing the remaining three seasons come out on DVD, for the many people who've enjoyed it.

Here's something I think you'll like: five caricatures of E.G. Marshall, done by five of the top cartoonists of the day. Click on the photo to find out who's responsible for what.


◊ ◊ ◊

Sometimes it's the shows, sometimes it's the stars, sometimes it's something that just catches my eye.

Man Without a Gun stars Rex Reason as a crusading newspaperman (is there any other kind?) determined to rid his area of the West without the use of a weapon, and Sunday's episode (3:00 p.m. ET, WABC) carries the title "No Heart for Killing." Well, if you're in a series called Man Without a Gun, you'd better not have any heart for killing, or you're going to find yourself out of luck. Later on Sunday, if you're like me and wouldn't really have wanted to watch the Beatles, the choice would have been the interestingly-named I Bury the Living on WOR; it sounds like a Corman-type MST3K feature, but it stars Richard Boone (made during his Have Gun - Will Travel days) and Theodore Bikel. The story: "A cemetery manager finds that someone dies each time he sticks a black pin into a chart fo the reserved plots." And after that, if Bonanza's your thing (9:00 p.m., NBC), you get to see Little Joe, who's determined to marry a young woman whom he accidentally blinded in a hunting accident. Note to prospective couples: this is not a prescription for long-term marital success.

Monday afternoon's matinee on WPIX (1:00 p.m.) carries the decepitve title Hangmen Also Die; it's actually the more-or-less true story of Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich, one of the most evil, and most remarkable, men of the 20th century. His nicknames speak for themselves: The Hangman; The Butcher of Prague; The Blond Beast; The Man with the Iron Heart. He was at one time head of the group which would become Interpol; he helped organise Kristallnacht in 1938; as chair of the Wannsee Conference, he was tasked with organizing plans for the Final Solution in 1942. He was played in the movie Conspiracy by Kenneth Branagh. As for Hangmen Also Die, it's directed by Fritz Lang, based on a story by Bertolt Brecht, with a score by Hanns Eisler and cinematography by James Wong Howe, It stars Hans Heinrich von Twardowski, Brian Donlevy, Walter Brennan, Gene Lockhart and Dennis O'Keefe. Whew.

Friday, WPIX offers up chapters 13 and 14 of the serial "Canadian Mounties vs. Atomic Invaders." I don't know how I've missed this one - or, better yet, how MST3K missed it. Here's a trailer for the DVD release, just to prove I haven't made it up.


At 9:30 p.m. on Friday, CBS has a preview of the $200,000 Carling World Golf Championship, which airs over the weekend and which gets a mention in next week's issue. James Garner is the host of the exhibition, which was taped earlier in the day at the famed Oakland Hills Country Club outside Detroit and features six of the golfers playing in the tournament, along with some comic relief from Pat Harrington.

That's not the big sports news of the week, though - that story was in the front of the issue, where For the Record reports on the sale of controlling interest of the New York Yankees to CBS for $11 million. It's a landmark sale in many ways, for although the sum seems paltry by today's standards, it marks one of the first moves of corporate ownership into professional sports. It's thought that CBS did this partly for investment purposes - "It's the entertainment business, isn't it?" said one director" - and partly for strategic reasons, to keep pay-TV, which has made inroads with the Dodgers and Giants, from becoming more heavily involved in the broadcasting picture. It's not a happy marriage, and CBS winds up unloading the Yankees for $10 million in 1973, less than what it paid for the club. Don't weep for the Tiffany Network, though; according to Michael Burke, one of the new owners (along with George Steinbrenner), "because of its corporate structure, tax losses and the like, CBS 'substantially recouped its investment.'

Here's something I didn't know: the announcer and sidekick on Tennessee Ernie Ford's Monday-Friday afternoon variety show is Jim Lange, who started out with Ford during his prime-time show in 1962 and will, three years later, go on to host The Dating Game. Something I did know is that Lange was born and raised in the Twin Cities and graduated from the University of Minnesota. When you're from Minnesota yourself, you tend to know things like that.

TV Teletype reports that NBC will pair two previously seen half-hour portraits of Civil War heroes Grant and Lee on September 1: "U.S. Grant, and Improbable Hero," and "Lee, the Virginian" as a full-hour show. No snark here, just a serious question: could you actually show something like this on television today, let alone refer to Robert E. Lee as a "Civil War hero"? I honestly don't know that you could.

◊ ◊ ◊

Long before Guy Fieri became a royal pain in the ass, there was The French Chef, Julia Child, the first breakout star of National Educational Television. People love her and her easy-does-it attitude; more than once she's said something like, "Never use water unless you have to - I'm going to use vermouth." Of the occasional blunder, there's the hope that "Heavens! Maybe we'll discover something new with this departure from the recipe!"

Her show is produced on WGBH, Channel 2 in Boston, and is currently seen on 40 educational stations throughout the country, a number that will expand to 90 this fall. She gets no pay for the program, and prior to doing the show she'd never performed before a camera. The story mentions how her husband worked with the State Department in Paris, how she took a six-month course at Cordon Bleu, how she was tutored by private chefs and then opened her own cooking school, after which she co-wrote a cookbook called Mastering the Art of French Cooking. It mentions nothing about her time working as a spy for the OSS, a story good enough that they're planning to make a TV series about it, but then you can't have everything in one story, can you?

"Part of cooking," she says, "is in recovering one's mistakes. A cook's motto should be 'Never despair' - you can always change a mistake into something else." That attitide, and her accessibility, is one reason why she'll always be the people's chef.

◊ ◊ ◊

Phyllis Newman, lately of NBC's That Was the Week That Was, will long outlive the network's unsuccessful attempt to duplicate the success of the BBC's news/satire hit. ("This is the satire that isn't," says the New York Herald Tribune's John Horn). She was far from an unknown commodity before the show started, and the "kooky and quick-witted parlor personality" will remain in-demand long after TW3 is but a blur in the faded consciousness of even the most hardened classic television aficionado.

She started her career out at age five with an act called "Pussy the Hypnotizing Cat," something even she admits she isn't sure about. As a youngster she trooped around the Catskills performing in the last days of vaudeville, then did some drama in school and wound up back in the theater. She understudied in the musical "Bells are Ringing," and wound up marrying the show's co-author, Adolph Green - half of the famed songwriting team of (Betty) Comden and Green. She went on to win a Tony for Supporting Actress in a Musical for "Subways Are For Sleeping," after which came appearances on The Tonight Show, gigs as a daytime panelist on To Tell the Truth and other Goodson-Todman properties, and TW3, among others. Always, she appears with that "kooky," girlish charm and winning personality, guaranteeing she'll be a fixture on TV screens and stages, for even though she loves being a mother of two and enjoys being in her husband's limelight ("I'm not after a monumental career."), a friend says she's like everyone else: She wants to be a star.

One of the reasons why I mention Phyllis Newman, besides the fact that I've always liked her, is because if you have Buzzr, you can catch her on reruns of Password, What's My Line? and To Tell the Truth. If you have Antenna, you can likely see some of her many appearances on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. And if you check her out online, you can go to her website because Phyllis Newman is one of the very few stars from that era who is still with us, and I think that alone is worth celebrating, don't you?

◊ ◊ ◊

Finally, why convention organizers are so adamant on having conventions tightly scripted - and why television viewers hate it so much.

As Neil Hickey relates it, it was at the 1948 Democratic convention when "a well-meaning lady delegate decided that a flock of 'doves of peace' should be released in the Convention Hall just as President Harry Truman was to begin his acceptance speech." We'll let the story develop from here:

The "doves" turned out to be garden-variety pigeons recently entrapped at City Hall, and no one had bothered to rehearse them sufficiently. They were supposed to soar upward on cue as inspiring symbols fo peace.

Instead, they waddled out of their cages and remained resolutely earthbound, until their sponsors began spooking them with sticks and rolled-up newspapers. Then they took off crazily in all directions, diving and swooping at the delegates.

One made a low-level attack on Permanent Chairman Sam Rayburn, sending him cowering under the rostrum. Others flew with a kamikaze fervor into the giant fans which were cooling the hall.

The scene proved to the Democrats that pigeon pageants are OK - on paper - but an old-fashioned platform addvocating peace is safer."

About the only detail missing is the feathers from the kamikaze pigeons, floating lazily down from the ceiling to the convention floor. But I ask you - would you not tune in to something like this? If you ask me, this would be Must See TV.

What's on TV? Monday, August 24, 1964

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The nice thing about being in a city like New York during Convention week is that we're not limited to network affiliates for our viewing entertainment. In fact, we've got plenty of choices if politics isn't your thing, as will be the case for increasing numbers of Americans by the time this divisive campaign is over. As this is the first day of the convention, the opening session isn't until tonight, meaning the daytime schedules are unaffected, leaving us with even more to watch. Well, let's get to it!


 2   WCBS (CBS)

Morning

    6:20
PREVIEWS

    6:25
GIVE US THIS DAY – Religion

    6:30
SUMMER SEMESTER
Introduction to Space Science

    7:00
NEWS AND WEATHER

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
MY LITTLE MARGIE – Comedy

    9:30
PEOPLE’S CHOICE – Comedy

  10:00
NEWS – Mike Wallace

  10:30
I LOVE LUCY – Comedy

  11:00
McCOYS – Comedy

  11:30
PETE AND GLAYDS

Afternoon

  12:00
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

  12:25
NEWS – Robert Trout

  12:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

  12:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

    1:00
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

    1:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    2:00
PASSWORD – Allen Ludden
Guests Betty White, Robert Reed

    2:30
HOUSE PARTY – Linkletter
Guests Jimmie Rodgers, John Di Betta

    3:00
TO TELL THE TRUTH – Panel
Panelists Chester Morris, Sam Levenson, Barbara Cook, Phyllis Newman

    3:25
NEWS – Douglas Edwards

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    4:00
SECRET STORM – Serial

    4:30
LOVE THAT BOB! – Comedy

    5:00
MOVIE – Drama
Early Show: “Bailout at 43,000” (1957)

Evening

    6:00
NEWS – Robert Trout

    6:30
NEWS – Walter Cronkite

    7:00
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION – Atlantic City   SPECIAL 
Robert Trout, Roger Mudd

    8:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

    9:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  10:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  11:00
NEWS – Jim Jensen

  11:10
WEATHER

  11:20
MOVIE – Western
Late Show: “Arizona Mission” (1956)

  12:50
NEWS

  12:55
MOVIE – Drama
Late Late Show: “You and Me” (1938)

    2:45
MOVIE – Drama
“Coronado” (1935) Time approximate

    4:15
MOVIE – Comedy
“The Pursuit of Happiness” (1935)



 3   WTIC (HARTFORD) (CBS)

Morning

    6:25
TOWN CRIER

    6:30
SUMMER SEMESTER
Introduction to Space Science

    7:00
UNDERSTANDING OUR WORLD – Education

    7:30
PERCEPTION – Dick Bertel

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
HAP RICHARDS – Children

    9:15
DEPUTY DAWG - Cartoons

    9:30
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

  10:00
NEWS – Mike Wallace

  10:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Private Worlds” (1935)

Afternoon

  12:00
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

  12:25
NEWS – Robert Trout

  12:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

  12:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

    1:00
MOVIE – Musical
“Down to Earth” (1947) Part 1

    1:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    2:00
PASSWORD – Allen Ludden
Guests Betty White, Robert Reed

    2:30
HOUSE PARTY – Linkletter
Guests Jimmie Rodgers, John Di Betta  

    3:00
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    3:30
TO TELL THE TRUTH – Panel
Panelists Rita Moreno, Barry Nelson, Abe Burrows, Phyllis Newman

    3:55
NEWS – Douglas Edwards

    4:00
RANGER ANDY – Children

    4:30
MOVIE – Western
“The Texas Rangers” (1951)

Evening

    6:10
SPORTS – Bob Steele

    6:15
NEWS – Bruce Kern

    6:25
WEATHER

    6:30
NEWS – Walter Cronkite

    7:00
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION – Atlantic City   SPECIAL 
Robert Trout, Roger Mudd

    8:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

    9:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  10:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  11:00
NEWS AND SPORTS

  11:15
MOVIE – Drama
“Serpent of the Nile” (1953)

  12:50
NEWS AND WEATHER



 4   WNBC (NBC)

Morning

    6:25
SERMONETTE – Religion

    6:30
MODERN MATH

    7:00
TODAY

    9:00
BIRTHDAY HOUSE – Children

    9:55
NEWS – Bob Wilson

  10:00
MAKE ROOM FOR DADDY

  10:30
WORD FOR WORD   COLOR 

  10:55
NEWS – Edwin Newman

  11:00
CONCENTRATION – Clayton

  11:30
JEOPARDY – Fleming   COLOR 

Afternoon

  12:00
SAY WHEN – James   COLOR 

  12:30
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES – Bob Barker   COLOR 

  12:55
NEWS – Ray Scherer

    1:00
BACHELOR FATHER – Comedy

    1:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL   COLOR 

    1:55
NEWS – Floyd Kalber

    2:00
LORETTA YOUNG – Drama

    2:30
DOCTORS – Serial

    3:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

    3:30
YOU DON’T SAY! – Kennedy   COLOR 
Guests Tommy Sands, Nancy Sinatra

    4:00
MATCH GAME – Gene Rayburn
Panelists Dale Robertson, Phyllis Diller

    4:25
NEWS – Sander Vanocur

    4:30
DOBIE GILLIS – Comedy

    5:00
MOVIE – Musical
“Cadet Girl” (1941)

Evening

    6:00
LOCAL NEWS – Gabe Pressman, Bill Ryan

    6:25
WEATHER – Pat Hernon

    6:30
NEWS – Huntley, Brinkley

    7:00
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION   SPECIAL 
Chet Huntley, David Brinkley

    8:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

    9:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  10:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  11:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  12:00
JOHNNY CARSON   COLOR 

    1:30
NEWS – Bill Rippe

    1:40
MOVIE – Mystery
“Devil’s Cargo” (1948) Time approximate

    3:20
SERMONETTE – Religion



 5   WNEW (IND.)

Morning

    7:00
CALL TO PRAYER – Religion

    7:30
COLUMBIA SEMINARS

    8:00
SANDY BECKER – Cartoons

    8:45
KING AND ODIE – Cartoons

    9:00
SANDY BECKER – Children

    9:30
TOPPER – Comedy

  10:00
MOVIE – Comedy
“Rings on Her Fingers” (1942)

  11:25
NEWS

  11:30
ROMPER ROOM – Children

Afternoon

  12:30
CARTOON PLAYTIME

  12:40
KING AND ODIE – Cartoons

  12:55
CARTOONS – Fred Scott

    1:25
NEWS

    1:30
MOVIE – Comedy
“Rings on Her Fingers” (1942)

    2:55
NEWS

    3:00
DOORWAY TO DESTINY

    3:30
BAT MASTERSON – Western

    4:00
HALL OF FUN – Fred Hall

    5:00
ASTROBOY – Cartoon

    5:30
SANDY’S HOUR – Children

Evening

    6:30
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB

    7:00
OUTLAWS – Western
Last show of the series.

    8:00
NEW BREED – Police

    9:00
SAM BENEDICT – Drama

  10:00
DEPUTY – Western

  10:30
DRAGNET – Police

  11:00
NEWS

  11:15
MOVIE – Drama
“Kiss of Death” (1947)

    1:05
NEWS

    1:15
NIGHT COURT – Drama



 7   WABC (ABC)

Morning

    6:20
NEWS

    6:30
PROJECT KNOW – Education

    7:00
ANN SOTHERN – Comedy

    7:30
GALE STORM – Comedy

    8:00
COURAGEOUS CAT – Cartoons 

    8:20
BILLY BANG BANG – Cartoons

    8:25
NEWS

    8:30
LITTLE RASCALS – Comedy

    9:00
MOVIE – Comedy
“Steamboat ‘Round the Bend” (1935)

  10:30
PRICE IS RIGHT – Cullen
Guest Carol Lawrence

  11:00
GET THE MESSAGE
Guests Constance Bennett, Darryl Hickman

  11:30
MISSING LINKS – Clark
Panelists Dorothy Kilgallen, Nipsey Russell, Tom Poston

Afternoon

  12:00
FATHER KNOWS BEST

  12:30
ERNIE FORD – Variety
Guest Ken Murray

    1:00
MOVIE – Musical
“On Your Toes” (1939)

    2:30
DAY IN COURT – Drama

    2:55
NEWS – Lisa Howard

    3:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

    3:30
QUEEN FOR A DAY – Smith

    4:00
TRAILMASTER – Western

    5:00
MOVIE – Western
“Rock Island Trail” (1950)

Evening

    6:25
WEATHER – Ken Rabat

    6:30
LOCAL NEWS – Bill Beutel

    6:45
NEWS – Ron Cochran

    7:00
HENNESEY – Comedy

    7:30
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION – Atlantic City   SPECIAL 
Howard K. Smith, Edward P. Morgan

    8:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

    9:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  10:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  11:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  12:00
NEWS – Bob Young

  12:10
LOCAL NEWS – Richard Bate

  12:20
MOVIE – Comedy
Best of Broadway: “Stella” (1950)



 8   WNHC (NEW HAVEN) (ABC)

Morning

    6:40
NEWS AND WEATHER

    6:45
FILM FEATURE

    7:00
OPERATION ALPHABET

    7:30
MR. GOOBER – Children

    8:30
JACK LA LANNE – Exercise

    9:00
GIRL TALK – Panel
Panelists Jeri Archer, Mimi Benzell

    9:30
QUEEN FOR A DAY – Smith

  10:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

  10:30
PRICE IS RIGHT – Cullen
Guest Carol Lawrence

  11:00
GET THE MESSAGE
Guests Constance Bennett, Darryl Hickman

  11:30
MISSING LINKS – Clark
Panelists Dorothy Kilgallen, Nipsey Russell, Tom Poston

Afternoon

  12:00
FATHER KNOWS BEST

  12:30
ERNIE FORD – Variety
Guest Ken Murray

    1:00
MOVIE – Drama
“I’m Still Alive” (1940)

    1:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Magnificent Melody” (Italian; 1952)

    2:30
DAY IN COURT – Drama

    2:55
NEWS – Lisa Howard

    3:00
TRAILMASTER – Western

    4:00
ADMIRAL JACK – Children

    5:00
RIFLEMAN – Western

    5:30
YOGI BEAR – Cartoons

Evening

    6:00
LOCAL NEWS – Salmona

    6:10
Weather – Joe Francis

    6:15
NEWS – Ron Cochran

    6:30
GALLANT MEN – Drama   RETURN 

    7:30
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION – Atlantic City   SPECIAL 
Howard K. Smith, Edward P. Morgan

    8:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

    9:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  10:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  11:00
CONVENTION COVERAGE CONTINUES

  12:00
LOCAL NEWS – Thompson

  12:10
WEATHER – Carole Wilson

  12:15

MOVIE – Biography
“The Life of Emile Zola” (1937)

    2:20
NEWS



 9  WOR (IND.)

Morning

    9:20
FARM REPORT

    9:00
NEWS AND WEATHER

    9:25
MOVIE – Drama
“Magnificent Melody” (Italian; 1952)

  11:00
GENIUS – Education

  11:30
GIRL TALK – Panel
Panelists Gypsy Rose Lee, Lovelady Powell

Afternoon

  12:00
NEWS – John Wingate

  12:15
CONVENTION HIGHLIGHTS – Atlantic City   SPECIAL 

  12:30
MEMORY LANE – Joe Franklin
Guest Jean Turner

    3:00
NEWS – Joseph King

    3:15
CONVENTION HIGHLIGHTS S

    3:30
HIGH ROAD TO ADVENTURE   COLOR 

    4:00
FIRESIDE THEATER – Drama

    5:00
MOVIE – Adventure
“Elephant Fury” (German: 1955)

