Yugoslavia really didn't care. They were institutionally socialist, but very open to the West. Their policies were completely independent from the Soviet bloc.
Indeed. Even in the early 1970s, ABC's Peyton Place was a huge hit in Slovenia:

It was the first soap opera shown in Slovenia, and it became such an obsession that Stop, the TV listings magazine published detailed weekly episode summaries (in the style of Soap Opera Digest):

My father, who still hates soap operas with a passion, was the one who wrote the summaries. (He previewed the episodes during special censorship sessions, when the authorities would check the series for any inappropriate content.)
Eventually, Peyton Place was taken off the air because the authorities decided it glamorized an inappropriate lifestyle, but many other American series remained on TV.
Media scholar Burton Paulu explains the decision in his 1974 book Radio and Television Broadcasting in Eastern Europe:








