YES I REMEMBER WHEN DONAHUE WAS ON AT 4:00PM ON WVUE
I think WSMV carried Donahue and pre-empted whatever NBC had from 9-10 AM (Central).As far as Nashville goes, I'm thinking Donahue aired on WTVF-5 as a lead in to The Price Is Right. If not there, then WSMV-4 as a lead out of the then two hour Today Show.
Before she got put in the 3 PM slot on WSMV, didn't Oprah get put on at 9 AM at some point after Ralph Emery retired?I think WSMV carried Donahue and pre-empted whatever NBC had from 9-10 AM (Central).
That's in New Orleans, right?FOR A WHILE DONAHUE WAS AIRING WEEKNIGHTS AT 10:00PM ON WUPL-54
That's in New Orleans, right?
Before she got put in the 3 PM slot on WSMV, didn't Oprah get put on at 9 AM at some point after Ralph Emery retired?
WESH aired Donahue to start.Orlando at 9am weekdays on what is now WKMG. His final season aired on WRBW first at 7pm weeknights and, later 10a weekday mornings.
I’m not sure who else aired Donahue in O-Town but those are the only 2 that come 2 mind
The decline of “Donahue” can be traced directly to the success of King World’s “Oprah Winfrey.” When Winfrey premiered, she went straight to the top. She was new and different and, after years of being the only talker in town, “Donahue” had competition.
“Oprah changed the street we lived on,” says a former “Donahue” producer. “Phil was able to do a lot of first-person and relationship shows, but he was a little further back. When ‘Oprah’ came on she was more of a girlfriend who dishes.”
After “Oprah,” a slew of new talkshows emerged. The current crop includes Columbia TriStar TV Distribution’s “Ricki Lake” and Warner Bros. Domestic TV Distribution’s “Jenny Jones.”