Evening

    6:30
MAVERICK – Western

    7:30
MOVIE – Science Fiction
Million Dollar Movie: “Brain from Planet Arous” (1958)

    9:00
FRACTURED FLICKERS

    9:30
ON STAGE – Drama

  10:30
BEST OF THE POST – Drama   COLOR 

  11:00
MOVIE – Science Fiction
Million Dollar Movie: “Brain from Planet Arous” (1958)

  12:30
NEWS AND WEATHER



 11  WPIX (IND.)

Morning

    9:10
COCO THE KLOWN – Cartoon

    9:20
FUNNY COMPANY - Cartoon

    9:30
WALLY GATOR – Cartoon

    9:40
POPEYE – Cartoon

    9:50
MEL-O-TOONS – Cartoons

  10:00
JACK LA LANNE – Exercise

  10:30
BOLD JOURNEY – Travel

  11:00
BOZO THE CLOWN – Cartoons

Afternoon

    1:00
MOVIE – Drama
“Hangmen Also Die” (1943)

    2:20
NEWS

    2:30
RACKET SQUAD – Police

    3:00
EXPLORE THE WORLD

    3:30
TRUE ADVENTURE

    4:00
HERCULES – Jack McCarthy

    4:30
CHUCK McCANN – Children

    5:30
SUPERMAN – Adventure

Evening

    6:00
THREE STOOGES – Comedy

    6:30
YOGI BEAR – Cartoons

    7:00
NEWS – Kevin Kennedy

    7:10
LOCAL NEWS – John Tillman

    7:25
WEATHER – Gloria Okon

    7:30
HONEYMOONERS – Comedy

    8:00
LIFE WITH FATHER – Comedy

    8:30
I SEARCH FOR ADVENTURE

    9:00
NAVY LOG – Drama

    9:30
M SQUAD – Police

  10:00
STATE TROOPER – Police

  10:30
BEST OF GROUCHO – Quiz

  11:00
NEWS – Kevin Kennedy

  11:10
WEATHER – Marilyn Grey

  11:15
STEVE ALLEN – Variety
Guest host Woody Woodbury, guests Zsa Zsa Gabor, Paul Lynde


 13  WNDT (EDUC.)

Afternoon

    5:00
OPERATION ALPHABET

    5:30
ONCE UPON A DAY – Children

Evening

    6:00
WHAT’S NEW - Children

    6:30
INGLES PARA TODOS

    7:00
COLUMBIA SEMINARS

    7:30
PROFILE: NEW JERSEY

    8:00
ANTIQUES – George Michael

    8:30
INDIAN EXPERIMENT

    9:00
THE CITY – New York

    9:30
MAKING OF A DOCTOR   SPECIAL 

  10:00
WORLD AT TEN

  10:30
INGLES PARA TODOS

The "It's About TV" Interview: Jodie Peeler talks about Dave Garroway

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David Cunningham Garroway, better and more appropriately known as Dave, was once considered one of of the great men in all of broadcasting history; and though we've become accustomed to many of the founding pioneers fading into the ether of time, there's a sense that Garroway, who perhaps should be remembered along with Lucy and Kovacs and Gleason and Sullivan and some of the other names that populate television's early history, has faded farther than he ought, and we don't remember him as we should.

Fortunately, both for Garroway and for us, there's someone out there seeking to rectify that: Jodie Peeler, the keeper of the Garroway at Large website ("A Tribute to the Master Communicator") and co-author of an upcoming book about Dave Garroway. Jodie's been interested in broadcast history as long as she can remember. After stints in radio and in newspaper reporting, Jodie is now a communications professor at Newberry College in South Carolina. She's also a brave woman, becoming the latest to agree to step into the It’s About TV interview spotlight.

It's About TV: I don’t know if you've read the novel Morning by W.D. Wetherell that came out about 15 years or so ago. 

Jodie Peeler: I have! I liked it a lot.

The main character in the book was a morning show host that was obviously based on Garroway, and though we weren’t meant to draw any parallels between what happens to this character in the book and the life that Garroway lived in real life, it was just a fascinating look at the early days of television, and the kind of impact that a man of Garroway’s ingenuity and ability would have been able to have. And although I knew about Garroway, had seen and read about him, it made me want to know more about him and the impact he’d had on TV history.

Wetherell very nicely captured the feel of those early days of television and that’s why I enjoyed the book so much. Alec McGowan differed a great deal from Garroway but if you know where to look, you can catch little glimpses of him. I also liked how well Wetherell re-created what live television was like, and again if you know about the early days of Today you know what he borrowed from that. It’s kind of like how My Favorite Year gave you a fictionalized peek into putting on Your Show of Shows. I’d imagine Wetherell gave Robert Metz’s The Today Show a close read, and that’s a terrific book for anybody who wants to know about the early years of the program.

Without giving anything away for either of us, you’re younger than I am.

And believe it or not, my collaborator on this project is younger than I am!

Which is wonderful, because there’s this feeling that the only people are into classic television are those who were around when it was originally on, and here’s someone whose interest in Garroway starts closer to the time of his death than it does when he was making television history, which gives me hope that the history of television can continue to be passed down from generation to generation. So what drew you to Garroway in the first place?

Well, for as long as I can remember I’ve been fascinated by history in general, and along with it television and radio from yesteryear, and any time there was a retrospective program with clips from old television programs, it fascinated me. I’m not sure why, but from an early age I loved the stuff. I grew up listening to old radio cassettes, and taping programs about television history on the family VCR. Even if my parents didn’t understand it, they went along with it and sometimes would buy me books or tapes that fed my interest. (Since I ended up teaching in the communications field, I hope my folks now look at such things as having made an investment in my future.)

I was nine when Dave Garroway died, and I didn’t know that much about him in the moment aside from knowing he was the first host of Today, and from that clip we’ve all seen a hundred times from January 14, 1952, Dave at the desk wearing that big microphone. Even in that, though, there’s something about how easygoing he is, that purring voice and easy manner, that makes you realize he was something special. The more I read about him, and the more clips I got to see in retrospective shows, the more I wanted to know. But no one had ever done a proper book about him, so there was only so much I could learn. And the narratives about him vary and it can be difficult to separate the gas from the gospel.

When the Internet came along it opened up a few more sources of information, and eventually I found out the draft of an uncompleted autobiography and some other papers were in a collection at the University of Maryland. Part of me wanted to take that on, but I know from experience that writing a book is a huge project, and I’d have to squeeze everything in among other obligations. About a year or so back, I started thinking about the project again. And I happened upon another Garroway researcher, Brandon Hollingsworth, who’d not only considered the same project but had conducted research in the papers at UMD. So we’re sharing research findings with one another and combining our efforts, via e-mail and postal mail, to make this overdue biography a reality. The college where I work granted me a sabbatical for the Fall term, so that gives me time to work on the Garroway project and another biography I’m trying to get published, about author and journalist Ben Robertson.

In Morning there’s a scene where McGowan, the Garroway character, decides on wearing these black horn-rimmed glasses because they’ll make him stand out on the static-y pictures that weren’t always so clear in the B&W days. Any evidence that Garroway ever did anything like that?

There are pictures of Garroway wearing horn-rimmed glasses as a disc jockey after World War II, so the owlish look came with him to television, rather than something he did for television. That said, those glasses and the bow tie became his visual trademark. There’s a very sweet clip from a 1950 episode of Kukla, Fran and Ollie where Garroway presents Kukla with a tiny pair of horn-rimmed glasses, and Kukla is so tickled to have glasses like Dave’s. They’re so much a part of the Garroway image that when you see him in his post-Today years wearing wire-rimmed glasses and a necktie, he looks like someone else.

We're back in the early days of television, when you often made a name for yourself in local TV, which acted kind of like a farm system, often producing shows for the networks, and I think Dave got his start in Chicago before heading to New York. Was that always his objective, to head for New York? Was it that he had a vision for what television could be that he wanted to see fulfilled?

Garroway and Chicago went back a little way. He’d started with NBC as a page at 30 Rock – and how he got that job is a great story in itself – and through a lot of determination he parlayed that into a gig as an announcer for KDKA in Pittsburgh. He was at WMAQ in Chicago when World War II broke out, then got inducted into the Navy, commissioned as an officer, and assigned to a minesweeper. Unfortunately, he got incredibly seasick, even when his ship was pierside. When his ship was sent from California to Pearl Harbor he spent most of the voyage ill in his bunk. Obviously, he wasn’t much use aboard a ship, so he was put in the officers’ pool and ended up running the Pacific Fleet Yeoman and Stenography School, which turned out to be an easy job for him.

In the evenings Garroway got bored with hanging out at the officers’ club, and one day he dropped by radio station KGU to see if they needed help. When the station manager learned of Dave’s NBC pedigree, he hired him on the spot for an evening program and gave him free rein. That’s really where Dave honed his style, playing jazz and symphony music from the station’s library and taking listeners on imaginary walks through cities he knew well stateside, using that remarkable, very personal style of his. It was a huge hit with homesick service personnel.

When Garroway came back to WMAQ after the war, he brought that style with him to a midnight show called The 11:60 Club. It was something really different. He liked using unusual words – calling a piece of music “diaphanous,” for instance, or pretending to talk to a mouse in the studio, or seducing the listener with a nickname like “old honeybee,” using this start-stop cadence that was unlike anything else on radio. It was a very personal style of radio, kind of jazzy, and he did it well. He described it as like “talking to one and a half people,” like someone else is nearby but you’re concentrating on one person, and you get that sense when you listen to his radio shows. It’s this very seductive manner he uses talking to you. It’s funny, because Garroway in person was shy and didn’t take much to conversation, but when it was just him and a microphone or a camera there was a connection, and magic ensued. It drew him a devoted following in Chicago, not only with listeners (especially the Northwestern University set) but other DJs liked his work too. Dave was very happy there, and under WMAQ boss Jules Herbuveaux he had a lot of creative freedom.

That style was adapted for television when Garroway at Large came along. You not only had Dave’s wonderful person-to-person style, but you had a brilliant creative team that wasn’t afraid to have fun with the conventions of the medium. They weren’t afraid, for instance, to just walk from one set to another on the program, or to work some of the crew into a bit, or even have a duet with a boom microphone. And in the middle of it all was Garroway, this genial guy with a whimsical air about the whole proceeding. NBC picked up Garroway at Large for the network and the brass in New York didn’t quite know what to make of it. The Chicago style was at odds with this very proper New York style. But it was unusual and brilliant. When David Letterman goofed around with his stage crew or showed that a set piece was phony, it seemed fresh to me in the 1980s. But Garroway was doing some of those things, minus Letterman’s irony, in 1949.

I think Garroway always wished he could go back to how it was in Chicago during those postwar years, when it was fun and he had the freedom he had at WMAQ.  Even with the success of Today and all that it brought him, it wasn’t the same. Of course, the Chicago School was running out of time. But in his recollections, Garroway speaks so warmly of those days, and I really think that’s when he was happiest.

And so Garroway winds up as host of Today, this revolutionary program that's on at 7:00 in the morning. How does this transition from Garroway at Large to Today happen? And with this blank canvas, so to speak, what does he hope to do with it? 

That’s another instance of the luck or kismet or whatever it was that you sometimes see in his story. For instance, he got hired by NBC in 1935 because he happened to be at a card game and the hostess mentioned she was in charge of hiring and firing the network’s pages, and he was hired the next day, and the rest is history. And that kind of fate was at work in 1951. Garroway at Large lost its sponsorship and time slot, and Dave was trying to figure out what was next for him. One day that September he was having breakfast at the Pump Room in Chicago’s Ambassador Hotel and somebody had left a copy of Variety behind, and he started leafing through it. About 30 pages in, he found a piece about this new early-morning concept Pat Weaver at NBC had put together. And Dave was transfixed, because this new show sounded tailor-made for him. So he told his agent, Biggie Levin, that he wanted that job, and meetings with the higher-ups at NBC soon followed.

There’s an interesting memo in the NBC papers at the Wisconsin Historical Center. It was written by Tom McAvity, who was then in charge of talent for NBC, to Pat Weaver in November 1951. McAvity was presenting all the numbers and other factors Weaver should consider in making an offer to Garroway. The last paragraph had a very interesting passage. “We think he is equally as interested in his career as in money,” McAvity wrote. “The fact that Dave in this project would be, as in other projects, a pioneer, should appeal to him.”

Was he happy with morning television, or did he hope to transition to evening TV with it?

Whether Dave came in with the intent to parlay that into evening television, I don’t really know. It did come to pass when NBC revived the Garroway at Large format in 1953 as an evening program called The Dave Garroway Show, and there were rumors a year or two into Today that Garroway would leave the early-morning show and focus on an evening program. But Dave stuck with Today for its first nine years, and he also did other projects like The Dave Garroway Show and Wide Wide World. And on the radio side, he kept Dial Dave Garroway for a few years, did a weekly long-form prerecorded show, and had a slot on Monitor each week for a while. He was a very busy man in those years. He made a lot of money and he had fame and influence. He had a daily platform not only for news and interviews, but he could also talk about what he was interested in or what was on his mind. He had sponsors who begged for that Garroway touch in selling their products. From a show-business perspective, it was a bonanza. But on a personal level, it took a terrible toll on him.

Naturally, in many ways Today was a much different show than we're accustomed to now. When people think about this early Today, they're always going to think about the chimp, J. Fred Muggs. Where does he fit into all this?

Muggs came about because a writer on the show had seen a New Yorker cartoon that involved a chimpanzee newscaster, and they had the idea of a visual gag of cutting to a chimp dressed as a newspaperman banging away at a typewriter. They had been looking for a chimp for the role, and one day a couple of men had brought a baby chimp into the building for some other reason. So they hired that chimp for the show, and he turned into the program’s resident comic relief and ended up with the name J. Fred Muggs. And Muggs became very popular, especially with children. Parents wanted to hear the news and weather, but the kids wanted to see what Muggs was up to. It even got to the point where some elementary schools brought in television sets so children could watch Muggs before classes started. One of the producers, Richard Pinkham, figured that having Muggs on the show made around $100 million for NBC. Muggs got a lot of fan mail and even a little bit of hate mail, and they sent him on a round-the-world trip, and he generated a lot of publicity for the program. All this was cute when Muggs was little, but as he grew up he became harder to manage, and increasingly the producers sent him out on trips or did segments where Muggs wouldn’t be in the studio. In 1957 the producers let Muggs go, and Muggs (or, more properly, his owners) promptly filed suit against NBC, the producer who fired Muggs, and also against Jack Lescoulie and Dave Garroway.

Garroway played along with Muggs on the air, but Robert Metz characterized the off-camera relationship with Muggs as “on-again, off-again.” Dave had compassion for Muggs, but I also think he got tired of his antics and was relieved when he no longer had to worry about Muggs biting him. Muggs was replaced by a chimp named Kokomo Jr., who was of sweeter temperament and adorable in a baby-ish way. But Muggs was too tough an act to follow, and Kokomo didn’t last very long.

There was also something called "The Today Girls." It seems sexist to talk about them now; what was Garroway’s position on them? Did he have anything to do with them?

Well, women were vital to Today from the very beginning, even in the planning stages. There were women like the incredible Mary Kelly, who was a very determined and hard-working staff member who did just about everything from writing for the show and conducting prerecorded interviews to rounding up hard-to-get guests and even minding J. Fred Muggs on his travels, and she ended up as a producer before it was all over. Estelle Parsons was another. She was hired on as a production assistant, and did that as her day job while trying to get her performing career started. She ended up having more on-camera roles, and you’d see her update the weather or talking to Dave, and eased into doing interviews and filing stories for the program. And I think the “Today Girl” concept adapted from that. When Estelle Parsons left was when that role changed into the sidekick who added light and beauty to the show, could handle segments about household matters or fashion, but was a featured player rather than a star. It was kind of a grown-up sister or a “girl next door,” not an Arlene Francis or Betty Furness type who could have been a co-host.

Garroway was comfortable with women working on the show, even with Faye Emerson filling in for him when he was on vacation. I think he believed in opportunity for anyone who could do a job well. And he seems to have gotten along well with the Today Girls. They posed no threat to his role, and they gave him someone different to interact with. Of course, recollections vary depending on when they were on the show with him. Lee Meriwether, who replaced Estelle Parsons, said she had fond memories of working on Today and that Garroway was protective of her. Betsy Palmer said she felt she was loved when she was on the show. Florence Henderson said Garroway was always very nice to her and that he was amazingly brilliant. By that point, though, his Dexedrine use and his relentless schedule were getting to him, and she got to see some of that, and remembered that he could be a control freak. Those tendencies clouded his late tenure on Today, and he was constantly requesting new producers and staffers and writers, and the Today Girls were no exception. Beryl Pfizer, who went from being a writer to a Today Girl, wrote that Garroway would request a new Girl if ratings dropped or even if he just got restless with the program. She wrote that’s what happened to her, but Garroway hated to be the bad guy and couldn’t say he’d done it, instead saying it was somebody else’s decision.

One side note: Not long before he left Today, he approved the hiring of a young writer named Barbara Walters. And we know the great career she built from that big break, and how many opportunities she opened for women in the television business. At the Emmy Awards in 1982, she delivered a heartfelt tribute to Garroway and spoke with gratitude about the opportunity he gave her all those years before.

You mentioned Monitor, the legendary weekend radio program which was also the brainchild of Pat Weaver, I believe. Aside from introducing the inaugural episode, did Dave have much to do with that?

Garroway was not only on that inaugural Monitor broadcast, but he held down a Sunday night slot until 1961. Just the fact Garroway was a host - or, in Pat Weaver-ese, a Monitor Communicator - made people really take the program seriously when it was trying to get established. He was popular with listeners, but Dennis Hart's marvelous book about Monitor includes some stories about how Garroway could be difficult, if not maddening, to work with.

If you look at Today, it really does have Garroway's fingerprints on it, doesn't it? As with Wetherell's Morning, there is such an intimacy between the host and the viewers, it's real magic. 

It took a Dave Garroway to shape the program into what we’ve come to expect in the morning, and the role of the host as we come to expect it. The initial concept was a form of televised radio, meant more to be listened to than seen, so when you’re getting ready to go to work or doing chores around the house your ear takes in the important content.

Garroway wasn’t the first name to come up when the concept was being thrown around – and the morning concept wasn’t the only idea for Today, because there was also a proposal to do it as a midday 15-minute program, and there were various proposals to have singers and a resident comedian and to do a lot of other things, a concept that sounded akin to Don McNeill’s Breakfast Club, and thankfully all of that was thrown out in favor of a simpler format. Pat Weaver had thought about getting Russ Hughes, who was nicknamed “Rush Hughes” because he had a rapid-fire delivery, and I don’t know about you but I don’t want rapid-fire delivery that early in the morning! And in one of the 1951 proposal memos producer Mort Werner recommended hiring Johnny Olson – yes, the same Johnny Olson you’re thinking of. But Garroway sold NBC on hiring him, and I think he’s what made the difference. At the very least, it’s difficult to imagine anyone else doing it, because that program was so much Garroway’s.

Today tried a lot of things in its first years. If you watch segments from the really early days of Today – and there aren’t many kinescopes, and in fact only 45 minutes from that very first morning exist because in all the run-up, they forgot to order a kinescope – it really tries to do a little of everything. It’s like the first episodes of Saturday Night Live, when the program was trying to figure out what it wanted to be. And there were a lot of people who worked to make the show successful, but as the face of the program Garroway was excellent. His cool, droll demeanor went down really easy first thing in the morning, friendly and informed and just irreverent enough, and his “just you and me” style was perfect. Here was a friendly and reassuring face and voice welcoming you to the day you were about to live. And it was a formula no one else could match. CBS threw numerous efforts against Garroway in the 1950s, with Walter Cronkite or Jack Paar or Will Rogers Jr. And though some of those efforts got good reviews and sometimes offered a ratings challenge, none of them took hold. I think they just couldn’t match the most special element Today had. But no one could.

