It was 41 years ago on Monday - September 19, 1970 - That "The Mary Tyler Moore" show debuted on TV. It featured Mary wearing a brown & white outfit with winter-white vinyl boots seeking employment at the TV station.
firepoint525 said:At any rate, it's amazing what a wasteland that Saturday night TV has become since then.
Cross-referencing another thread, I mentioned seeing Jim Croce and Maury Muehleisen (sp?) in a Time-Life infomercial. I didn't mention it in that other thread, but I happened to see that infomercial at 7:00 p.m. (CDT) on a Saturday evening on the NBC affiliate station here in Nashville. Wonder what they bumped to show that? ;DFreddyE1977 said:I was way too young to have any serious plans for Saturday night at that time, but you raise an interesting topic.firepoint525 said:At any rate, it's amazing what a wasteland that Saturday night TV has become since then.
firepoint525 said:Cross-referencing another thread, I mentioned seeing Jim Croce and Maury Muehleisen (sp?) in a Time-Life infomercial. I didn't mention it in that other thread, but I happened to see that infomercial at 7:00 p.m. (CDT) on a Saturday evening on the NBC affiliate station here in Nashville. Wonder what they bumped to show that? ;D
The oft-quoted reason is that people go out on Saturday night (restaurants, movies, bars, music) , though I doubt they go out in any greater numbers than in the 70s - and the population has grown since then, so the potential prime-time audience is probably much larger on Saturday nights these days than in the 70s.FreddyE1977 said:firepoint525 said:At any rate, it's amazing what a wasteland that Saturday night TV has become since then.
I was way too young to have any serious plans for Saturday night at that time, but you raise an interesting topic.
That Saturday night CBS lineup was dynamite (MTM, All in the Family, MASH, Bob Newhart, Carol Burnett)
The ABC Friday Night lineup was pretty strong also. I know the economy was pretty bad in the 70's which
would have caused a lot of people to stay home on those nights. But it's not good now. What changed to
the point that Fox would opt not to renew a show with minimal production costs (America's Most Wanted) in favor of
reruns of programming from earlier in the week? If you add up all the viewers from all the cable networks and home video
does that account for where viewers have gone on those nights, or are people simply choosing to do something else?