Yep. They will lose viewers to ABC and NBC (and other programming) that will have no reason to return to CBS in a year.They might lose too much ground by then.
Yep. They will lose viewers to ABC and NBC (and other programming) that will have no reason to return to CBS in a year.They might lose too much ground by then.
Kimmel's current contract is only for a yearYep. They will lose viewers to ABC and NBC (and other programming) that will have no reason to return to CBS in a year.
Sort of like Kimmel no longer being the long term solution for ABC with his one year deal.CBS says Byron Allen isn't the long term solution for late night. It's a one year deal. They're still interested in other ideas:
![]()
CBS Says It Will Develop New Late Night Concepts After Axing Stephen Colbert, but ‘Immediate Profitability’ Is the Focus With New Byron Allen Deal
Paramount TV Media chairman George Cheeks says late night is still a work in progress at the network. The Eye did a one-year deal with Byron Allen to air his “Comics Unleashed” at 11:35 p.m. as a time...www.yahoo.com
I never knew it was controversial. I watched it and liked it.Look up the controversy around Dianne Carroll's show Julia.
In the 30's and 40's, the networks all took fully sponsored shows produced by advertisers and their ad agencies. But they watched them carefully and cancelled those that did not performAs the article says, at one time, CBS turned over late night to Universal TV, producers of a scripted dramas. Universal owned those shows. I don't know if they paid CBS for the time or not, but CBS turned over the programming to an outside supplier. Just as they did with Worldwide Pants.
CBS has a long history of doing this. Back in the network radio days, the advertisers owned the prime time entertainment programming, not the network. In the 70s, CBS turned over the programming of its O&O radio stations to Mike Joseph's Hot Hits format. In the 2000s, CBS Radio did a national deal with SparkNet for the Jack format. So this isn't as big a deal as this article implies.
Looking it up might be easier if you spelled her first name Diahann.Look up the controversy around Dianne Carroll's show Julia.
This isn't really true. We'll know more after the network meeting with affiliates next month, but I'm not aware that it changes the relationship at all.
As the article says, at one time, CBS turned over late night to Universal TV, producers of a scripted dramas. Universal owned those shows. I don't know if they paid CBS for the time or not, but CBS turned over the programming to an outside supplier. Just as they did with Worldwide Pants.
CBS has a long history of doing this. Back in the network radio days, the advertisers owned the prime time entertainment programming, not the network. In the 70s, CBS turned over the programming of its O&O radio stations to Mike Joseph's Hot Hits format. In the 2000s, CBS Radio did a national deal with SparkNet for the Jack format. So this isn't as big a deal as this article implies.
Correct. I remember Boston's WEEI-FM going Hot Hits with a new call of WHTT in 1983. It had been a soft rock station since 1977.I don't normally do this on this site but @TheBigA wrote in part:
"In the 70s, CBS turned over the programming of its O&O radio stations to Mike Joseph's Hot Hits format."
This is patently false. First, Mike Josephs' "Hot Hits" format was a product of the early 1980s, not of the 1970s. Second, with the exception of the 96.3 frequency in Chicago (assuming that was owned by CBS at the time) and the 93.1 ffrequency in Los Angeles (which, as far as I know, wasn't using the Mike Josephs package though it was top-40 for two years between 1983 and 1985), none of the CBS O&O's ever were top 40 during the 1970s.
Correct. I remember Boston's WEEI-FM going Hot Hits with a new call of WHTT in 1983. It had been a soft rock station since 1977.
I was wondering if this was the same Allen from "Real People." Back ten years or so ago, his "Real People" co-host (and show creator) John Barbour launched into a scathing rant about Allen on "Coast to Coast AM." His libelous accusations against Allen were such that host Noory dropped Barbour as a guest mid-show/mid sentence and banned him from future C2C shows. Word was that show was removed from the C2C's library of previous shows for members.Good for Byron Allen. I remember him from Real People and appearing on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Reading his Wikipedia page, he's been in show business and comedy since he was teenager.
It's an unusual spelling and wouldn't immediately come to mind unless one remembered it from the 1970s and had a sharp eye for detail. It sounds the same.Looking it up might be easier if you spelled her first name Diahann.
Byron Allen was 18 years old when Real People debuted on NBC, and 23 when the show ended.I was wondering if this was the same Allen from "Real People."
What did he say about Byron?I was wondering if this was the same Allen from "Real People." Back ten years or so ago, his "Real People" co-host (and show creator) John Barbour launched into a scathing rant about Allen on "Coast to Coast AM." His libelous accusations against Allen were such that host Noory dropped Barbour as a guest mid-show/mid sentence and banned him from future C2C shows. Word was that show was removed from the C2C's library of previous shows for members.
Would be interesting to hear Allen's side of that story.
This is patently false. First, Mike Josephs' "Hot Hits" format was a product of the early 1980s, not of the 1970s.
Hot Hits was a radio format created by consultant Mike Joseph in the 1970s. That concept, which helped spur the birth of what is now known as CHR, also revitalized the Top 40 format and would play a role in bringing the format to the FM band throughout the 1980s.
Don't recall specific verbiage, but he very vocally and angrily challenged Allen's intelligence and integrity. The particular episode was in the fall of 2016, either the same night as or shortly after one of the Trump v. Clinton debates, so probably Sept/Oct 2016. One of the more entertaining nights listening to C2C.What did he say about Byron?