Jack Lescoulie, who was, I don’t know – would you kind of describe him as Dave’s sidekick on Today, or was there more to him than that?

Jack Lescoulie was a number of things to Today: announcer, sidekick, gave the sports rundowns, filled in for Dave when he was away. But Dave also called Jack his “saver.” Dave told him, “If you ever feel that I’m getting dull or that an interview isn’t going right, just walk in, Jack.” That’s an incredible amount of trust to have in your sidekick. In 1953 Garroway gave Lescoulie a gold ring that was a duplicate of a silver ring Dave wore. Inside it was inscribed, “To Jack from Dave, for being just what you are by the dawn’s early light.” Lescoulie wore it the rest of his life.

I recall in an interview in TV Guide, Lescoulie says that there were only two great commercial pitchmen on television, and he says this after watching a commercial that was just terrific, very creative, but at the end he can’t remember what the product was, which should be the whole point of the commercial, and those two pitchmen were Arthur Godfrey and Dave Garroway. Considering how good Garroway was at reaching through the tube to his audience, I don’t suppose we should be so surprised that he’d be so effective.

It’s interesting that Lescoulie cited Garroway in the same breath as Arthur Godfrey. They were very different people, but they had some parallels. Both specialized in that kind of “just you and me” style of communicating over radio and television. Their most productive years were the 1940s and 1950s, and they both enjoyed periods when they seemed to be everywhere. They were coveted by advertisers because they were such excellent salesmen who could sell anything. And by the early 1960s, they were yesterday’s news. Godfrey held on with his daily radio show until 1972 (and oddly enough, Garroway subbed for Godfrey a few times in the post-Today era) and some television projects, but he wasn’t what he once had been. Garroway tried several things after leaving Today, but between his personal circumstances and the way the medium was changing, nothing took.

Incidentally, a side note – does it say something about the kinds of skills that are needed to sell products that these two great salesmen both worked in morning television, or is that just because morning viewers back then – primarily women – were the ones who held the purse strings?

I’m inclined to think it’s a good salesman is a good salesman, and a good salesman’s going to bring the magic regardless of the time of day or the product. Dave could do commercials for any number of things on both daytime and nighttime programs and the same magic was there. He could pitch for General Motors just as well as he could for Saran Wrap, just as Godfrey’s magic was there regardless of the product being Lipton Tea, Chesterfield cigarettes, or Eastern Air Lines. And considering the variety of sponsors Today had, for just about every kind of product you can imagine, he had to know how to sell anything.

There’s a moment captured in a 1959 New Yorker profile, and it’s a testament to the Garroway style of selling. When they did Today from Paris via videotape, there was a segment where Dave was on the second level of the Eiffel Tower with Charles Van Doren, who had been hired as the show’s culture-and-arts specialist, and they were showing the sights from up there. When the camera panned to Napoleon’s tomb, Garroway entered the picture. “Ah, yes, a magnificent monument.” And from that, Garroway gently segued into a commercial for tombstones made by one of the show’s sponsors! As Jack Lescoulie said, “When you can sell tombstones to people at breakfast time, you’ve got to be good!”

Speaking of Charles Van Doren, I've always been interested in him. He was, of course, a big winner on Twenty One, which led to Today, and then in the wake of the Quiz Show Scandals lost the job, along with everything else. How did Garroway feel about having Van Doren on the show, and what was the relationship like between the two of them? 

Even if Van Doren had been hired on by NBC as a way to continue deriving value from the stardom he'd achieved on Twenty One, I think Garroway enjoyed the intellect he brought to Today, and felt his segments added a little grace and class to the program. Dave was generous to Van Doren on Today, and also let him do segments on Wide Wide World. They grew close, as you will when you work together under pressure and on a strange schedule, and Van Doren's sudden suspension upset and saddened him. Maybe it's not a shock to us now, when we know what we know about Garroway, to think about him weeping on the air (during a segment that had been taped the previous afternoon, no less), but in 1959 it surprised viewers.

Garroway said in his on-air comments that he'd come to know Charles very well, considered him part of the little family they had on the program, had traveled with him and worked with him so much and so often, had watched the Van Dorens' little girl grow up. I think anybody who's had to deal with an awful truth about someone you deeply care for can understand why Dave wept and said "I can only say I'm heartsick."

When Van Doren - who kept a low profile for more than 40 years after the quiz show scandals - finally broke his silence on the quiz show scandal about a decade ago, he wrote that he and Garroway wrote to one another after Van Doren left the show, but fell out of touch.

Is there a point during Garroway's time on Today that you see as the epitome of where he wants the show to be, what he envisioned it to be, or was that never a consideration for him, in other words did he see it as in a consistent state of evolution?

That's a good question. I haven't come across any hard-and-fast evidence, at least from the early years, that Garroway had some grand vision for what the program should become. As his tenure continued and as he gained more control over the broadcast (to the point that it was officially renamed The Dave Garroway Today Show late in his tenure), his preferences for what the program should be and how it should run did gain more power, and of course in the back half he had enough clout to make personnel changes if he didn't get quite what he wanted, or if he got bored with how things were going.

Whether Dave had a clear vision of what he wanted to be, or if he saw it as an evolution, I'm not quite sure. There are some memos in some archives we have yet to get to, and I hope they'll shed some light on what Dave's vision was for Today.

You've alluded to the troubled personal life which Garroway had away from the camera, and how it affected his television career. Tell us a little more about that. 

Dave had two major issues dogging his life. One was chronic depression, which from about 1945 on caused him trouble, and he spent a lot of time with mental health professionals trying to get a handle on it. The other was Dexedrine. Garroway had a habit of staying up late that went back years. He’d go to these all-night card games, or as an NBC page he’d stay late and go into empty studios to work on his announcing skills, and of course he was a tinkerer and loved to stay up late working on his cars. His son, Dave Jr., told an author that at a card game after World War II, a physician told Garroway about Dexedrine, and Dave got hooked and laid in a supply of it. You hear stories about Dave using some liquid called “The Doctor” to keep him going, and that was a preparation of Dexedrine and vitamins.

We know things now about Dexedrine and Benzedrine that we didn’t know in 1945, and we know what they can do to the body and mind with continued use. It’s like what we know about smoking that we didn’t know then. But back then Benzedrine was talked about in sort of the same way we now talk about those little 5-Hour Energy shots, and it had been used to keep troops alert in battle during the recent war, so it was something people were aware of. There’s a great Esquire piece from 1953 about Garroway and the early days of Today, and The Doctor is talked about in there – and not in the context of Dave using it, but members of the crew using it to stay awake and alert against the strange hours they had to keep at this demanding job.

Garroway kept strange hours not just because of Today and all the obligations that came with it, but he had other things going on with other programs, sponsor commitments, guest appearances, so many other things. Or he’d go out for an evening, or go to an all-night card game, or even come home in the early evening and then work past midnight on one of his cars, only to have to be up again at 3:30 or 4:00 to do the program at 7:00. So he’d take sleeping pills to help him rest and Dexedrine to get going, surviving on very little sleep as it was, but with these drugs working on him.

The other thing is, from what I’ve researched – and I’m not a physician, so take this for what it’s worth - the more you use of something like Dexedrine, the more you need of it to get the same effect, and it does strange things. I think the stories of Dave’s paranoia, like putting microphones in the gargoyles outside his doorstep because he insisted people were going to break in, or his preoccupation with bomb shelters, have foundation in his Dexedrine use. Some of Dave’s unhappiness with things behind the scenes may also be related. Florence Henderson told of seeing Dave one day after he’d pulled a lot of skin off his thumb, and that’s consistent with the skin-picking that can come with heavy Dexedrine use. I also wonder if the heart troubles he had later in life were connected to all the Dexedrine he’d used back in the day, because it can have an effect on the heart. Dave eventually kicked the Dexedrine habit and got that part of his life in order, but the depression never left him.

Off-camera there were signs that Dave’s life was in bad shape. Lindsey Nelson, the sportscaster, wrote of being on the program with Garroway, and when they cut away to a 60-second filmed commercial Dave sat silently as tears rolled down his face. He told Nelson, “I’ve got to quit crying on the show. People can’t understand what I’m saying.” There was a day when Dave passed out in Betsy Palmer’s arms just before the show was to begin. There were tales of behind-the-scenes intrigue, of Garroway ordering the firings of producers and other personnel, and you’ll read in showbiz columns these little hints of “turmoil behind the scenes at the Garroway show.” There was also a shift to videotaping the program the afternoon before, in an effort to ease the burden on Garroway.

What’s amazing, though, is how little of this came across on the air. Certainly if you compare the sunny Garroway of 1952 with the serious Garroway of 1960 or 1961 you can see a difference. But Garroway had this way of compartmentalizing. Whatever was going on in his mind or behind the scenes did not really show to the home viewer when the tally light came on. There were moments when it slipped, such as his teary monologue after Van Doren was suspended, and another where he’s said to have blown up on the air at a crewman to the point where NBC had to issue an apology. But those moments were exceptions.

So in 1961, he leaves Today. Why, and was it the right thing for him to do?

There were a lot of things going on about that time. For one, Dave’s drug use was really getting to him, and it was wearing him out.  There was also turbulence behind the scenes at Today, with a revolving door of staffers and producers who either got tired of dealing with Garroway or were fired at his request. By 1961 there are items just about every other week in the entertainment columns about turmoil at Today. Dave’s contract was going to expire later that year and he was seeking new one. On top of that, his marriage was under strain and his wife was having her own problems, and in late April she was found dead of an overdose. Things really caught up with him that year in an incredibly sad way.

Dave insisted he was forced out because the news department wanted control of the show and insisted he wasn’t a newsman. He said as much in interviews years later, and Dave Jr. told an author his dad said he’d have just been a talking head if he’d stayed. Dave didn’t fit with what the network wanted Today to become, and his recent behavior probably soured the network too. So Garroway left and the show was retooled with John Chancellor and Frank Blair and Edwin Newman, which turned Today into what somebody called “the evening news in the morning,” and that didn’t work well at all. Garroway lamented what the network did to Today after he left.  But even if none of that had happened, I wonder how long it would have been before the strain of everything – the drugs, the depression, his busy schedule, his wife’s death – would have caught up with him. He was on course for a breakdown as it was. To me the wonder is that with everything he faced, he held it together that long, and for the most part kept it off the program.

I think you just answered this, but what did Garroway think of Today with John Chancellor and then Hugh Downs in charge? I'd think that the hard-news approach of Chancellor would have been the opposite of what he wanted for the show.

Oh, he hated what resulted when NBC gave control of Today to the news division. He hated what News did to Today and really felt they'd taken out what made the program special. It didn't help that, according to Garroway, NBC News had insisted Garroway was not a newsman, and that NBC wouldn't have let him keep his same role or any of the power he held over the program. He knew they wanted to change the program, and he didn't like it. I don't think Garroway blamed the hosts after him for what happened to the program. I think what upset Garroway was what TV Tropes calls "executive meddling." Especially since he had invested so much of himself into carving Today out of the wilderness and into a very popular and well-regarded program.

Be that as it may, whether it was his feelings of hurt or if it was genuine concern, Garroway did have a point. The Chancellor-hosted version of Today was a legendary misfire. Chancellor himself didn't feel it was his field, Frank Blair didn't feel comfortable as the sidekick instead of the newsman, and the whole thing was just too hard-news for early morning. When Hugh Downs took over in 1962 the program kind of went back to its roots a little, but in Garroway's eyes Today was never again as good as it was when he was hosting.

What was Dave's career, and his life, like post-Today?

Dave tried a number of things in the years after Today. He invested in a broadcasting magazine, but that went bust and turned into a serious financial nightmare, and he did some work in radio. He did a science series for National Educational Television, the forerunner of PBS. He moved to Boston later in the 1960s and hosted a talk show that he tried to get nationally syndicated, but that didn’t come through. After that, he moved to Los Angeles and worked in radio there, and hosted a summer replacement show for CBS called The Newcomers, showcasing up-and-coming talent, and he had fun doing that. He tried pitching some television series to the networks, but none of them worked out. He did commercials, and even took acting lessons and had a few bit parts on programs like Alias Smith and Jones.

I remember that episode - my wife said, "Isn't that Dave Garroway?" 

His personal life settled down somewhat, and he could devote time to his many interests, to his car collection and his golf game. He had long been fascinated with astronomy and telescopes, and even knew how to grind his own lenses, and he’d travel to see eclipses in Africa or go take tours of great telescopes. He was on a tour of Soviet telescopes in the mid-1970s when he befriended an astronomy professor named Sarah Lippincott, and their friendship grew to the point where they got married. I think he found in her an ideal partner, and she really loved him too. And at some point Dave kicked his addictions. Unfortunately, his health started to go in the 1970s, and he had to have some heart procedures performed. One of them left complications, and he was in and out of hospitals a good bit toward the end. And, of course, depression was never far away, and one of his associates who talked to him via phone at least twice a week noted his affect was up some days and down some others.

But he managed to show up for the Today 30th anniversary special in 1982, and that’s poignant to watch. The producer built the show around Dave, and he delivered. He looked 78 and not 68, but being back on the air and surrounded by old friends energized him. On the 25th anniversary show he had kind of rambled, but this time around he was sharp and his tone was light. The segments he did, reminiscing with Jack Lescoulie and Frank Blair and Pat Weaver, had the old Garroway magic. Lescoulie and Garroway kidded around like they did in the old days. At the end of the program, before they sliced this huge birthday cake, Bryant Gumbel invited Dave to have the last word. “Sentimental Journey” comes up in the background and eyes are misting up. Dave raises his hand and says “I’m Dave Garroway...and peace.” Everybody applauds. As the show’s going off, Dave is standing with his wife and Lee Meriwether and Betsy Palmer and Florence Henderson, and he’s given a piece of cake. He tells them, “I said ‘peace’ and I got one!” And everyone laughs. It was the perfect end to a wonderful reunion. Dave enjoyed the morning so much, and wrote this gracious thank-you to the show’s producer that ended with the words, “Now let’s talk about 1987.”

And six months later, he was dead. I think his health issues had just become too much, between the lingering aftereffects from his heart surgery, and his depression. His family made the study of depression a cause in the years after his death, and helped the University of Pennsylvania set up a laboratory program in his honor.

You mention that at one point he said to his friends that “I’m old hat, old shoe. Nobody wants old Dave any more.” Did he ever feel that it had been a mistake to leave Today, that perhaps if he’d done things differently it might have worked out better, or would that kind of second-guessing just have been a natural part of his depression?

From what Garroway himself said in interviews and what Dave Jr. has said, Today was going to change regardless of how Garroway felt, so even if he could have stayed the program was not going to be the same, he’d have had to cede a good deal of control, and he probably would not have been happy with what ensued.

I think so much of what Garroway was up against in any comeback was that the industry had changed. In 1972 he talked about the kinds of interviews he once could conduct, of things he could do in the old Chicago days, and mourned that you couldn’t get away with that any more. He said “Maybe I belong in another, long-gone era when people had time for nonsense,” and I think that captures what he was facing. Depression may have been a factor in that, but I think he was also dealing with a cold reality that many of his contemporaries also faced, that his style of broadcasting was no longer in demand. One review of The Newcomers compared Garroway to an uncle who tells predictable jokes and does little sleight-of-hand tricks at cocktail parties.

As someone who’s struggled with depression from time to time myself, I have a great deal of compassion for anyone who feels that kind of blackness envelop them to that extent – far more than I’ve ever experienced.

Oh, yeah. I’ve dealt with it too. Never to the extent Garroway had to, but enough that I would never wish it on even my worst enemy. Mine was bad enough, and I cannot imagine what Dave had to deal with.

Do you think there was a time, post-Today, when there was a chance for him to put it all back together, a project that might have been able to bring him back or something that could have given his life meaning, or was it just a combination of things that became too much for him to overcome?

I think there were things in his own life that interfered, but the medium also changed too much. Television has a way of devouring its own, as happened with Milton Berle and Arthur Godfrey, two others who were inescapable back in the day but had trouble finding gigs in a new age because they just didn’t fit any longer. And tastes change, and networks change. Garroway tried pitching a couple ideas to the networks in the early ‘70s and got polite refusals. I think by that point the time had passed, and he acknowledged as much in several interviews.

What would Garroway say about television today, do you think? Would he be pleased by the direction it’s gone in since his time? Would he feel it’s stagnated, that it’s gone in the wrong direction, that it needs to go in a different direction? Would he think that the personalities on TV connect with audiences the way he was able to, even given the fact that he had an extraordinary ability to do so?

There’s no doubt he would be fascinated by the technical aspects of what can be done these days. But I don’t think he would be very happy with what it’s being used for. Even in the 1970s he was outspoken about it. If he was sad about what television was like then, I know he would hate what it’s now become. I think he’d be unhappy with how we’ve lost the ability to give time to ideas, how there’s so little time for genuine conversation and exploration. And if he thought the 1976 version of Today had become “so cut up” and without humanity or empathy, I hate to think what he’d say about it now!

To put this in a more positive light, what can I see Dave Garroway enjoying in 2017? He’d have certainly enjoyed the new version of Cosmos that was done a few years ago; having science celebrated in prime time on network television, accessible to the lay viewer, would have made him very happy. Sunday Morning on CBS, with its relaxed pace and occasional bits of whimsy, might be in there too. I think he’d also enjoy the kinds of interviews Charlie Rose does, with one person for an extended conversation.  He’d probably enjoy the science and culture programs on PBS. The news and interview programs on NPR, with their longer formats and more time for exploration, would probably be up his alley too. And, of course, he’d love the jazz programs NPR still presents.

Looking back on his career, I know it might be hard to answer the cliché kind of question about what was the single most important contribution that Dave Garroway made to television history, so let me put it this way: as a visionary, what was the vision that Garroway had that made him different, that made him a pioneer of television, and how did it change the direction of television? And if you were able to isolate one contribution that he made, what would it be?

It took someone with the vision of Pat Weaver to imagine broadcasting as it could be, and to think of a host being more than a host, but a “communicator,” someone who could not only tell you what mattered but why it mattered. But it took someone with the talent and ability of Dave Garroway to turn the “communicator” concept into a reality. It’s that ability to take all the knowledge and information and convey it to the average person in a way that’s appealing and accessible – and do it in a way that feels like it’s for you alone. That’s no small order, when you think about it.

Think about hosting a show like Today, where you had two hours to cover anything and everything under the sun, and needed the ability to talk about anything. Or Wide Wide World, where you’d have all these live remotes from all these different locations, and the host has to be a tour guide as much as anything. It would be really easy for Wide Wide World to be like one of those stilted “as the sun sinks slowly in the west….” travelogues. But going places via television with Garroway was fun, like going with a friend who always had some neat bit of information or some kind of insight or inspiration. All of that stuff was written for him, of course, but having compared the script pages with how Dave delivered those words on the air, it’s night and day. I use the word “magic” a lot, but that’s what Dave had, this great ability to make it seem spontaneous and personal.

And we don’t get to see that so much these days when so many programs see the host as someone who hands off to other people, instead of somebody who is your companion through the whole program. And maybe that’s a good way to think of the Garroway style at its best, as someone who is your wise and  enjoyable companion in whatever journey the program takes you through.

Finally, Dave’s famous gesture that he’d make at the end of each show, which at least for me takes on an added poignancy given the lack of peace he had in his own life. What was the meaning behind that?

Dave’s favorite writer and best friend, Charlie Andrews, remembered that there was a preacher in Philadelphia who had a radio show and gave these really high-energy messages, and would end his oration with “Peace...it’s wonderful.” Garroway fell in love with that and adopted “peace” for himself, and had that written in as his benediction at the end of each program. Andrews said that Garroway would also use it in conversation when he couldn’t think of anything to say.

