Lorenzo and Henrietta Music's show ran all of five weeks in the fall of 1976. WSB carried it at 12:30 PM, but by the end of October was carrying "Divorce Court" at 12:30 and "Liars Club" at 1.
"Wait Till Your Father Gets Home" originally aired in Atlanta on Tuesdays at 7:30 on WAGA, right before "Maude." It got massacred by "Wild Kingdom" on WSB and "To Tell The Truth" on WXIA. Channel 5 then moved it to Saturdays just before "All In The Family," where it proceeded to get clobbered by "Hee Haw" on WSB.
Some other miscalls on WAGA were Bobby Goldsboro's show, Andy Williams' short-lived 1976 show, "The $128,000 Question," and "Music Hall America."
Peter Marshall's show aired in Atlanta Sundays at 11:30 PM on WXIA, directly against Sammy Davis Jr.'s "Sammy And Company" on WSB. Sammy's show lasted longer (two seasons) but was really not much more successful in the ratings than Peter's show.
And here's one I don't know if anyone remembers (or even if one of their local stations carried it): "The Anniversary Game." In 1969, a cash-strapped ABC asked (told might be a better word) its o&os to develop a program or programs that could be placed into national syndication through what was then ABC Films, giving the network additional income. Ed Nelson (yes, of "Peyton Place") hosted a morning talk show on WABC that almost made it into syndication, but the only show that did was the aforementioned "Anniversary Game" out of KGO San Francisco. Alan Hamel was the host of this part q&a/part stunt show. and Suzanne Somers was the model (that's where they met and, of course, later married--as her manager, he demanded a higher salary for her on "Three's Company" and got her kicked off the show). Three stations in my part of the country carried it: WFMY Greensboro, WSPA Spartanburg, SC, and WXIA.
Another game show from the same era that had a fairly wide syndication and was distributed on a barter arrangement with Colgate-Palmolive, IIRC, was "The Movie Game." In its first season, Sonny Fox was host and it had two teams each consisting of a contestant and two celebrities answering movie-trivia questions. The format changed in its second year to two three-celebrity teams, and Larry Blyden became the new host (he went from there to "What's My Line?" when "Movie Game" ended in 1972). A regular feature was the show's end game, in which columnist Army Archerd asked rapid-fire questions over a 90-second time limit. I seem to recall John Wayne being a celebrity guest one week. In some ways the show resembled "Sports Challenge," which had two teams of sports stars (for example, veterans of the Yankees vs. veterans of the Dodgers) and the rapid-fire questions replaced by the "Bonus Biography Round," with announcer Johnny Gilbert (who also announced "Movie Game") giving biographical clues to the identity of a famous sports figure and which often determined the outcome of the game.