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April 24: This Day in TV History

Just a few random TV related events that happened on April 24. Discuss or comment as you please……

1933: Actor/comedian/TV host John Barbour (Real People) is born in Toronto, Ontario.

1940: Actor Michael Parks (Then Came Bronson) is born (as Harry Samuel Parks) in Corona, California.

1951: Journalist Dwight Lauderdale is born in Columbus, Ohio. He would become the first African-American news anchor in South Florida (WPLG-TV) and one of the state's most watched and longest running anchors, retiring in May 2008.

1954: WSEE-TV (channel 35) begins broadcasting in Erie, Pennsylvania.

1955: Another of the very few historic channel 70-83 full-power stations moves lower in the band as WLOK-TV (channel 73) switches to channel 35, changing calls to WIMA-TV. (The station is now known as WLIO.)

1955: KFDM-TV (channel 6) launches in Beaumont, Texas.

1960: CBWFT (channel 6, later channel 3) signs on, bringing full-time French-language programming to Winnipeg, Manitoba. (CBWT, which had previously broadcast in both languages, becomes English-only.) Initially, lacking a live interconnection with the CBC, the station depends on videotapes and films sent from Montreal and delayed by one week.

1967: Public station KSPS-TV (channel 7) signs on in Spokane, Washington. The station’s beginnings are quite humble; its first studios are in the basement of an elementary school.

1974: Comedian Bud Abbott (The Abbott and Costello Show) dies in Woodland Hills, California of prostate cancer, aged 78.

1976: In one of the most remembered bits from the early years of Saturday Night Live, producer Lorne Michaels makes a tongue-in-cheek on-air offer to pay The Beatles $3,000 to reunite on the show. (He would later raise the offer on another show – to a whopping $3,200.) Unbeknownst to Michaels, Paul McCartney is visiting his old bandmate John Lennon, and they are watching the live show together in Lennon’s New York apartment. McCartney would later say that the two had briefly and jokingly considered actually showing up at the studio (just 20-odd blocks away) while the show was still on the air, but did not want to deal with the mob scene that would almost certainly ensue.

1977: The last original episode of McMillan and Wife airs on NBC.

1978: Card Sharks premieres on NBC.

1980: WTAE-TV (Pittsburgh) personality Nick Perry, who hosts Bowling for Dollars and also calls the lottery drawings for the Pennsylvania Lottery, fixes the Lottery's Daily Number so that the drawing would come up as "666." Thus begins the Pennsylvania Lottery Scandal, colloquially known as the “Triple Six Fix.” Perry would eventually serve jail time, and production of the Lottery broadcasts would move to WHP-TV in Harrisburg a year later. (In addition, broadcasts of the drawings would also be taken from WTAE, moving to KDKA.) The debacle would result in lotteries being audited and monitored with witnesses from the government and/or accounting firms hired by them. The real-life incident also would be the inspiration for the 2000 movie “Lucky Numbers.”

1997: Comedian Pat Paulsen (The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour, The Pat Paulsen Half a Comedy Hour) dies of complications from colon and brain cancer and pneumonia in Tijuana, Mexico, aged 69. (His condition having been diagnosed as terminal, Paulsen felt he had nothing to lose and was undergoing experimental cancer treatments south of the border at the time of his death.)

1998: The second of the two Dallas reunion TV-movies, Dallas: War of the Ewings, airs on CBS, a little less than a year and a half after the first TV-movie, Dallas: J.R. Returns, was broadcast, and seven years after the original series finished.

2003: The final original episode of Sabrina the Teenage Witch airs on The WB.

2004: At the Early Television Conference in Columbus, Ohio, the CBS Color Television System is demonstrated for the first time in 50 years. A restored original CBS color television receiver and color monitor are used to display signals from a homebuilt NTSC-to-CBS converter.

2007: The day after his 94th birthday, TV personality Lawson J. Deming dies in Cleveland, Ohio of congestive heart failure. For 15 years (1967-82) he entertained kids and adults alike in the Detroit-Windsor area on WJBK-TV (and, at times, in syndicated markets such as Cleveland and Washington, D.C.) as the horror-movie host “Sir Graves Ghastly.” Gone, but certainly not forgotten by fans, the character and the actor who portrayed him are the subject of a very extensive and detailed fan site.

(Just a little featurette I hope to do as time permits. It’s an entirely random selection based on a quick Net search, and is not meant to be comprehensive. So, don’t post nasty messages about “you forgot THIS” or “how could you not mention THAT?” Do so, and I’ll just take my keyboard and go home…..) ;)
 
Stanislav said:
2007: The day after his 94th birthday, TV personality Lawson J. Deming dies in Cleveland, Ohio of congestive heart failure. For 15 years (1967-82) he entertained kids and adults alike in the Detroit-Windsor area on WJBK-TV (and, at times, in syndicated markets such as Cleveland and Washington, D.C.) as the horror-movie host “Sir Graves Ghastly.” Gone, but certainly not forgotten by fans, the character and the actor who portrayed him are the subject of a very extensive and detailed fan site.