“Peace” was a nifty sign-off, and people read a lot into it, especially with the tenor of the times. But it’s telling that after he left Today he switched his sign-off to “Courage.” It came from a poem Amelia Earhart wrote, which ended with “Courage is the price which each of us must pay for peace.” And Dave rationalized the switch by saying “peace” was supplicating for peace while “courage” was a way to find it, and when you put all that together with what he faced in his own life it makes sense. Beryl Pfizer, who saw some of Garroway’s problems up close, wrote that she often saw “peace” as more a personal plea than a political one, and I tend to agree. He did worry about the state of the world, but he also sought peace in a life that was complicated by so many things.

And I think that’s so much of why I feel annoyed when people want to write Dave Garroway off as an eccentric, or focus on his foibles or his drug habit, or generally make him out as a weirdo, as I’ve sometimes seen. If you focus on those aspects, you miss the man underneath it all, and you also overlook that he accomplished so much while battling some intense personal demons. I wonder what his life would have been like if they’d known then what we know now about treating depression and mental illness and addiction. I wonder what a Dave Garroway who was truly at peace would have been like. That would have been magic.

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Once again, a big thank you to Jodie for her generosity with her time, and sharing her passion and knowledge of Dave Garroway. I'm very much looking forward to reading this book and learning more about this remarkable man and his place in television history, and I hope you are as well.

Around the dial

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As you might expect, a number of pieces this week are devoted to the memory of Jerry Lewis, who died Sunday. As I said on Facebook, his death was more than just the end of an era - he was the last of an era. Back in the day, when I had a little more time than I do this week, I would have written extensively about him, because he was certainly a visible presence in my life. As a kid I was a big fan of his; loved the slapstick, the yelling about, movies like The Disorderly Orderly. As I grew older I also grew to admire him greatly for his humanitarian work with Muscular Dystrophy, and came to appreciate his technical innovations as a director. I though his recognition by the Academy with the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award was long overdue. In a way, he outlived the culture that most appreciated him and his brand of humor, but that can be said of many of us, who feel ourselves to be strangers in our own land nowadays. You can argue over whether or not the French were right that he was a great comedian (I think they're more right than wrong), but I don't think you can argue that he was a great man.

Captain Video is back with the two-part comic book adventures of Jerry as he meets the new Wonder Woman! The comic book adventures of Jerry and Dean Martin ran from 1952 to 1957, and then with Jerry alone until 1971! Here's Part 1, followed by Part 2.

At The Ringer, K. Austin Collins looks at Jerry's brilliant, complex record as a director, and how this private man often bared his soul in the most public of places - on the movie screen.

Finally, at A Shroud of Thoughts, Terence Towles Canote offers a very well-written obituary on Jerry, concluding with words that resound with me. "For decades it has been a bit of a running joke that Jerry Lewis was wildly popular in France, but the truth is he was wildly popular across the world. He was responsible for making many people laugh and his films are still very popular to this day. Only a very few comedic actors ever had the kind of success that Jerry Lewis had. I seriously doubt we will see too many reach the heights that he did in the future."

In honor of Monday's total solar eclipse, Faded Signals offered excerpts of KGW's coverage of the 1979 eclipse as seen in Portland, Oregon, as well as a link to how that eclipse was covered. I remember that one well, as well as the previous one, which I think was either in the early '70s or late '60s and may not have been a total one. One of the benefits of being old is that you can say, "When you've seen one eclipse, you've seen them all."

The Horn Section leads us on another merry chase through Crazy Like a Fox with the episode "Motor Homicide,"the series' take on the familiar "I tell you, I did see a dead body!" story that every series gets around to sooner or later. The success or failure of such an episode depends, of course, on the writing and acting, and in this case while the script often fails to deliver, the performances do their best to carry the load.

Cult TV Blog returns with a look back at his personal rehabilitation of Tales of the Unexpected, which was "terribly sophisticated and really attention-grabbing" for a child, but "incredibly dreary" if you try to watch the entire series as an adult. Instead, if you have the option, opt for the "best episodes" set, and you will find yourself with a series that, more often than not, has the power to "terrify and horrify.

Keeping in that horror trend, I've enjoyed listening to Lights Out on the Sirius OTR station when we've taken a road trip; programs like that make for very effective radio. If done right, they can also make for enthralling television, and Television Obscurities tells about the first attempt to bring Lights Out to TV - not the 1949-52 series that some of you may be familiar with, but four live specials done in the summer and fall of 1946 on WNBT.

At Comfort TV, David looks at two episodes of two popular sitcoms and provides us all with words to live by when someone starts to notice that our words look familiar - perhaps a little too familiar. "It's not a rip-off - it's an homage."

Classic Film and TV Café reviews the five best episodes of the Rod Serling-Lloyd Bridges 1960s Western series The Loner. It's an intriguing series; I've read that Serling himself was disappointed with it due to the various compromises he had to make (sponsors, star, network), going so far as to wish sometimes that the week would skip over Saturdays (the day it was aired) so there wouldn't be any Loner. Despite that, there are a number of thought-provoking episodes, as you can see here.

This week in TV Guide: August 29, 1964

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Open a page at random, come up with an idea. In this case, the issue opens to Friday night, where WLYH, Channel 15 (Lancaster, PA) has a double feature that only Mystery Science Theater 3000 could love - "Attack of the 50-Foot Woman" at 11:30 p.m., in which "a former mental patient witnesses the landing of a spaceship," followed by "The Devil Commands," a Boris Karloff flick in which he plays a scientist "who tries to communicate with the dead through a brainwave machine."

Say what you like, but the continuing existence of shows like MST3K and Svengoolie points out that horror movies, especially with local hosts, have been a part of television since virtually the very beginning. One of the reasons why SCTV's Count Floyd was so funny was that almost everyone of a certain age knew of a local host with whom they could identify. It was unusual to find a horror flick on during a weekday afternoon; their largest audience was in school, for one thing, which meant that if you did find one, it was probably something like "Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein." But while the late show was the province of serious movies during the week (Thursday's feature, for instance, is Preston Sturges's "Sullivan's Travels"), the weekend is where the horror movie truly shone. And while none of them measure up to that Friday double-feature, there's still a lot to enjoy on Saturday and Sunday. (WFBG, Channel 10 in Altoona, has "Dead Man's Eyes" early Saturday morning, in which Lon Chaney Jr. plays a blind artist "accused of murdering his benefactor for the man's eyes.")

On Saturday, always a good night for these kinds of things, WFIL, Channel 6 in Philadelphia, kicks of their 11:00 p.m. double-feature with "Creature from the Haunted Sea" (directed by Roger Corman, no less!), in which "A 'mythical' monster turns up to cause some problems for a band of loyalists during  a Central American revolution." (Disappointingly, the second movie is far more conventional - "Blackwell's Island," with John Garfield and Victor Jory.) A quarter of an hour later, Channel 10 offers up "Terror in the Haunted House*," in which "Philip Tierney takes his new bride Sheila to an old mansion, and the place terrifies her." On Sunday night, Channel 12, WNBF in Binghamton, NY, comes up with "The Beast with Five Fingers," where "A semi-invalid concert pianist is murdered by his severed hand seems to live on - seeking revenge." (Of course it does.) This stars Robert "My son was on M*A*S*H" Alda and Peter Lorre.

*I like its original title even better: "My World Dies Screaming." 

What about you? Do you have any local horror movie memories you'd like to share?

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I was actually a little disappointed there weren't more of these movies on this week, especially on Saturday afternoon (although Channel 15's 12:45 p.m. movie is "To Be Announced," so there's always hope). One reason for the paucity of chills may be the abundance of sports .

SOURCE ALL: HADLEY TV GUIDES
For the first time since 1950, the Philadelphia Phillies are in the thick of the pennant race, and for these Philadelphia-area stations, that's the main story. At 1:30 p.m., the local channels cover the Phillies game against Pittsburgh. The Phils will win that game, 10-8 and go up by six games in the National League, a lead they will more-or-less maintain until September 21, when they begin their monumental 10-game losing streak that knocks them into a season-ending second-place tie. The Phils' history in microcosm. Later in the afternoon, CBS's Game of the Week has the Dodgers and Cardinals - the Cards wind up winning that wild National League race - and NBC's version has the Giants and Braves.

There's more Philly sports at 2:00 p.m., when the Eagles play the New York Giants in an exhibition game from New Jersey, long before the Giants make that state their home. On ABC's Wide World of Sports, it's same-day coverage of the Little League World Series, from nearby Williamsport, PA, won by a team from Staten Island, NY. There's also horse racing from Saratoga; the third round of the Carling World Golf Championship from Oakland Hills, just outside Detroit; and, in prime time on ABC, the U.S. Olympic Trials in swimming, yachting and fencing.

Speaking of the Olympics, it's only three years (give or take a month) until the next Summer Games in Tokyo. The Games were also held there in 1964, one of the landmark Olympics; taking place less than 20 years after the end of World War II, it was also the first to be televised internationally via satellite rather than by having tapes flown around the world as had been the case been in 1960. You may recall that last year, NBC took more than a little flack for the amount of tape-delay programming they provided from Rio; apparently, back in '64, the trend was the opposite, as NBC's VP of Sports, Carl Lindermann, has announced the network will televise the opening ceremonies live on October 10, from 1:00 to 3:00 a.m. ET. Not only that, they'll "make the telecast available to other networks and stations." It's ironic that in the year when the Syncon III satellite makes such live broadcasting possible, this will be about the only opportunity NBC has to take advantage of it, due to the time difference.

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If it's an Olympic year, that means it's also an election year, and the presidential campaigns are starting to ramp up. According to "For the Record," Republican National Chairman (and future FCC Chairman) Dean Burch says the party's planning to spend somewhere in the neighborhood of $4 million on behalf of the Goldwater-Miller ticket during the campaign. (By contrast, it's estimated that in 2012, the GOP candidate, Mitt Romney, spent over $87 million on TV ads, although most of that came from outside groups; the party itself only spent about $2.3 million.)

They'll need that advertising in order to make a dent in the huge lead held by President Johnson; by a vote of 44 to 41, the Democratic-controlled Senate tables a bill to suspend the equal-time provisions of the Federal Communications Act as was done in 1960. Without that suspension, networks will be forced to offer equal time to "all other White House aspirants" as well as LBJ and AuH2O. It's not a surprise that the Democrats are sidetracking any possible debates; it's common action for front-runners, and would be until the presidential debate format was revived and formalized in 1976. What, after all, does the candidate in the lead have to gain? Nixon will do the same thing in 1968 and 1972.

Burch is a busy man this week. He's also filed a protest with the Fair Campaign Practices Committee about the infamous “Daisy” political commercial on behalf of President Johnson. Says Burch, “This horror-type commercial is designed to arouse basic emotions and has no place in this campaign.” he said. The Democratic National Committee says it's not sure if the ait wasn’t sure whether the ad would be aired again - and why should they? With just that one showing, it's already become the most famous political commercial in history, and the free publicity it garners just from people talking about it is, as they say, something that money can't buy. In the end, the commercial never is run again. I wrote about it here, and you can see it there if you want; compared to what goes on the political airwaves nowadays, it's actually pretty tame.

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From the men who brought you Rocky and Bullwinkle - Jay Ward and Bill Scott - it's The Nuthouse, presented at 10:00 p.m. Tuesday night on CBS. I thought the title of this show rang a bell, and a quick check with my copy of Keith Scott's The Moose That Roared, the terrific book about Jay Ward, confirms my suspicion.

Not to be confused with their 1963 TV comedy pilot of the same name, this featured older clips like a "Fractured Fairy Tale,' a piece from Watts Gnu, some "Flicker Songs," and some hilarious animated blackouts directed by Bill Hurtz and Jim Hiltz. (Originally made by Ward as a demo reel, the blackouts were picked up for CBS's The Garry Moore Show.) Scott used The Nuthouse excerpt reel at the various nationwide and Canadian college lectures at which he spoke.

Sounds delightful. Here's a clip from one of the show's bits.


I wonder if the audience knew what to make of this? It strikes me that had this been offered a few years later, after shows like Laugh-In had changed the television landscape, it might have had a better chance of sticking.

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Our fashion-show this week comes to us from Carol Lynley, about whom we read earlier this month. In addition to her burgeoning movie work, she's a regular fixture on television nowadays. None of this is mentioned in the following article, of course, but we do get plenty of information on what she's wearing.


Next year, she'd do another photo shoot for a different magazine, for which the emphasis is not on what she's wearing, but what she's not wearing. But, as I always say, that's another story for another day.

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Finally, you can learn a lot about what's going on by reading Letters to the Editor. The headline for the letter by Bonnie Karg, of Oakland, NJ, reads "A Girl Who Likes Dylan." In another year, you'd assume she was writing about this Dylan, but in 1964 she was referring to the other one - Dylan Thomas, the poet.* She's writing about yet another snarky Richard Gehman profile, this one on comedienne Peggy Cass. Says Bonnie, "A girl who likes Dylan Thomas poetry can't be all bad."

*One could call the first Dylan a poet as well. I might not, but others could.

Elinor Gatz of Shreve, Ohio, has the New Christy Minstrals on her mind. They're a popular group of the time, frequent guests on television shows throughout the '60s, but Elinor wants to talk about the original Christy Minstrals, founded in the 1840s. Specifically, Elinor takes exception to the description of the Christy Minstrals as "singers of 'Darkie songs'," and points out the group was instrumental in introducing the songs of Stephen Foster, including "Old Folks at Home." Those songs are a part of our American heritage, even if today's generations have no idea.

And then there's Dan Brockma of Maitland, FL, who provides the answer to the question everyone asks regarding NBC's Bonanza: "I don't see Bonanza's Adam, Hoss and Little Joe are ever going to find three nice girls if they don't change clothes sometime." I don't know how we could find a better exit line than that.

What's on TV? Saturday, August 29, 1964

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Another week, another trip - this time back to the Eastern Seaboard, and the City of Brotherly Love. I don't have a lot to add to this week's listings in the way of local insights, so why not just get out of the way and let them speak for themselves?



 3  WRCV (NBC) 

Morning


    6:25
NEWS

    6:30
FARM DOING

    7:25
WHAT’S DOING

    7:30
BERTIE THE BUNYIP

    8:30
PETE’S GANG – Children

    9:00
FILM FEATURE   COLOR 

    9:30
RUFF AND REDDY   COLOR 

  10:00
HECTOR HEATHCOTE   COLOR 

  10:30
FIREBALL XL-5 – Children

  11:00
DENNIS THE MENACE

  11:30
FURY – Adventure

Afternoon


  12:00
BULLWINKLE – Cartoon   COLOR 

  12:30
NEXT GENERATION   COLOR 

    1:00
SUMMERTIME ON THE PIER - Music   COLOR 

    3:00
WRESTLING

    3:30
MEET YOUR NEIGHBOR   COLOR 

    4:00
FARM AND GARDEN   COLOR 

    4:30
ROLLER-RAMA 

    5:00
NBC SPORTS SPECIAL

Evening


    6:00
PORTRAITS IN MUSIC

    6:30
NEWS, WEATHER   COLOR 

    6:45
NEWS – Sander Vanocur

    7:00
HAVE GUN – WILL TRAVEL – Western

    7:30
LIEUTENANT – Drama   COLOR 

    8:30
JOEY BISHOP – Comedy   COLOR 

    9:30
MOVIE – Drama   COLOR 
Saturday Night at the Movies: “Wild River” (1960)

  11:15
NEWS   COLOR 

  11:30
MOVIE – Adventure
“Cardinal Richelieu” (1935)

    1:30
WRESTLING

    2:30
FARM AND GARDEN   COLOR 

    3:00
NEWS   COLOR 


 6  WFIL (ABC)

Morning


    6:55
CHRISTIAN ANSWER – Religion

    7:00
THIS IS THE NAVY

    7:30
THE BIG PICTURE – Army

    8:00
R.F.D. NO. 6

    8:30
CHIEF HALFTOWN – Children

    9:00
BUGS BUNNY – Cartoons

    9:30
FUNNY COMPANY

  10:00
TALK BACK

  10:30
ALAKAZAM – Children

  11:00
CASPER – Cartoons

  11:30
BEANY AND CECIL – Cartoons

Afternoon


  12:00
NEWS CONFERENCE

  12:30
AMERICA WANTS TO KNOW

    1:00
CLAY DALRYMPLE

    1:10
MEET THE PHILLIES

    1:20
WARM-UP

    1:30
BASEBALL – Phillies
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh

    4:00
TO BE ANNOUNCED

    5:00
WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Little League Championship

Morning


    6:30
BEST OF THE POST - Drama   COLOR 

    7:00
RIPCORD – Adventure   COLOR 

    7:30
OLYMPIC TRIALS   SPECIAL 

    8:30
LAWRENCE WELK – Music

    9:30
KING FAMILY – Music   SPECIAL 

  10:30
NEWS

  10:30
MOVIE – Double Feature
1. “Creature from the Haunted Sea” (1961) 2. “Blackwell’s Island” (1939)

    1:40
MOVIE – Suspense
“Enemy Agent” (1940)

 8  WGAL (LANCASTER) (NBC)

Morning


    7:25
NEWS AND WEATHER

    7:30
MOVIE – Western
“Painted Trail” (1938)

    8:30
SUPERCAR – Children

    9:00
PERCY PLATAPUS - Children

    9:30
RUFF AND REDDY   COLOR 

  10:00
HECTOR HEATHCOTE   COLOR 

  10:30
FIREBALL XL-5 – Children

  11:00
DENNIS THE MENACE

  11:30
FURY - Adventure

Afternoon


  12:00
BULLWINKLE – Cartoon   COLOR 

  12:30
MR. WIZARD – Science

    1:00
SOLDIERS OF THE LAW   COLOR 

    1:15
FILM SHORT

    1:30
BASEBALL – Phillies
Philadelphia vs. Pittsburgh

    4:00
NFL GAME OF THE WEEK

    5:00
FILM FEATURE   COLOR 

    5:30
NBC SPORTS SPECIAL

Evening


    6:00
CALL OF THE OUTDOORS   COLOR 

    6:30
SPORTS, WEATHER, NEWS

    7:00
LITTLEST HOBO – Drama

    7:30
LIEUTENANT – Drama

    8:30
JOEY BISHOP – Comedy   COLOR 

    9:00
MOVIE – Drama   COLOR 
Saturday Night at the Movies: “Wild River” (1960)

  11:15
NEWS

  11:45
MOVIE – Drama
“Breakthrough” (1950)
  

 10   WFBG (ALTOONA) (ABC, CBS)

Morning


    7:00
EYE ON AGRICULTURE

    7:30
R.F.D. NO. 10

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
ALVIN – Cartoons

    9:30
TENNESSEE TUXEDO

  10:00
QUICK DRAW McGRAW

  10:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

  11:00
RIN TIN TIN – Western

  11:30
ROY ROGERS – Western

Afternoon


  12:00
SKY KING – Adventure

  12:30
FUNNY COMPANY   COLOR 

    1:00
LONE RANGER – Western

    1:30
TO BE ANNOUNCED

    2:00
TELESPORTS DIGEST

    2:15
BASEBALL PRE-GAME

    2:25
BASEBALL – Dodgers vs. Cardinals

    5:00
WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP   SPECIAL 

Evening


    6:30
BANDSTAND – Dick DiAndre

    7:30
LUCY-DESI COMEDY HOUR

    8:30
DEFENDERS – Drama

    9:30
SUMMER PLAYHOUSE – Comedy

  10:00
GUNSMOKE – Western

  11:00
NEWS

  11:15
DOUBLE FEATURE
1. “Terror in the Haunted House” (1958) 2. “Kennel Murder Case” (1933)

    2:25
NEWS
  
 10  WCAU (CBS)

Morning


    5:55
NEWS

    6:00
SUMMER SEMESTER
Modern Comparative Drama

    6:30
OFFICIAL REPORT

    7:00
PIXANNE

    7:30
TENNESSEE TUXEDO

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
CARTOON CORNERS - Children

  10:00
QUICK DRAW McGRAW

  10:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

  11:00
RIN TIN TIN – Western

  11:30
ROY ROGERS – Western

Afternoon


  12:00
SKY KING – Adventure

  12:30
NEWS – Martin Agronsky

    1:00
SCIENCE UNLIMITED

    1:30
FOOD FOR FUN

    2:00
SUM AND SUBSTANCE

    5:30
DR. HUDSTON’S JOURNAL

    2:30
MUSICAL THEATER

    3:00
MOVIE – Musical
“Curly Top” (1935)

    4:30
HORSE RACING – Saratoga
Hopeful Stakes

    5:00
WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP   SPECIAL 

Evening


    6:30
FILM SHORT

    6:45
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

    7:00
SEA HUNT – Adventure

    7:30
LUCY-DESI COMEDY HOUR

    8:30
DEFENDERS – Drama

    9:30
SUMMER PLAYHOUSE – Comedy

  10:00
GUNSMOKE – Western

  11:00
NEWS

  11:15
DOUBLE FEATURE
1. “Blood on the Sun” (1945) 2. “A Foreign Affair” (1948)
  
 12  WNBF (BINGHAMTON, NY) (CBS)

Morning


    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
TREASURE HOUSE

    9:30
CARTOONS - Children

  10:00
FUNNY COMPANY   COLOR 

  10:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

  11:00
RIN TIN TIN – Western

  11:30
ROY ROGERS – Western

Afternoon


  12:00
SKY KING - Adventure

  12:30
AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION

    1:00
FILM FEATURE

    1:30
DISCOVERING AMERICA – Documentary

    2:00
MOVIE – Double Feature
1. “Never Say Die” (1939) 2. “Waikiki Wedding” (1937)

    5:00
WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP   SPECIAL 

Evening


    6:30
SUSPENSE – Drama

    7:00
TRUE ADVENTURE   COLOR 

    7:30
LUCY-DESI COMEDY HOUR

    8:30
DEFENDERS – Drama

    9:30
SUMMER PLAYHOUSE – Comedy

  10:00
GUNSMOKE – Western

  11:00
NEWS

  11:20
MOVIE – Biography
“Night and Day” (1946)
  

 15  WLYH (LANCASTER) (CBS)

Morning


    7:30
FARM REPORT

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
ALVIN – Cartoons

    9:30
TENNESSEE TUXEDO

  10:00
QUICK DRAW McDRAW

  10:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

  11:00
RIN TIN TIN – Western

  11:30
ROY ROGERS – Western

Afternoon


  12:00
LONE RANGER – Western

  12:30
NEWS – Martin Agronsky

  12:45
MOVIE – To Be Announced

    2:15
BASEBALL PRE-GAME

    2:25
BASEBALL – Dodgers vs. Cardinals

    5:00
WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP   SPECIAL 

Evening


    6:30
DETECTIVES – Police

    7:30
LUCY-DESI COMEDY HOUR

    8:30
DEFENDERS – Drama

    9:30
SUMMER PLAYHOUSE – Comedy

  10:00
GUNSMOKE – Western

  11:00
MOVIE – Adventure
“Across the Wide Missouri” (1951)
  

 16  WNEP (WILKES-BARRE) (ABC)

Morning


    9:45
FARM AND OUTDOORSMAN

  10:15
OFF TO ADVENTURE

  10:30
ALAKAZAM – Children

  11:00
CASPER – Cartoons

  11:30
BEANY AND CECIL – Cartoons

Afternoon


  12:00
BUGS BUNNY – Cartoons

  12:30
AMERICAN BANDSTAND
Guests Irma Thomas, the Standells

    1:30
BASEBALL – Phillies
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh

    4:00
TO BE ANNOUNCED

    4:30
ROCKY AND HIS FRIENDS

    5:00
WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
Little League Championship

Evening


    6:30
TARGET: CORRUPTORS

    7:30
OLYMPIC TRIALS   SPECIAL 

    8:30
LAWRENCE WELK – Music

    9:30
KING FAMILY – Music   SPECIAL 

  10:30
MOVIE – Musical
“Two Tickets to Broadway” (1951)
  

 22  WDAU (WILKES-BARRE) (CBS)

Morning


    6:00
SUMMER SEMESTER
Modern Comparative Drama

    6:30
OFFICIAL REPORT

    7:00
MOVIE – Western
“Heart of the Rio Grande” (1942)

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

    9:00
ALVIN – Cartoons

    9:30
TENNESSEE TUXEDO

  10:00
QUICK DRAW McGRAW

  10:30
MIGHTY MOUSE

  11:00
RIN TIN TIN – Western

  11:30
ROY ROGERS - Western

Afternoon


  12:00
SKY KING - Adventure

  12:30
NEWS – Martin Agronsky

    1:00
SURFSIDE 6 – Mystery

    2:00
PRO FOOTBALL – Eagles vs. Giants

    4:30
HORSE RACE – Saratoga
Hopeful Stakes

    5:00
WORLD GOLF CHAMPIONSHIP   SPECIAL 

Evening


    6:30
ROUTE 66 – Drama

    7:30
LUCY-DESI COMEDY HOUR

    8:30
DEFENDERS – Drama

    9:30
SUMMER PLAYHOUSE – Comedy

  10:00
GUNSMOKE – Western

  11:00
NEWS

  11:35
MOVIE – Comedy
“Battle of the Sexes” (1960)

    1:10
NEWS

    1:15
MOVIE – Western
“Fort Worth” (1951)
  

 28  WBRE (WILKES-BARRE) (NBC)

Morning


    8:00
DAVEY AND GOLIATH   COLOR 

    8:15
OFF TO ADVENTURE   COLOR 

    8:30
POPEYE – Cartoons   COLOR 

    9:00
CASPER – Cartoons   COLOR 

    9:30
RUFF AND REDDY   COLOR 

  10:00
HECTOR HEATHCOTE   COLOR 

  10:30
FIREBALL XL-5 – Children

  11:00
DENNIS THE MENACE

  11:30
FURY – Adventure

Afternoon


  12:00
BULLWINKLE – Cartoon   COLOR 

  12:30
MR. WIZARD – Science

    1:00
MOVIE – Western
“Battle of Rogue River” (1954)

    3:00
BASEBALL – Giants vs. Braves

    5:00
FILM FEATURE

    5:30
NBC SPORTS SPECIAL

Evening


    6:00
BROADWAY GOES LATIN

    6:30
MEN OF ANNAPOLIS

    7:00
MAN AND THE CHALLENGE

    7:30
LIEUTENANT – Drama   COLOR 

    8:30
JOEY BISHOP – Comedy   COLOR 

    9:00
MOVIE – Drama   COLOR 
Saturday Night at the Movies: “Wild River” (1960)
         
  11:15
NEWS – Joe Scott

  11:30
MOVIE – Crime Drama
“The Rise and Fall of ‘Legs’ Diamond (1960)

Facts are curious things

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So it appears that Josh Whedon was never a feminist after all. I'm not quite sure why this was such a shock to people; after all, it's not as if he was Alan Alda. I think I would have been only slightly more surprised to find out that Mickey Rooney was emceeing an event held by the National Organization for Women, and that the entertainment was being provided by Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra. ("Look at all those chicks out there, Pally. Suppose I can find one for me?")

It's never nice to find out that your heroes have feet of clay, but by this time it shouldn't be a surprise, either, whether it's discovering that Raymond Burr and Bob Crane led secret lives, or that Bob Hope and George Burns enjoyed the company of women other than those to whom they were married. Now, I realize that these revelations often came as profound shocks to their fans, as well as to people who thought they knew these men (although in some cases less of a shock than others), but should it really diminish the esteem in which we hold the work of these men? As is the case in most of life, I'd guess the answer to be, "it depends." If we find out that the entertainer in question happened to be a hypocrite, a murderer or abuser, that's one thing. On the other hand, if Bob Hope was a philanderer, I don't see that it makes his body of work over the years any less commendable, just as his years of service to the troops makes it any more hilarious. As they say nowadays, Your Mileage May Vary - but in each of these cases, the off-screen behavior of these gentlemen hasn't changed the way I feel about their performances or their shows one bit.

In an unrelated article dealing with this weekend's reprehensible Mayweather-McGregor spectacle, Bryan Curtis makes a point that I think is more in tune with what we have to beware of.

The main reason we embrace a spectacle like Mayweather-McGregor is simpler: This is how online sportswriting works now. As we try to ward off the “pivot to video,” we throw ourselves on top of every bit of news that comes across the digital wires. It hardly matters if it’s Ezekiel Elliott’s suspension, Ric Flair’s trip to the ICU, or a hot new episode of Game of Thrones. To ignore an event—any event, however slight or manufactured —is to risk leaving clicks on the field. 

Indeed. It's not a problem I specifically face - most of my classic TV subjects are dead - but we could easily make something of it anyway. There's a website out there; I'm not going to name it, partly because I don't really want to push traffic their way, but mostly because I don't want to unjustly badmouth them since I'm not convinced they're doing this intentionally. They seem to specialize in promoting various scandals involving Hollywood's famous from years past. They aren't particularly bringing up anything that most people weren't already aware of, but they do occasionally get read by people with sensitive ears, apparently, people who didn't know that Bob Hope was the way he was, for example, and now those people are either disillusioned with Hope or angry with the people who shattered their illusions, or both. In response, the blogmasters get defensive. Bruised feelings all around.

As I say, I'm not sure they're trying to cause scandal. Detraction, perhaps, which includes the telling of damaging things that are true, but I don't want to get into motivation here. Besides, any time one digs into history in search of the hidden truth, one risks coming across things that they may wish were better left buried.; in fact, we could be accused of treading along the same lines here, in pieces about Inger Stevens and Judy Tyler, Howdy Doody's Princess Summerfall Winterspring. Considering the number of people who already knew about this, it's difficult to say that detraction occurred, but still. I have said in the past, and will continue to say, that one of the things that separates classic television from television of the last, say, thirty years or so, is a sense of dignity; not just self-dignity, but dignity toward the audience and toward the subject matter (James Aubrey notwithstanding). I'd like to think it's a mark of our classic TV blogosphere as well.

The entertainment business is about illusion, about creating stories, creating characters, creating special effects. When it's done well, we hardly notice it, and we're in thrall to the ability of the creators to take us into their sphere of influence and transport us, for a brief time, into a place that's outside our own time and space. Those who create that entertainment are illusionists themselves, and sometimes their illusion spills out from their work to their personal lives, when it becomes difficult to tell where one ends and the other begins. (K. Austin Collins' fascinating article about Jerry Lewis, which I linked to last week, is an excellent example of how complex that can be.)

It should be no surprise, I suppose, that the same will happen to us out here: as fans, we allow ourselves to be taken in from time to time, mistaking the one on screen for the one behind the curtain, so to speak, and becoming conflicted when we find out the facts are not always aligned, and decide which of the images we have to purge. Facts are not only curious things, they are most inconvenient, and at the most inconvenient times, and they do ruin a good story, don't they? Just ask, well, you know who I mean.

Around the dial

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I'm writing this introductory sentence on Tuesday, which means there's still time for it to change, but thankfully to this point nobody prominent in the television world has yet died, so there's hope we can still make it through the week without having to start by remembering someone, as we sadly seem to have done too many times in recent weeks. While we have the chance, let's get started.

I like this piece from Classic Film and TV Café on the five biggest movie stars of the '60sbecause it's such a snapshot of the times. Paul Newman: yes, he's no surprise, and neither is Sidney Poitier when you're reminded (think about Lilies of the Field, To Sir with Love, In the Heat of the Night, Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, and then you'll remember), and of course Sean Connery has to be there on the strength of the Bond franchise, but I think Hayley Mills and Doris Day serve as a reminder that the first half of the '60s really are much more like the last half of the '50s, a discussion we had back in the comments section a while back.

The Twilight Zone is famous, of course, for the quality of its writing, not only from Rod Serling, but the stable of writers he assembled, including Richard Matheson, Charles Beaumont, George Clayton Johnson, and others. But, as The Twilight Zone Vortex reminds us, don't forget the tremendous performances that brought those stories to life - here's part one of the 20 greatest performances from the series.

Speaking of, Escape Clause - now there's an episode of The Twilight Zone that must be fun to describe to a six-year-old, and I think Fire Breathing Dimetrodon Time does an admirable job of it, especially when the little one sees what a mess David Wayne's gotten into with his deal with the Devil, not to mention a well-timed facepalm at the end. Don't know what I'm talking about? It's well worth checking out, particularly for the O. Henry conclusion - and the performances.

Once Upon a Screen returns with a classic Columbo investigation, "Etude in Black," featuring John Cassavetes, who gives perhaps the worst impression of a concert conductor I've ever seen in my entire life - I've seen babies waving their arms in their strollers who would've made more convincing conductors. However, the rest of Cassavetes' performance is terrific, including his interactions with his old friend Peter Falk, and the rest of the supporting cast, including Blythe Danner and Myrna Loy, is top notch.

It's not British, but Get Smart gets the coveted ranking of Stonking Good Television from Cult TV Blog. It has all the spy conventions of the time, and of course it's appropriate that they're all overdone, but living across the pond John wonders just how popular it was, since he hasn't read a lot about it. Our own Mike Doran fills in some of the blanks in the comments section.

I mentioned this on the It's About TV! Facebook page last week, but for those of you who haven't seen it, Carol at the Vote for Bob Crane website shares the press release on the new podcast she and Eric Senich are doing. It's called The Bob Crane Show: Reloaded, based on the book which Carol co-authored (discussed here), and one of the treats of it is that on occasion you get to hear passages from the book spoken by the actual people involved. Surely you'll have time to check this out.

We've written from time to time about The Defenders, and now it's time for some more extensive treatment from Television's New Frontier: the 1960s, which takes a close look at the series' first season. Whether or not this show is my cup of tea is beside the point; it's part of TV's history, and I wish the remainder of the series would come out in DVD for the many who've been delighted by its quality.

At Comfort TV, David takes a look back at the life and times of Ann Jillian, an actress who probably never quite got the credit she deserved, and continuing to reach people as a motivational speaker.

It may be too early for me to start watching Christmas shows, or even go into the Christmas section of Hobby Lobby, but that doesn't mean I'm not in the mood to appreciate a tour through part of Joanna Wilson's collection of Christmas books - you can see for yourself at Chrstmas TV History.

Finally for this week, a new entry in bare-bones e-zine's Hitchcock Project: the works of Francis and Marian Cockrell, beginning with the very first Alfred Hitchcock Presents episode, "Revenge," from October 2, 1955.

Early deadline this week, so if there more good ones come our way before the end of the week - and I wouldn't be surprised in the least if that happens - I'll just add them on to next week's exciting roundup!

This week in TV Guide: September 7, 1957

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The beginning of September brings its own milestones, a couple of which we'll see over the weekend, along with notable programs sprinkled throughout the week. We'll start things off, however, with a slice of real life: Nat King Cole, whom some are comparing to Jackie Robinson.

As the first black performer to star in his own regular, major network program, more than a few people are looking to Nat to clear away racial prejudice from television the same way Robinson revolutionized baseball in the '40s. If this is to be the case, though, Cole is a most reluctant leader. "I don't want to crusade," he says. "Any prejudice against the Negro in TV has been mostly passive. If I try to make a big thing out of being the first and stir up a lot of talk, it might work adversely." The passive prejudice takes many forms, he says, mostly network brass wary of the unknown. "They thought sponsors would be afrai of a Negro whose show would go into the South. They were afraid to take a chance so they never experimented." He tours extensively through the South, often despite criticism by other black performers, and performs before segregated audiences.

His show began at 15 minutes for its first season before expanding to a half hour, and he's enjoyed the television experience so much he's planning to cut down on touring and nightclubs to stay with it if possible. Unfortunately, it isn't - although The Nat King Cole Show is able to pick up regional sponsors, and most of the guests agree to work for scale (or sometimes for no pay at all), the failure of NBC to secure a national sponsor ultimately dooms the show. Cole himself decides to pull the plug on the show; the final episode airs on December 17. Says Cole memorably, "Madison Avenue is afraid of the dark."

◊ ◊ ◊

And now for those September milestones. They begin Saturday night on CBS with the Miss America Pageant, live! from Atlantic City (9:30 p.m. CT). Bert Parks emcees the pageant, while the television broadcast hosts are Douglas Edwards and former Miss America Bess Myerson. For the first time, all contestants will be seen live on TV, with films of the elimination contests shown, and then the ten semifinalists will battle in the talent competition, before the five finalists square off in the Q&A round by Parks, where they demonstrate their "poise, character and personality." The winner, Miss America 1958, is Marilyn Van Derbur, Miss Colorado, one of the more extraordinary women to hold the title. Over the years she'll become a familiar face hosting parades, pageants, and other specials on CBS and NBC, as well as giving talks around the country, but she'll become even more well-known, and perhaps contribute even more, with her frank public discussion in 1991 of incest and abuse which she had suffered for years at the hands of her father. It is an remarkable public disclosure that she makes, detailing - without malice - years of darkness and split personalities, completely hidden to a public that knew her only as a beautiful and gracious pageant winner and personality, in hopes that it might provide help and .

On Sunday it's the conclusion of the U.S. Tennis Championships at Forest Hills, New York, what's now known as the U.S. Open. Only amateurs were allowed to compete in tennis' Grand Slam events back in the day, so as not to despoil the purity of the sport; hence, since the tournament wasn't "open" to just anyone, it wasn't called the Open. On the women's side, the winner was the remarkable Althea Gibson, one of the great pioneers of sports. The previous year, she had become the first black tennis player, man or woman, to win a major championship, taking the French title. In 1957 she will win both Wimbledon and the U.S. Championships, and be voted Associated Press Female Athlete of the Year, a triple she repeats in 1958. I've often thought that she, and not Billie Jean King, would have been far more worthy of having the National Tennis Center named after her. Perhaps we should start a campaign to have the change made? Australian Mal Anderson, a very good player who makes it as high as #2 in the world, makes the U.S. Championship his only major win - as an unseeded player, no less.

◊ ◊ ◊

One of Ed Sullivan's first great on-air challenges came from Steve Allen, who left Tonight to take over an NBC variety show which, at the beginning, aired opposite Ed. It didn't run as long as Ed's, of course, but then Allen said his goal was never to conquer Ed, but to coexist with him, which he did for three seasons. Let's see who gets the best of the contest this week.

Sullivan: Tonight's entire show orignates from New York's Madison Square Garden, where the "Ice Capades of 1958" is the special feature for this evening. Other guests include comedienne Jean Carroll; singers Marion Marlowe, the Chordettes, Jimmie Rodgers and Della Reese; and Jackie, English Balancer.

Allen: Steve's guests are the recently crowned Miss America of 1958; singer Steve Lawrence; comedienne Martha Raye; songstres Eydie Gorme; cartoonist Milton Caniff; actor Robert Young; and TV actress Marion Lorne, who will be seen starting next Sunday in the new "Sally TV series. Caniff will be talking 2ith Steve about Steve's part in his comic strip "Steve Canyon."

If you like ice shows, I think you'll like Sullivan this week; otherwise, if you turn over to Steve, you'll get Marilyn Van Derbur, Steve and Eydie, and Robert Young. And while I knew Steve Allen had made himself into a fictional detective solving murder mysteries, I had no idea he was also a cartoon character in someone else's comic strip. No question this week: Hi-Ho, Steverino!

◊ ◊ ◊

And that's not all the programs of note for the week:

If Miss America isn't your cup of tea on Saturday, then you might want to check out NBC's Your Hit Parade (9:30 p.m.), with the long-time cast replaced by an all-new (and younger) set of performers: Jill Corey, Virginia Gibson, Tommy Leonetti, and Alan Copeland, and new musical director Don Walker. The show's finding it increasingly difficult to deal with rock 'n' roll (how many different ways, after all, can one stage "Hound Dog"?); next season the show will move from NBC, its home since its radio debut in 1935, to CBS, and it will leave TV after that season.

Sunday evening at 6:00 p.m., CBS's Lassie arrives at a milestone of its own, as Jon Provost makes his series debut as "The Runaway.""A runaway orphan named Timmy makes his way to the Miller farm. Lassie finds him in the barn, but the little boy refuses to tell Ellen who he is or where he omes from. He's afraid of being sent back to the orphanage." Provost will remain on the show until 1964; in syndication, the show will be known as Timmy & Lassie. I don't know that I ever saw Lassie live myself, at some public appearance; I don't think that I did, but I did have an autographed picture of her with Ranger Corey, my favorite Lassie companion. Following Lassie, it's the final episode of the season for My Favorite Husband; next week in the same time spot, it's the debut of Bachelor Father, starring John Forsythe, which has a pretty successful run until 1962.

On Monday, Studio One's tenth season opens with "The Night America Trembled," (9:00 p.m., CBS) a very entertaining and reasonably accurate representation of Orson Welles' famous "War of the Worlds" radio broadcast. The program - today, we'd probably call it a docudrama - is given added gravitas by using Edward R. Murrow as host, and the program features a cast of soon-to-be big names including James Coburn, Ed Asner, Vincent Gardinia, and Warren Beatty. Despite the fact that Welles' presence hangs over the production like a London fog, he's never mentioned by name; in fact, none of the actors involved in the production are. The always-reliable Wikipedia speculates that this could be due to a lawsuit that Wells is currently involved in with the network. Although I think most representations of this story tend to overplay the extent to which it caused a panic among the general population, it remains a singular story in American history, and a wonderful chapter in the career of the country's most talented Enfant terrible. Monday also sees Voice of Firestone celebrate the start of it's 30th season; it began on NBC radio in 1928 (it remained on radio until 1956) and launched a TV version in 1949, which moved to ABC in 1954. The great Robert Merrill is tonight's guest (8:00 p.m.)

On Tuesday the aforementioned Nat King Cole Show (NBC, 9:00 p.m., but interestingly enough not on KSTP, the NBC affiliate in the Twin Cities) features Ella Fitzgerald in a show from Las Vegas. In fairness to KSTP, I ought to add that the NBC affiliates in this issue are all over the place on Tuesday night, so it's hard to tell what's supposed to be on; in place of Nat's show, Channel 5 shows the syndicated Dr. Hudson's Secret Journal. Meantime, Greer Garson makes a rare television appearance in the ABC drama Telephone Time at 8:30 p.m.

ABC's prestige show Disneyland celebrates its fourth anniversary on Wednesday (6:30 p.m.) with one of Disney's classics, "Peter and the Wolf," shown in its entirety. I di.n't know this, but the composer of "Peter and the Wolf," Sergei Prokofiev, apparently played the piece for Walt Disney (or "le papa de Mickey Mouse," as Prokofiev described him to his sons) during a visit to America in 1938. According to the always-reliable Wikipedia, Disney at one point apparently considered including the animated "Peter" in Fantasia, which would have been interesting indeed.

On Thursday, the second season of CBS's Playhouse 90 begins with "The Death of Manolete," (8:30 p.m.), which is, shall we say, not one of the legendary series' more distinguished efforts despite a quality director (John Frankenheimer) and star (Jack Palance). The story of the death of Spain's greatest bullfighter never hits the mark in a production which Billboard said gave Manolete a "posthumous goring." Most of the problems, as Martin Grams details in this very good story, point to an episode rushed into production before it was ready in order to beat a similar bullfighting story being prepared by G.E. Theatre. Oh well, they can't all be winners - which isn't good news if you're a bullfigher.

Finally, Friday's Person to Person season premiere sees Edward R. Murrow visiting lawyer Robert Kennedy. (9:30 p.m, CBS) Interesting, isn't it, how you're seen when your brother isn't yet president and you're not yet attorney general. For one thing, you don't get to use a middle initial.

◊ ◊ ◊

This week's review is of Date with the Angels, the ABC sitcom with Betty White and Bill Williams as the happily married couple Gus and Vickie Angel, and according to reviewer R.J., it "would appeal more to this wicked old viewer if it had a little more devil in it."

As we all know by now, happily married couples - at least on television - "cannot exist without a pair of unhappily married neighbors and a pair of cynics for friends." Once you know this, then all you have to do is see the premise, presented in the first few minutes of each week's episode, and "before you can say "Plot!" you know how the rest of the story will unfold. It is, as R.J. points out, "harmless enough fun," but "the joike is more often on one of the friendly married couples than on Gus and Vickie."

Which brings us to the moral of the story, and the review, one which Don Fedderson, who would go on to produce My Three Sons and Family Affair, among other series, perhaps took to heart: "bring his Angels down to earth and show us how funny they are with their halos down."

◊ ◊ ◊

On the cover this week is Janette Davis, the new producer of Arthur Godfrey's TV show. As far as I can tell, the significance of this for us is twofold: (1) it shows that Godfrey is still a big name in television, and in the public's mind, and (2) it emphasizes that being a female at the higher echelon of television production (or a "girl producer," as she's referred to in the article) is still a relatively unusual occurrence.

Not one, but two potential starlets this week. The first is Martha Hyer; she's appeared on Lux Video Theatre four times, a pleasant diversion from working in Westerns. I think she qualifies as a starlet - her best years are ahead of her, with appearances in several Oscar-nominated movies, as well as her own Supporting Actress nomination for Some Came Running in 1958. She also makes frequent appearances on television in series such as Alfred Hitchcock before retiring at age 50, a very good career behind her.

The other candidate this week is Dana Wynter (left), another familiar face on television, especially in the '60s. TV Guide calls her "Britain's Lovliest Export," via South Africa. Her appearances have been few but talked about, from Robert Montgomery Presents, Playhouse 90, and Studio One on television, to The Invasion of the Body Snatchers in the movies. She says that she only works when her husband, Hollywood attorney Greg Bautzer, wants her to work.* She'll continue to appear on television throughout her  career, and stars in the series The Man Who Never Was with Robert Lansing in 1967. She will be known as one of Hollywood's most elegant stars.

*Bautzer is her first husband, a distinction the writer makes perhaps because she is Bautzer's third wife, his first being Buff Cobb, who later married Mike Wallace. Got all that straight? (Isn't Hollywood wonderful?) In fact, they remain married until 1981, and he is her only husband.

And last but not least, one of the news-and-notes pieces gives us a starlet in the making, one who'll be more successful than most. "CBS will try star-making with Junior Miss. They signed an unknown named Sandra Deefor the lead role of Judy. They say she sings, dances and is delicious."

What's on TV? Thursday, September 12, 1957

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Television was still making itself known throughout Minnesota in 1957, and so this week's issue features stations not only from the state, but from Iowa and Wisconsin as well. You had to be a little more regional back then; I remember in the days of living in The World's Worst Town™, we got our CBS programming from one of the KELOland stations in South Dakota, and accepted the news and weather from that part of the area as, if not your own, at least kind of like an adopted family.

Finding your favorite shows is a little more complicated here than you might think; a note at the top of the page reminds us that all times listed are Central Daylight; for Standard Time subtract one hour. Unless my Minnesota history fails me, Daylight Savings Time - or "Fast Time," as it was known, was limited to Hennepin and Ramsey counties, the counties that contain Minneapolis and St. Paul, and plus the city of Duluth, while the rest of the state was on Standard Time. The state wasn't standardized until later; don't ask me what it was like in Iowa and Wisconsin.




 3   KGLO (MASON CITY, IA) (CBS)

MORNING


    9:55
THIS I BELIEVE – Religion

  10:00
CHRISTOPHERS – Religion

  10:30
STRIKE IT RICH – Quiz

  11:00
HOTEL COSMOPOLITAN

  11:15
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

AFTERNOON


  12:00
ACCENT – Joan Morris

  12:25
NEWS – Walter Cronkite

  12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    1:00
MY LITTLE MARGIE – Comedy

    1:30
MARKETS, WEATHER, NEWS

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF – Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY – Serial

    3:15
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    4:00
JIMMY DEAN – Music

    4:45
INDUSTRY ON PARADE

    5:00
BOB CAVANAUGH – Variety

EVENING


    6:00
WILD BILL HICOCK – Western

    6:30
YARD LIGHT – Heinz

    6:45
NEWS – Doug Edwards

    7:00
FARM REPORTER – Al Heinz

    7:05
NEWS, WEATHER, MARKETS

    7:30
ANNIE OAKLEY – Western

    8:00
BOB CUMMINGS – Comedy

    8:30
PLAYHOUSE 90 – Drama

  10:00
CLIMAX! – Drama

  11:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  11:30
MY HERO – Comedy

Here's an example of what I was talking about above. If you subtract one hour from these listings, you'll find that the 11:00 news was on at 10:00, bringing everying into alignment. Is that the way it was supposed to be? Don't know.


 4   WCCO (CBS)

MORNING


    7:00
JIMMY DEAN - Music

    7:45
NEWS – Richard Hottelet

    8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO – Kids

    8:45
NEWS – Richard Hottelet

    9:00
GARRY MOORE – Variety

    9:30
ARTHUR GODFREY

  10:30
STRIKE IT RICH – Quiz

  11:00
HOTEL COSMOPOLITAN

  11:15
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

AFTERNOON


  12:00
NEWS, WEATHER

  12:15
TAKE FIVE – Cedric Adams

  12:20
WEATHER – Kraehling

  12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS

    1:00
OUR MISS BROOKS – Comedy

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY – Linkletter

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF – Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY – Serial

    3:15
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    4:00
AROUND THE TOWN – Haeberle

    4:30
BUGS BUNNY – Comm. Cappy

    4:55
WATCH THE BIRDIE – Quiz

    5:00
AXEL AND DOG – Clellan Card

    5:30
POPEYE CLUBHOUSE – Kids

    5:55
WEATHER, NEWS, SPORTS

EVENING


    6:15
NEWS – Doug Edwards

    6:30
SGT. PRESTON – Adventure

    7:00
BOB CUMMINGS – Comedy

    7:30
CLIMAX! – Drama

    8:30
PLAYHOUSE 90 – Drama

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:30
MOVIE – Musical Comedy
“Crazy House” (1943)

It's hard to imagine watching a music-variety show at 7:00 in the morning, isn't it? Let alone one by an outsized pesonality like Jimmy Dean.


 5   KSTP (NBC)

MORNING


    6:30
DAVID STONE – Variety

    6:40
TELE-FARMER – Seils

    7:00
TODAY – Garroway

    9:00
ARLENE FRANCIS
Guests: Susan Strasberg, Mrs. Lee Strasberg

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

  10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

  10:30
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES – Stunts

  11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH

  11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


  12:00
NEWS, WEATHER

  12:15
WEATHER – Johnny Morris

  12:20
TREASURE CHEST - Quiz

    1:00
CLUB 60 – Variety   COLOR 

    1:30
BRIDE & GROOM

    2:00
MATINEE THEATER   COLOR 
“Son of 37 Fathers”

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:45
MODERN ROMANCES

    4:00
I MARRIED JOAN

    4:30
SUSIE – Comedy

    5:00
SIDE SHOW – T.N. Tatters

    5:30
WEATHER, SPORTS

    5:45
NEWS – Huntley, Brinkley

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS, WEATHER

    6:20
YOU SHOULD KNOW – Quiz

    6:30
TIC TAC DOUGH – Quiz   COLOR 

    7:00
GROUCHO MARX

    7:30
DRAGNET – Jack Webb

    8:00
PEOPLE’S CHOICE – Comedy

    8:30
HIGH LOW – Quiz

    9:00
LUX VIDEO THEATRE – Drama   COLOR 

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:30
HIGHWAY PATROL – Police

  11:00
TONIGHT – Jack Paar

Actress Susan Strasberg (the Home show with Arlene Francis, 9:00 a.m.) is the daughter of Mrs. Lee Strasberg, Paula Miller, who in addition to being married to Lee Strasberg was Marilyn Monroe's acting coach. (We won't hold that against her.) Lee was known as the father of the acting system known as "the Method"; Susan memorably described her mother once as a "combination delicatessen, pharmacist, Jewish mother".


 6   KMMT (AUSTIN) (ABC)

AFTERNOON


    2:00
MOVIE – Comedy
“My Dear Secretary” (1948)

    3:00
AMERICAN BANDSTAND
Guests: Nick Nobel and the Tune Weavers

    4:30
MOVIES – Double Feature
1. “Here Comes Trouble” (1948) 2. “A Man’s Affairs”

    5:50
SPORTS, NEWS, WEATHER

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS – John Daly

    6:30
CHINA SMITH – Adventure

    7:00
ABC PRESENTS – Documentary

    7:30
MODERN AMERICANA

    8:00
DANCE BILLBOARD

    8:05
TUNES ON TRIAL – Music

    8:30
INDUSTRIES FOR AMERICA

    9:00
FILM FEATURE

    9:30
UNCOVERED – Mystery

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:30
MOVIE – Mystery
“Return of a Stranger” (1937)

Tunes on Trial was not, contrary to what you might think, hosted by Tipper Gore.


 7   KWWL (WATERLOO, IA) (NBC, ABC)

MORNING


    7:00
TODAY – Garroway

    9:00
ARLENE FRANCIS
Guests: Susan Strasberg, Mrs. Lee Strasberg

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

  10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

  10:30
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES – Stunts

  11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH

  11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


  12:00
TEX AND JINX – Interviews

  12:30
CLUB 60 – Variety   COLOR 

    1:30
BRIDE & GROOM

    2:00
MATINEE THEATER   COLOR 
“Son of 37 Fathers”

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:45
MODERN ROMANCES

    4:00
I MARRIED JOAN

EVENING


    6:55
WEATHER, SPORTS, NEWS

    7:15
NEWS – Huntley, Brinkley

    7:30
TIC TAC DOUGH

    8:00
ANNIE OAKLEY – Western

    8:30
HIGH LOW – Quiz

    9:00
LUX VIDEO THEATRE – Drama   COLOR 

  10:00
GROUCHO MARX - Quiz

  10:30
DRAGNET – Jack Webb

  11:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  11:30
INTERNATIONAL PLAYHOUSE

  12:00
TONIGHT – Jack Paar

    1:00
NEWS – Tom Miller

"Son of 37 Fathers," this afternoon's episode of Matinee Theater, is not, I swear, a porn film. It's actually the story of a young Korean boy who's adopted by 37 American troops and later becomes the prime suspect when a classified map goes missing from camp. Think Dondi, or maybe The Manchurian Candidate.


 8   WKBT (LA CROSSE, WI) (ALL NETWORKS)

MORNING


  11:00
HOTEL COSMOPOLITAN

  11:15
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

  11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

  11:45
FILM SHORT

  11:55
TROUBLE WITH FATHER

AFTERNOON


  12:25
NEWS – Walter Cronkite

  12:30
STRIKE IT RICH – Quiz

    1:00
OUR MISS BROOKS – Comedy

    1:30
HOUSE PARTY – Linkletter

    2:00
BIG PAYOFF – Quiz

    2:30
VERDICT IS YOURS

    3:00
BRIGHTER DAY – Serial

    3:15
SECRET STORM – Serial

    3:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

    4:00
MOVIE – To Be Announced

    5:00
KIDDIES HOUR – Kids

    5:30
FOREIGN LEGIONNAIRE

EVENING


    6:00
FARM DIGEST – Martin

    6:05
SPORTS, NEWS, WEATHER

    6:30
LONE RANGER – Western

    7:00
WEB - Drama

    7:30
CLIMAX! – Drama

    8:30
DRAGNET – Jack Webb

    9:00
GROUCHO MARX

    9:30
STAGE 7 – Drama

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:20
THIS IS YOUR LIFE
Guest: Lou Costello

  10:50
INNER SANCTUM - Mystery

In all the years I've done this, I've never seen a station with the affiliate description "all networks." But it's brilliant - it's the only station providing coverage into the viewing area, and undoubtedly it can bill itself as providing the best programming from each of the networks. Kind of like an all-star network.


 9   KMGM (IND.)

AFTERNOON


    5:00
MOVIE – Drama
“Fury” (1936)

EVENING


    6:30
MOVIE – Comedy
“Guardsman” (1931)

    8:00
MR. AND MRS. NORTH – Mystery

    8:30
SCIENCE FICTION THEATER

    9:00
MOVIE – Mystery
“Hunt the Man Down” (1951)

  10:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Undercurrent” (1946)

In years to come, KMGM will become KMSP, and will move from independent status to an ABC affiliate, and then turn indepenedent again before becoming part of the Fox network. When I compare their prime time lineup to that of WTCN's, I'm not that sure that they're not getting the better deal at this point in time.


 10   KROC (ROCHESTER) (NBC)

MORNING


    7:00
TODAY – Garroway

    9:00
ARLENE FRANCIS
Guests: Susan Strasberg, Mrs. Lee Strasberg

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

  10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

  10:30
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES – Stunts

  11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH

  11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


  12:00
NEWS, WEATHER

  12:15
CHANNEL TEN CALLING

  12:30
CLUB 60 – Variety   COLOR 

    1:30
BRIDE & GROOM

    2:00
MATINEE THEATER   COLOR 
“Son of 37 Fathers”

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:45
MODERN ROMANCES

    4:00
I MARRIED JOAN

    4:30
FOREST FRONTIERS

    5:00
MOVIE – Western
“Pioneers of the West” (1940)

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS, WEATHER

    6:15
NEWS – Huntley, Brinkley

    6:30
LOONEY TUNES – Cartoon

    6:45
DUFFER’S DIGEST

    7:00
GROUCHO MARX

    7:30
DRAGNET – Jack Webb

    8:00
FRONTIER DOCTOR

    8:30
HIGH LOW – Quiz

    9:00
LUX VIDEO THEATRE – Drama   COLOR 

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:30
MOVIE – Drama
“Minesweeper” (1943)

The quiz show High Low is hosted by Jack Barry; it only runs for the Summer and doesn't even appear in his Wikipedia article. Of course, he's preoccupied with other things right now - it will be next year that the Quiz Show Scandals, in which he plays a significan role, will explode.
In all the years I've done this, I've never seen a station with the affiliate description "all networks." But it's brilliant - it's the only station providing coverage into the viewing area, and undoubtedly it can bill itself as providing the best programming from each of the networks. Kind of like an all-star network.


 11   WTCN (ABC)

AFTERNOON


  11:45
NEWS – Al Paulson

  11:55
THIS IS THE STORY - Drama

EVENING


  12:00
CASEY JONES – Rog Awsumb

  12:30
ROMPER ROOM – Miss Phyllis

    1:00
MOVIE – Historical Drama
“Elizabeth the Queen” (1939)

    2:50
NEWS – Bob West

    3:00
AMERICAN BANDSTAND
Guests: Nick Nobel and the Tune Weavers

    4:30
CARTOON CARNIVAL – Kids

    5:00
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB – Kids

EVENING


    6:00
NEWS, WEATHER

    6:15
NEWS – John Daly

    6:30
LONE RANGER – Western

    7:00
ABC PRESENTS – Documentary

    7:30
MODERN AMERICANA

    8:00
MOVIE – War Drama
“Flying Tigers” (1942)

    9:30
DICK POWELL – Drama

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:15
MOVIE – Drama
“Hell’s Kitchen” (1939)

You recall how I said that Channel 9 had the better of the deal with Channel 11 - well, if you look at what ABC's prime time schedule actually was at the time, you'll see that WTCN has almost none of it on right now, except for John Daly's news and The Lone Ranger. Was it because it was Summer? Possibly; the shows don't appear on KMMT, the area's other full-time ABC affiliate, either. Of course, local stations didn't always run to associate themselves with ABC back then.


 13   WEAU (EAU CLAIRE) (NBC, ABC)

MORNING


    7:00
TODAY – Garroway

    9:00
ARLENE FRANCIS
Guests: Susan Strasberg, Mrs. Lee Strasberg

    9:30
TREASURE HUNT

  10:00
PRICE IS RIGHT

  10:30
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES – Stunts

  11:00
TIC TAC DOUGH

  11:30
IT COULD BE YOU

AFTERNOON


  12:00
OPERATION SUCCESS

  12:30
CLUB 60 – Variety   COLOR 

    1:30
BRIDE & GROOM

    2:00
MATINEE THEATER   COLOR 
“Son of 37 Fathers”

    3:00
QUEEN FOR A DAY

    3:45
MODERN ROMANCES

    4:00
I MARRIED JOAN

    4:30
CARTOONS – Kids

    4:55
SHERIFF BOB – Kids

    5:30
FILM FEATURE

EVENING


    6:00
LONE RANGER – Western

    6:30
FILM SHORT

    6:45
WEATHER, NEWS

    7:00
GROUCHO MARX

    7:30
DRAGNET – Jack Webb

    8:00
SCHLITZ PLAYHOUSE - Drama

    8:30
HIGH LOW – Quiz

    9:00
LUX VIDEO THEATRE – Drama   COLOR 

  10:00
NEWS, WEATHER, SPORTS

  10:30
SPORTS HORIZONS

  10:45
LAWRENCE WELK - Music

I like these brief descriptions that accompany the shows here; it's one reason I switched over to this method. You know: Lawrene Welk - Music. Schlitz Playhouse - Drama. Dragnet - Jack Webb. Not "Police," not "Drama.""Jack Webb." As my wife commented, what else is there to say?

TV Jibe: Now that's what I call volume control!

Around the dial

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Sure enough, no sooner do I get everything put up for last week, we have two more of the classic TV greats die. First: Richard Anderson, who it would seem was never out of work in the '60s and '70s, between a turn as a regular on Perry Mason, his best-known turn as Oscar Goldman on both The Six Million Dollar Man and The Bionic Woman, and more guests shots on TV series and movies than you can count. A man who has that much work only succeeds because he's good, and people know it.

And then there was Shelly Berman, one of the "sick" stand-up comedians of the late '50s and early '60s, who turned out to be a very, very good dramatic and comedic actor. I enjoyed his appearances on everything from The Twilight Zone to Peter Gunn, and he was nominated for a Emmy for Curb Your Enthusiasm. I recall someone discussing how good comedians were as dramatic actors (Don Rickles was another), probably because the root of so much comedy comes from personal drama.

In this vein, let's start off with Fire-Breathing Dimetrodon Time's look back at the season two episode of The Bionic Womanentitled, appropriately enough, "Kill Oscar." P.S.: it fails, fortunately not only for the free world but for all of us watching at home.

The Washingtonian has this ridiculous profile - actually, it's not the writing by Michelle Cottle that's ridiculous; rather, it's the subject of the profile, Sally Quinn, former anchor of the CBS Morning News with Hughes Rudd in 1973, and probably better known as the widow of Washington Post publisher Ben Bradlee. Some, shall we say, interesting revelations in Quinn's latest book, as covered in the article. I'm sorry, but what a nutburger. . .

A couple of sequals to stories from last week: Joanna is back with part two of her Christmas book inventory at Christmas TV History, while The Twilight Zone Vortex has the final five in the countdown of the 20 greatest TZ performances. Ah, what great fun these were.

Vote for Bob Crane has the latest addition to the Liberty Aviation Museum's official Hogan's Heroes display, and you'll want to click on the link to take a look at just what it is!

Once Upon a Screen takes a moment to look back at the movie career of Yvonne De Carlo, Lily Munster herself. Amid complaints that "She’ll never fit in. She’s a movie star!" she fit in quite well indeed. And what a career she had...

Faded Signals has a nice print and video lookback at Love on a Rooftop, the 1966 ABC sitcom starring Peter Duell and Judy Carne, both of whom died too soon.

Garroway at Large has an episode of What's My Line? from 1953 that features the Master Communicator himself, as the mystery guest.

You know, here's something I miss. From Broadcast House has a look at the start of the 1967 TV season, and reading about the new and returning shows (Garrison's Gorillas! Red Skelton! N.Y.P.D.! Hollywood Palace!) reminds me of the anticipation that time of the year created - the desire to check out something new, the welcome return of old favorites. There'd be new looks on the new shows, and sometimes on the old ones as well, and you'd start to see commercials for the new product lines (cars, naturally, but more), with the soon-enough-but-not-soon-enough ads for Christmas not much farther down the line. Does anything create that kind of anticipation anymore, or is it all hype?

At The Horn Section, it's time to saddle up once again and ride with Hondo - this time, the episode "Hondo and the Commancheros," which sounds a lot like a John Wayne movie, doesn't it? I confess to not ever having seen an episode of Hondo - which doesn't make it unique, I admit - but it can't possibly be as entertaining as Hal's write-ups, can it?

Plenty of links to follow next week, when through the miracles of modern technology, you'll be reading it while I'm at the nostalgia convention. (Unless you're there as well, right?)

This week in TV Guide: September 13, 1975

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It's time once again for everyone's favorite game, "Pick the Winners," where you get the chance to go head-to-head against the television experts to choose the year's most successful series! Last year, you may recall, the panel assembled by TV Guide unanimously - unanimously - chose Paul Sand in Friends and Lovers as the sure-thing, can't-miss, "best chance for ratings glory" program of the year. Fifteen weeks later, it was gone. As Neil Hickey says, keep this in mind when you look at their picks

First things first. The experts are eleven of the top advertising agency executives, men paid big bucks to predict where the bigger bucks ought to go. And among these eleven, there is a consensus, three series that show up on more of their lists than any others. Those three: Phyllis, on CBS; Joe Forrester, on NBC, and Switch, on CBS. Phyllis, the second spinoff from The Mary Tyler Moore Show, starring Cloris Leachman, is described as "the enviable filly," sandwiched between Rhoda and All in the Family, with Maude and Medical Center to follow. Joe Forrester, starring Lloyd Bridges in a spinoff from a Police Story episode, is up against the "big gamble of the year," CBS's Masterpiece Theatre-clone Beacon Hill, and ABC's fading Marcus Welby, M.D. Switch, which stars Robert Wagner and Eddie Albert in a "first cousin" to the Oscar-winning The Sting, is strengthened by the likeability of its stars, but handicapped by its tough position going up against Police Story and The Rookies. 

How did they do? Let's go to the judges' cards for the decision. Phyllis lasted two seasons, fewer than Rhoda, although their ratings were comperable. Joe Forrister was clearly a disappointment, lasting only a single season. Switch, however, survived for three seasons before being replaced by The Incredible Hulk.. So as far as that goes, we'll give the experts one out of three, which would give them a pretty good batting average in the major leagues. They do much better when it comes to picking the bombs (it's always embarrassing when you look back and find out that one of their "sure fire flops" turns out to be something like Little House on the Prairie) - the three most likely to fail are On the Rocks ("mostly because nobody could find out why it was conceived at all, much less sent out to compete"). Mobile One (similar reasons, plus it's on up against Sanford and Son, Chico and the Man, and M*A*S*H), and Saturday Night Life with Howard Cosell, which is only remembered today because it's the show that forced SNL to use the title NBC's Saturday Night for the first few weeks.

Were there any shows they really missed? Well, the cop show Starsky and Hutch garnered a fair amount of support, and a sitcom called Welcome Back, Kotter got a vote. On the flip side, there were several votes for Doctors Hospital, starring George Peppard, one of the first "realistic" medical dramas, which probably got less than it deserved.

◊ ◊ ◊

SOURCE: H ADLEY TV GUIDES
Let's stay on the prediction binge a little longer here, and turn to Melvin Durslag's prognostications for the new NFL season. Profits are on the downside - each team makes but $2 million from television, the average team shows a profit of a measly $512,000, and eight teams lost money last season. Contrast this with the most recent figures, which show that the average profit margin per team is over $225 million (from the league's revenue pool), and the teams evenly divide about $2.5 billion or so from their television contract. Eh, inflation.

But it's true that Durslag paints something of a grim picture for the NFL in 1975, and at first glance that would seem to be anything but true nowadays. And yet - ratings were down last year for the first time in a while, and we'll see if it was just the election, or if it did have something to do with players kneeling for the national anthem, for sexual assaults and violence and concussions and other off-field happenings, and there's still the threat of labor strife in the future. So when you think about it, for all that's changed, a lot is still the same.

Durslag's predictions for the AFC are straightforward: Miami in the East, Pittsburgh in the Central, Oakland in the West, while in the NFC the division winners are St. Louis in the East, Minnesota in the Central, and Los Angeles in the West. And how did this expert do? Well, in fact, Durslag aces the NFC, with one proviso. He mentions that we are warned that it is "dangerous to pick against Dallas in the division, but the judgment here is that the Cowboys have busted their last bronc for a spell. They must rebuild." He does not pick the Cowboys to win the East, and he is correct. However, they do win the Wild Card (he has them finishing fourth), and then go on to upset both Minnesota and Los Angeles to wind up in the Super Bowl, where they take on: Pittsburgh. While Durslag gets the Steelers and Raiders right, he really blows it in the East, where he picks Baltimore to finish fifth, and for awhile he looks smart; the Colts get out to a 1-4 start before running off seven straight wins, then defeat Miami 10-7 in an overtime thriller in Baltimore, before defeating New England in the final game of the season to finish atop the division. The Steelers win the AFC anyhow, then top Dallas in Super Bowl X.

◊ ◊ ◊

I don't often get the chance to do a head-to-head between Don Kirshner's Rock Concert and The Midnight Special, primarily because there aren't often listings for the guests on Kirshner's show. This week is an exception though, and I'm going to take advantage of it.

Kirshner: Yes, David Essex, Brian Cadd, Rush, and the Fania All-Stars are the performers. Also: clips of Jimi Hendrix.

Special: Helen Reddy (hostess), Paul Williams, Phoebe Snow, the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and comedian Alan Mandell are the guests. On film: David Bowie.

OK, let's think about this for a minute. On film, you've got David Bowie. On stage, you have Yes and Rush, plus film clips of Hendrix. This week it's a big Yes for Don Kirschner.

◊ ◊ ◊

They're not starlets anymore, they're just the "Stars of the Future," and they come in both sexes. Let's see who some of Hollywood's most successful talent scouts have labeled for upcoming stardom.

(L-R) Grant, Conaway, Pringle, Potts, Sublette
Ethel Winant, formerly of CBS and now of Children's Television Workshop, likes Linda Sublette, who's been in Gunsmoke and Mary Tyler Moore, as well as a ton of commercials. "She's very American," says Winant, back when that was an asset. "Cute. Bright. Perky." Al Trescony of NBC, who dates back to MGM and Clary Gable, favors Cliff Potts, whom, he says, "could be another Steve McQueen." Potts has been on "the TV guest-star circuit" and was Gene Barry's assistant in The Name of the Game.

Gail Melnick, of ABC, rather likes Barra Grant, "the most versatile actress I've ever seen." Adds Melnick, "She's right for almost every female part I have." Grant, in addition to doing series guest parts and TV movies, is the daughter of Bess Myerson. Meanwhile, Monique James of Universal City Studios casts her vote for Joan Pringle. "What an actress!" she says of Pringle, who was in the last season of Ironside, had roles in Emergency!, Toma, and Banacek, and is headed for That's My Mama. Eddie Foy III, part of the famous Foy family, is reminded of a young Dick Van Dyke when he thinks of Jeff Conaway. "He's got that marvelous looseness that you don't see in a lot of people today." He played in Grease on stage for a couple of years, and also did an episode of Movin' On.

So how did these predictions go? Well, Jeff Conaway, who died in 2011, had successes in both Taxi and Babylon 5, as well as the movie version of Grease. Joan Pringle did a lot of TV; her best-known role was probably in The White Shadow. Barra Grant appeared in the second series of the BBCseries Take Three Girls, as well as numerous TV shows and movies, but has gone on to do more work as a TV writer and director. Cliff Potts has done a number of movies and TV series, including Silent Running, and acted with Steve McQueen, though he never approached his talent or his magnetism. And Linda Sublette has a few credits to her name, but probably made far more money off of commercials than I'll ever see in my lifetime.

Which just goes to show that predicting success isn't easy, but even a little success is as accomplishment. It's a tough business, as Eddie Foy III says: "Television makes it come too fast, too soon. And it ends quicker than it starts."

◊ ◊ ◊

Muhammad Ali, the Heavyweight Champion of the World, hosts his own variety special at 7:00 p.m. CT on ABC Saturday night; his guests are Howard Cosell (natch), Flip Wilson, Aretha Franklin, Gabe Kaplan, The Captain and Tennille, and Barry White. (I swear, this sounds like some kind of SCTV parody, doesn't it?) I remember the host of Welcome Inn, the local "variety" show on Channel 7, talking about the Ali special later in the week and marvelling and how smooth and funny Ali was as a host; even at 15, I was thinking to myself, "Hey lady, have you ever heard of, you know, writers?" The unnamed critic of The Screening Room begs to differ with our Channel 7 hostess, saying that Ali is "out of his element when he's out of the ring. His opening monologue falls flat, his guests praise him fawningly, and his verbal sparring with Howard Cosell is predictable." On the other hand, Aretha Franklin's pretty good.

You can tell we're at the start of a new season just by looking at the heavy guns being brought out on Sunday. At 7:00 p.m., ABC's The Six Million Dollar Man begins its third season with a two-part episode bringing back Steve Austin's flame, Jaime Sommers. Steve saw her die in the previous season after undergoing an operation similar to his, but she's back this season and bionically better than ever, on the way to a series of her own the following year. At 8:00 p.m., it's CBS's turn to welcome a third-season favorite, as Telly Savalas'Kojak investigates a loan shark also under investigation by the Feds, with a guest cast including Eli Wallach, Michael Gazzo, Jerry Orbach, Jennifer Warren, F. Murray Abraham, and Charles Kimbrough. He'll need all that star power, because ABC's coming back with the network premiere of Cabaret, winner of eight Academy Awards, including Best Director (Bob Fosse), Best Supporting Actor (Joel Grey), and Best Actress (Liza Minnelli). Says Judith Crist, "this work is more than a film 'version' of the musical. It is a vivid drama wth music, a compassionate story of people trapped by their own indifference and slowly contaminated by their lack of involvement."

ABC kicks off the college football season Monday night at 8:00 p.m. with an all-Catholic showdown, as Notre Dame, under new head coach Dan Devine, travels to Boston to take on Boston College.* More accurately, they're in Foxboro, home of the New England Patriots, where a crowd of over 61,000 sees the Irish emerge triumphant, 17-3. Remember, we're still in the days when the number of games is limited, so this is it for the weekend, even though the season actually started on Saturday with a big matchup between Michigan State and Ohio State, which ABC shares with highlights during Wide World of Sports. Yup, times have changed.*

*In case you're wondering where Monday Night Football is, remember that in the days of the 14-game NFL season, opening day isn't until next week.

Tuesday morning starts on Today (NBC, 7:00 a.m.) with an interview of Margaret Thatcher, leader of Britain's Conservative Party. I remember when she was elected, the first woman in a Western nation to lead a major political party. People wondered if conservatives would have a problem with that. They didn't. That evening, on what has to be a wonderful rerun of Jean Shepherd's America, "Jean recalls the time his father's huge homemade kite blew away. Jean also tells about his father's first plane ride. . . before the invention of airsickness bags." You know, I can hear Jean Shepherd narrating that, and I can hear Darren McGavin shouting, can't you?

On Wednesday it's Mel Brooks' Robin Hood parody, When Things Were Rotten (7:00 p.m., ABC, with guest star Phil Silvers). I think I've mentioned before that there was a great mystique about programs like this that aired on CBS and, especiallyt, ABC while I lived in The World's Worst Town™. We could get CBS programming on the KELOland station when the weather was good, and on occasion (such as with the Muhammad Ali special above) Channel 7 would telecast ABC programming, since it was a dual affiliation. Rarely the good stuff, though. From what I'd read, I though When Things Were Rotten had to be a hilarious show; I knew Brooks from The Producers, and I thought spoofing Robin Hood was a slam dunk. It wasn't, but such is the aura of a show like that. The man who wrote that "'tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all" never got to watch a TV show he'd always wanted to see only to find out it wasn't any good.


Thursday starts off at 6:30 p.m. on KROC, the NBC affiliate in Rochester, with Space: 1999, the science fiction series starring the late Martin Landeau and Barbara Bain. As I recall, people had high hopes for this series, one of the first really serious sci-fi series since Star Trek, and at the time I remember hearing it was something of a disappointment (we couldn't see it up there, you know), although its reputation may have been burnished in the years since then. Hard to see how it couldn't be good, with that cast, plus Ian McShane (right) as a guest star. Later on (7:30 p.m., NBC), it's Lee Grant's 10-episode sitcom Fay, followed at 8:00 p.m. by the too-short Ellery Queen Mysteries, with Jim Hutton and David Wayne terrific as Queens son and father, Tom Reese dependable as Velle, John Hillerman wonderfully smug as Simon Brimmer, and a knockout guest cast this week: Susan Strasberg, Anne Francis, Don Ameche, Craig Stevens, Jack Kelly, and Ida Lupino. As my wife would say, it's too bad they couldn't get anyone big. Continuing on the crime beat, David Janssen's gritty P.I. drama Harry O (9:00 p.m., ABC) has a hit-and-run story with a desperate client (Carol Rossen, whose father Robert directed the classic All the King's Men, and who herself survived an incredible murder attempt), and a supporting cast including Larry Hagman and Robert Loggia).

It's a rite of passage on M*A*S*H Friday (7:30 p.m., CBS), as "Change of Command" provides an apt title for the episode that introduces the 4077th's new CO: Colonel Sherman Potter, played by the redoubtable Harry Morgan. Elsewhere, Jim Backus, Sherry Jackson, Julie Adams, and Patty McCormack are among the guests on ABC's soon-to-be short-lived series Mobile One (7:00 p.m.), Sgt. Becker - a veteran of the bunco squad - has to ask Rockford to bail him out after he's the victim of a fraud (and don't think Rockford will ever let him hear the end of it) on The Rockford Files (8:00 p.m., NBC), and Paul Picerni, a veteran of Quinn Martin's The Untouchables, returns to the QM stables as he guests on Barnaby Jones (9:00 p.m., CBS) along with Barry Sullivan, Sharon Acker, Charles Durning, and Hayden Rorke.

As I said, Septembers are great if you're looking for big-name guest stars!

◊ ◊ ◊

Tidbits collected from the rest of the issue:

ABC, on the heels of hiring Fred Silverman from CBS to run its programming, tried to go to that well again, offering Don Hewitt, producer of 60 Minutes, the job running the network's failing morning show, AM America. Hewitt tells ABC he's under a long-term contract to CBS and has no desire to try and get out of it, but that if he did, the only thing that would interest him would be if "I owned AM America." I know not whether he speaks in jest, but that thought is a very interesting one. Would the program, which features Bill Beutel, Stephanie Edwards, and Peter Jennings, have looked like its successor, Good Morning America, or would it have been something entirely different? I wonder what Hewitt would have had in mind. Like the number of licks it takes to get to the center of a Tootsie Roll Pop, the world will never know.

George Carlin is set to host the inaugural episode of NBC's live Saturday Night sketch comedy show (it does sound better after Cosell is cancelled, doesn't it?), and more cast signings have been announced: Albert Brooks "will contribute a short film - featuring himself as writer and star - to each of the first seven programs," and Jim Henson has some new Muppet creations set to appear. Producer Lorne Michaels confesses that the hardest part of live television "is making it come out to the right lenght," but that anxiety is what drives good comedy.

This season features the introduction of the "Family Prime Time Period," a nightly two-hour commitment to family-friendly programming agreed to by stations that subscribe to the Television Code fo the National Association of Broadcasters. Note that this is voluntary; there's no government intervention or censorship involved in this, although one could certainly intuit that the threat of government involvement often drives this kind of intervention. Stockton Helfrich, the Director of Code Authority for NAB, takes a moment to explain to TV Guide just what the phrase "family programming" means, and what he'll be looking for. The short answer: bear with us. It's going to take time to implement this, and it's going to be done on a case-by-case basis, rather than one-size-fits-all. Helfrich believes there's already a consensus between networks and broadcasters that "extraneous violence and explicit sexual subject material" is "out of bounds" in the Family Prime Time Period. He has confidence, though, that programmers can exercise their "usual business finesse in selecting broadcast entities that draw and hold audiences." However, he acknowledges that there will be times, such as when a viewer says, "it's all right to show that people fight, but it shouldn't get out of hand" - well, how do you define that? Or when someone speaks of sex and says, "no indecent stuff" - it's not going to be easy.

And it's funny you should mention that, because Monday night's episode of Medical Center (9:00 p.m., CBS) features a storyline in which Robert Reed plays a surgeon seeking a sex change, and his hostile wife and son refuse to intervene on his behalf. "CBS plans an announcement warning that the episode may not be suitable for all family members." Indeed.

What's on TV? Friday, September 19, 1975

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An interesting Friday night to look at; one of the reasons I was drawn to this date was that there are lots of programs here that you don't ordinarily associate with Fridays. M*A*S*H? Only for three months, but this date fell in that range. Hawaii Five-O? I always think of it on Wednesday or Thursdays, but here it is on Friday, for those same three months, as was Barnaby Jones. Five-O, Barnaby, Rockford, and Police Woman make up four hours of crime dramas on Fridays, and a crime drama (The Kansas City Massacre) for a movie. Quite a way to end the week, isn't it? Let's get started; we're looking at the Minnesota State Edition.




 2   KTCA (PBS)

MORNING

   10:00
ELECTRIC COMPANY
         
   11:30
VILLA ALEGRE – Children

AFTERNOON

   12:00
SESAME STREET

     3:00
VILLA ALEGRE - Children

     3:30
SEMINAR ON THE ‘70s

     4:00
MISTER ROGERS

     4:30
SESAME STREET

     5:30
ELECTRIC COMPANY

EVENING

     6:00
AVIATION WEATHER

     6:30
EVENING EDITION WITH MARTIN AGRONSKY

     7:00
WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW

     7:30
WALL $TREET WEEK – Louis Rukeyser

     8:00
YOUR WORLD THIS WEEK

     8:30
AMERICAN HIGHLANDS

     9:30
MEDIA 7 PRESENTS

   10:00
BLACK PERSPECTIVE ON THE NEWS

   10:30
EVENING EDITION WITH MARTIN AGRONSKY



 3   KDAL (DULUTH) (CBS)

MORNING


     7:00
CBS NEWS – Rudd

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

     9:00
GIVE-N-TAKE – Game

     9:30
PRICE IS RIGHT – Game

   10:00
GAMBIT – Game

   10:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

   10:55
CBS NEWS – Edwards

   11:00
YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS – Serial
         
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

AFTERNOON

   12:00
TOWN AND COUNTRY

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial

     1:00
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

     1:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

     2:00
MATCH GAME 
Avery Schreiber, Joyce Bulifant, Lana Wood, Charles Nelson Reilly, Brett Somers, Richard Dawson. Host Gene Rayburn

     2:30
TATTLETALES – Game
Mel and Janette Scott Torme, Kam and Bob Seagren, Helen and Gene Rayburn. Host Bert Convey

     3:00
MUSICAL CHAIRS – Game
Guests The Stylistics, Don Stewart. Host Adam Wade

     3:30
DINAH!

     5:00
ADAM-12 – Crime Drama

     5:30
CBS NEWS – Walter Cronkite

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
JEFFERSONS
Return

     7:00
BIG EDDIE – Comedy

     7:30
M*A*S*H

     8:00
HAWAII FIVE-O – Crime Drama

     9:00
BARNABY JONES – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE – Thriller
“The Devil’s Daughter” (1973)



 4   WCCO (CBS)

MORNING


     5:30
SUMMER SEMESTER
Science and Society

     6:00
CBS NEWS – Hughes Rudd

     7:00
CARMEN

     7:30
CLANCY AND WILLIE

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

     9:00
GIVE-N-TAKE – Game

     9:30
PRICE IS RIGHT – Game

   10:00
GAMBIT – Game

   10:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial

   10:55
LIVE TODAY – Religion

   11:00
YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS – Serial
         
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

   12:00
MIDDAY

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial

     1:00
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

     1:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

     2:00
MATCH GAME 
Avery Schreiber, Joyce Bulifant, Lana Wood, Charles Nelson Reilly, Brett Somers, Richard Dawson. Host Gene Rayburn

     2:30
TATTLETALES – Game
Mel and Janette Scott Torme, Kam and Bob Seagren, Helen and Gene Rayburn. Host Bert Convey

     3:00
MUSICAL CHAIRS – Game
Guests The Stylistics, Don Stewart. Host Adam Wade

     3:30
MOVIE – Thriller
“Night Gallery” (1969)

     5:30
CBS NEWS – Walter Cronkite

EVENING


     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game

     7:00
BIG EDDIE – Comedy

     7:30
M*A*S*H

     8:00
HAWAII FIVE-O – Crime Drama

     9:00
BARNABY JONES – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   11:00
MOVIE – Drama  BW
“The Little Foxes” (1941)

   12:45
MOVIE – Comedy  BW
“Goin’ to Town” (1935)



 5   KSTP (NBC)

MORNING

     5:50
MINNESOTA TODAY – Stone

     6:20
GRANDPA KEN

     6:30
HILARIOUS HOUSE OF FRIGHTENSTEIN

     7:00
TODAY – Hartz/Walters
Guest Hugh Downs

     9:00
CELEBRITY SWEEPSTAKES – Game
Guests Gavin MacLeod, James Darren, Dick Martin, Carol Wayne. Host Jim McKrell

     9:30
WHEEL OF FORTUNE – Game

   10:00
HIGH ROLLERS – Game

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Guests George Kennedy, Jimmie Walker, Susan Clark, Dionne Warwicke, Robert Fuller, Susan Howard, David Brenner, George Gobel, Rose Marie

   11:00
MAGNIFICENT MARBLE MACHINE – Game
Guests Bill Daily, Joan Rivers. Host Art James
         
   11:30
JACKPOT! – Game  

   11:55
NBC NEWS – Newman

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS

   12:10
TAKE FIVE

   12:25
TAKE KERR

   12:30
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial

     1:30
DOCTORS – Serial

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

     3:00
SOMERSET - Serial

     3:30
BRADY BUNCH – Comedy

     4:00
MOD SQUAD – Crime Drama

     5:00
HOGAN’S HEROES – Comedy

     5:30
NBC NEWS – John Chancellor

EVENING


     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
BOWLING FOR DOLLARS

     7:00
SANFORD AND SON

     7:30
CHICO AND THE MAN

     8:00
ROCKFORD FILES – Crime Drama

     9:00
POLICE WOMAN – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON
Guest Don Rickles

   12:00
MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
Guests Paul Williams, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Alan Mandell. David Bowie on film. Hostess Helen Reddy



 6   KBJR (DULUTH) (NBC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY – Hartz/Walters
Guest Hugh Downs

     9:00
CELEBRITY SWEEPSTAKES – Game
Guests Gavin MacLeod, James Darren, Dick Martin, Carol Wayne. Host Jim McKrell

     9:30
WHEEL OF FORTUNE – Game

   10:00
HIGH ROLLERS – Game

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Guests George Kennedy, Jimmie Walker, Susan Clark, Dionne Warwicke, Robert Fuller, Susan Howard, David Brenner, George Gobel, Rose Marie

   11:00
MAGNIFICENT MARBLE MACHINE – Game
Guests Bill Daily, Joan Rivers. Host Art James
         
   11:30
JACKPOT! – Game

   11:55
NBC NEWS – Newman

AFTERNOON

   12:00
ONLY FOR GIRLS

   12:30
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial

     1:30
DOCTORS – Serial

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

     3:00
SOMERSET - Serial

     3:30
NOT FOR WOMEN ONLY

     4:00
MIKE DOUGLAS
Guests Liza Minelli, Burt Reynolds, Gene Hackman, Victor Borge, Martin Landau, Barbara Bain, Rene Simard

     5:30
NBC NEWS – John Chancellor

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

     7:00
SANFORD AND SON

     7:30
CHICO AND THE MAN

     8:00
ROCKFORD FILES – Crime Drama

     9:00
POLICE WOMAN – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON
Guest Don Rickles

   12:00
MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
Guests Paul Williams, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Alan Mandell. David Bowie (on film). Hostess Helen Reddy



 6  KAAL (AUSTIN) (ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
A.M. AMERICA – Beutel

     9:00
DINAH!
Guests Cher, Elliot Gould, Phyllis Diller, Frankie Valli

   10:30
HAPPY DAYS

   11:00
SHOWOFFS – Game
Guests Lucie Arnaz, Don Galloway, Ruta Lee, Orson Bean. Host Bobby Van
         
   11:30
ALL MY CHILDREN – Serial

AFTERNOON

   12:00
RYAN’S HOPE – Serial

   12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game

     1:00
$100,000 PYRAMID – Game
Tony Randall, Anne Meara

     1:30
RHYME AND REASON – Game
Jaye P. Morgan, Lee Meriweather, Jan Murray, Pat Harrington, Fred Travelena, Nipsey Russell

     2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

     2:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE – Serial

     3:00
YOU DON’T SAY! – Game
Abby Dalton, Charlie Brill, Conny Van Dyke, Peter Haskell

     3:30
MIKE DOUGLAS
Guests Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons, Shelley Winters, Diane Ladd, Wayne Rogers, James Kelley

     4:30
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB  BW

     5:00
ABC NEWS – Harry Reasoner

     5:30
NEWS – Darrell Larson

EVENING


     6:00
I DREAM OF JEANNIE – Comedy

     6:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES

     7:00
MOBILE ONE – Drama

     8:00
MOVIE – Crime Drama
“The Kansas City Massacre”

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
WIDE WORLD SPECIAL
“The Underworld: A Portrait of Power”

   12:00
NEWS – Bill Hudson



 7   KCMT (ALEXANDRIA) (NBC, ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY – Hartz/Walters
Guest Hugh Downs

     9:00
CELEBRITY SWEEPSTAKES – Game
Guests Gavin MacLeod, James Darren, Dick Martin, Carol Wayne. Host Jim McKrell

     9:30
WHEEL OF FORTUNE – Game

   10:00
HIGH ROLLERS – Game

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Guests George Kennedy, Jimmie Walker, Susan Clark, Dionne Warwicke, Robert Fuller, Susan Howard, David Brenner, George Gobel, Rose Marie

   11:00
MAGNIFICENT MARBLE MACHINE – Game
Guests Bill Daily, Joan Rivers. Host Art James
         
   11:30
JACKPOT! – Game

   11:55
NBC NEWS – Newman

AFTERNOON

   12:00
FARM TODAY

   12:20
TRADING POST

   12:30
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial

     1:30
DOCTORS – Serial

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

     3:00
SOMERSET - Serial

     3:30
WELCOME INN

     4:00
ODDBALL COUPLE

     4:30
SPEED BUGGY – Cartoon

     5:00
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game

     5:30
NBC NEWS – John Chancellor

EVENING


     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
LAWRENCE WELK

     7:30
CHICO AND THE MAN

     8:00
ROCKFORD FILES – Crime Drama

     9:00
POLICE WOMAN – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON
Guest Don Rickles

   12:00
MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
Guests Paul Williams, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Alan Mandell. David Bowie on film. Hostess Helen Reddy

     1:30
NEWS



 8   WDSE (DULUTH) (PBS)

AFTERNOON

     4:00
MISTER ROGERS

     4:30
SESAME STREET

     5:30
ELECTRIC COMPANY

EVENING


     6:00
AVIATION WEATHER

     6:30
EVENING EDITION WITH MARTIN AGRONSKY

     7:00
WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW

     7:30
WALL $TREET WEEK – Louis Rukeyser

     8:00
MASTERPIECE THEATRE
“The Nine Tailors” Part 2

     9:00
YOUR WORLD THIS WEEK

     9:30
JEAN SHEPHERD’S AMERICA

   10:00
CONSUMER SURVIVAL KIT

   10:30
LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU



 9   KMSP (ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
A.M. AMERICA – Beutel

     9:00
DINAH!

   10:00
YOU DON’T SAY! – Game
Greg Morris, Meredith MacRae Joyce Builfant, Mickey Manners

   10:30
HAPPY DAYS

   11:00
SHOWOFFS – Game
Guests Lucie Arnaz, Don Galloway, Ruta Lee, Orson Bean. Host Bobby Van
         
   11:30
ALL MY CHILDREN – Serial

AFTERNOON

   12:00
RYAN’S HOPE – Serial

   12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game

     1:00
$100,000 PYRAMID – Game
Tony Randall, Anne Meara

     1:30
RHYME AND REASON – Game
Jaye P. Morgan, Lee Meriweather, Jan Murray, Pat Harrington, Fred Travelena, Nipsey Russell

     2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

     2:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE – Serial

     3:00
TO TELL THE TRUTH
Kitty Carlisle, Nipsey Russell, Bill Cullen, Peggy Cass

     3:30
MIKE DOUGLAS
Guests Liza Minelli, Burt Reynolds, Gene Hackman, Victor Borge, Martin Landau, Barbara Bain, Rene Simard

     5:00
NEWS

     5:30
ABC NEWS – Harry Reasoner

EVENING

     6:00
TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES – Game

     6:30
LAST OF THE WILD

     7:00
MOBILE ONE – Drama

     8:00
MOVIE – Crime Drama
“The Kansas City Massacre”

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE – Drama
“The Ugly American” (1963)

     1:00
NEWS



10  WDIO (DULUTH) (ABC)

MORNING


     7:00
A.M. AMERICA – Beutel

     9:00
CARTOON CARNIVAL

   10:00
RYAN’S HOPE – Serial

   10:30
HAPPY DAYS

   11:00
SHOWOFFS – Game
Guests Lucie Arnaz, Don Galloway, Ruta Lee, Orson Bean. Host Bobby Van
         
   11:30
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE

AFTERNOON

   12:00
LIFE STYLE

   12:30
LET’S MAKE A DEAL – Game

     1:00
$100,000 PYRAMID – Game
Tony Randall, Anne Meara

     1:30
RHYME AND REASON – Game
Jaye P. Morgan, Lee Meriweather, Jan Murray, Pat Harrington, Fred Travelena, Nipsey Russell

     2:00
GENERAL HOSPITAL – Serial

     2:30
ONE LIFE TO LIVE – Serial

     3:00
YOU DON’T SAY! – Game
Abby Dalton, Charlie Brill, Conny Van Dyke, Peter Haskell

     3:30
ALL MY CHILDREN – Serial

     4:00
MOVIE – Science Fiction
“Journey to the Seventh Planet” (Danish; 1961)

     5:30
ABC NEWS – Harry Reasoner

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
PARTRIDGE FAMILY

     7:00
MOBILE ONE – Drama

     8:00
MOVIE – Crime Drama
“The Kansas City Massacre”

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE – Western
“Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here” (1969)

   12:15
OUTER LIMITS



10  KEYC (ROCHESTER) (NBC)

MORNING


     7:00
TODAY – Hartz/Walters
Guest Hugh Downs

     9:00
CELEBRITY SWEEPSTAKES – Game
Guests Gavin MacLeod, James Darren, Dick Martin, Carol Wayne. Host Jim McKrell

     9:30
WHEEL OF FORTUNE – Game

   10:00
HIGH ROLLERS – Game

   10:30
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Guests George Kennedy, Jimmie Walker, Susan Clark, Dionne Warwicke, Robert Fuller, Susan Howard, David Brenner, George Gobel, Rose Marie

   11:00
MAGNIFICENT MARBLE MACHINE – Game
Guests Bill Daily, Joan Rivers. Host Art James
         
   11:30
JACKPOT! – Game

   11:55
NBC NEWS – Newman

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS

   12:30
DAYS OF OUR LIVES – Serial

     1:30
DOCTORS – Serial

     2:00
ANOTHER WORLD – Serial

     3:00
SOMERSET - Serial

     3:30
ROBERT YOUNG, FAMILY DOCTOR

     4:30
HOGAN’S HEROES – Comedy

     5:00
ADAM-12

     5:30
NBC NEWS – John Chancellor

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
TREASURE HUNT

     7:00
SANFORD AND SON

     7:30
CHICO AND THE MAN

     8:00
ROCKFORD FILES – Crime Drama

     9:00
POLICE WOMAN – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
JOHNNY CARSON
Guest Don Rickles

   12:00
MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
Guests Paul Williams, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Alan Mandell. David Bowie on film. Hostess Helen Reddy


11 WTCN (IND.)

MORNING


     6:30
WHAT’S NEW?

     7:00
NEW ZOO REVUE

     7:30
POPEYE AND PORKY – Cartoon

     9:00
FLINTSTONES

     9:30
I DREAM OF JEANNIE – Comedy

   10:00
FATHER KNOWS BEST BW

   10:30
ANDY GRIFFITH – Comedy  BW

   11:00
THAT GIRL – Comedy
         
   11:30
WHAT’S NEW?

AFTERNOON

   12:00


   12:30
LUCY SHOW

     1:00
MOVIE – Comedy
“Oh, Men! Oh, Women!” (1957)

     3:00
GOMER PYLE, USMC

     3:30
MICKEY MOUSE CLUB  BW

     4:00
BEWITCHED – Comedy

     4:30
GILLIGAN’S ISLAND

     5:00
FLINTSTONES

     5:30
PARTRIDGE FAMILY – Comedy

EVENING

     6:00
LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

     6:30
ADAM-12 – Crime Drama

     7:00
FBI – Crime Drama

     8:00
MERV GRIFFIN
Guests Neil Sedaka, Peter Marshall, Phyllis McGuire, Billy Holiday, Prof. Irwin Corey, the Oak Ridge Boys, DeMille

     9:30
NEWS

   10:00
DRAGNET – Crime Drama

   10:30
IRONSIDE – Crime Drama

   11:30
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

   12:30
MOVIE – Thriller
“The Crimson Cult” (English; 1968)


12 KEYC (MANKATO) (CBS)

MORNING


     7:00
CBS NEWS – Rudd

     8:00
CAPTAIN KANGAROO

     9:00
COFFEE BREAK

     9:30
PRICE IS RIGHT – Game

   10:00
GAMBIT – Game

   10:30
LOVE OF LIFE – Serial  

   10:55
CBS NEWS – Edwards

   11:00
YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS – Serial
         
   11:30
SEARCH FOR TOMORROW – Serial

AFTERNOON

   12:00
NEWS

   12:30
AS THE WORLD TURNS – Serial

     1:00
GUIDING LIGHT – Serial

     1:30
EDGE OF NIGHT – Serial

     2:00
MATCH GAME 
Avery Schreiber, Joyce Bulifant, Lana Wood, Charles Nelson Reilly, Brett Somers, Richard Dawson. Host Gene Rayburn

     2:30
TATTLETALES – Game
Mel and Janette Scott Torme, Kam and Bob Seagren, Helen and Gene Rayburn. Host Bert Convey

     3:00
MUSICAL CHAIRS – Game
Guests The Stylistics, Don Stewart. Host Adam Wade

     3:30
GIVE-N-TAKE

     4:00
BEWITCHED – Comedy  BW

     4:30
BONANZA – Western

     5:30
CBS NEWS – Walter Cronkite

EVENING

     6:00
NEWS

     6:30
I BELIEVE IN MIRACLES

     7:00
BIG EDDIE – Comedy

     7:30
M*A*S*H

     8:00
HAWAII FIVE-O – Crime Drama

     9:00
BARNABY JONES – Crime Drama

   10:00
NEWS

   10:30
MOVIE – Thriller
“The Devil’s Daughter” (1973)


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