Besides his long run as "Sir Graves Ghastly," Mr. Deming also did occasional announcing work at Cleveland's WJW/WJKW-TV - a sister station to WJBK - during the 1970's. Some clips of him at the mic are on YouTube; his normal announcing voice reminded this writer of that of one of CBS's New York staff announcers, Pat Connell.
 
1959: Final telecast of the original "Your Hit Parade."
The top three songs that night are "Come Softly To
Me," "Venus," and "Pink Shoelaces," typical of what
had caused the show's undoing starting around 1955:
rock 'n' roll. A Saturday-night institution since its
beginnings in the 1930s, "Hit Parade" aired Friday nights
on CBS during its last season. Chuck Barris made an
unsuccessful attempt to revive it in 1974, with Chuck
Woolery, Sheralee Lucas (of "The 700 Club"), and Kelly
Garrett recreating shows from the '40s, with the "Hit
Parade Extras" being current tunes performed by the
original artists.

For those unfamiliar with "Your Hit Parade," it was a
countdown of the week's top seven songs (as determined
by a method never really made clear), plus some old-time
"extras." The show began on radio in 1935, moving to
television in 1950; during the '40s Frank Sinatra was an
on-again, off-again regular, but the singers usually associated
with the show were all in the '50s: Dorothy Collins, Russell
Arms, Gisele MacKenzie, and Snooky Lanson (Collins and Johnny
Desmond were the only regulars in the 1958-59 season).
I guess it took Casey Kasem and "American Top 40" to bring
the countdown format successfully into the rock era.
 
1976: In one of the most remembered bits from the early years of Saturday Night Live, producer Lorne Michaels makes a tongue-in-cheek on-air offer to pay The Beatles $3,000 to reunite on the show. (He would later raise the offer on another show – to a whopping $3,200.) Unbeknownst to Michaels, Paul McCartney is visiting his old bandmate John Lennon, and they are watching the live show together in Lennon’s New York apartment. McCartney would later say that the two had briefly and jokingly considered actually showing up at the studio (just 20-odd blocks away) while the show was still on the air, but did not want to deal with the mob scene that would almost certainly ensue.

Best line: "And you don't even have to give Ringo full share."

The only downside was that the bit gave Lorne the false impression that anytime he appeared on the show, it would be funny.
 
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't George Harrison eventually show up and perform on the show? I seem to remember SNL airing a clip around the time George passed away in 2001.
 
KML-224 said:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't George Harrison eventually show up and perform on the show? I seem to remember SNL airing a clip around the time George passed away in 2001.
He appeared with Paul (Simon, that is, not McCartney), and performed "Here Comes the Sun" and one of Simon's songs.

Paul McCartney was the musical guest (and appeared in several sketches, including the Weekend Update segment) sometime around 1993.

Ringo hosted an episode of SNL around 1984-1985.
 
firepoint525 said:
KML-224 said:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't George Harrison eventually show up and perform on the show? I seem to remember SNL airing a clip around the time George passed away in 2001.
He appeared with Paul (Simon, that is, not McCartney), and performed "Here Comes the Sun" and one of Simon's songs.

Paul McCartney was the musical guest (and appeared in several sketches, including the Weekend Update segment) sometime around 1993.

Ringo hosted an episode of SNL around 1984-1985.

Well if John was ever on then they did have the reunion, just not at the same time.
 
bpatrick said:
For those unfamiliar with "Your Hit Parade," it was a
countdown of the week's top seven songs (as determined
by a method never really made clear), plus some old-time
"extras."

As I remember it, at the beginning of the TV show in the 1950's, it was explained that the songs were chosen and ranked by compiling: the sale of records & sheet music, the playing of records on "automatic coin machines" (jukeboxes), and songs most often played over the air (on radio).
 
bpatrick said:
1959: Final telecast of the original "Your Hit Parade."
The top three songs that night are "Come Softly To
Me," "Venus," and "Pink Shoelaces," typical of what
had caused the show's undoing starting around 1955:
rock 'n' roll. A Saturday-night institution since its
beginnings in the 1930s, "Hit Parade" aired Friday nights
on CBS during its last season. Chuck Barris made an
unsuccessful attempt to revive it in 1974, with Chuck
Woolery, Sheralee Lucas (of "The 700 Club"), and Kelly
Garrett recreating shows from the '40s, with the "Hit
Parade Extras" being current tunes performed by the
original artists.

For those unfamiliar with "Your Hit Parade," it was a
countdown of the week's top seven songs (as determined
by a method never really made clear), plus some old-time
"extras." The show began on radio in 1935, moving to
television in 1950; during the '40s Frank Sinatra was an
on-again, off-again regular, but the singers usually associated
with the show were all in the '50s: Dorothy Collins, Russell
Arms, Gisele MacKenzie, and Snooky Lanson (Collins and Johnny
Desmond were the only regulars in the 1958-59 season).
I guess it took Casey Kasem and "American Top 40" to bring
the countdown format successfully into the rock era
.

I'm going to quibble with that...just a little.

Weekly count-down shows were a staple of Top 40 radio stations as far back as the early 60s - possibly earlier, though I guess you can give Casey Kasem (and producer Ron Jacobs) credit for producing the first syndicated version in 1970. For example, in Los Angeles, KHJ started doing the weekly "Boss 30" countdown as soon as the station premiered in 1965. The countdowns were done on a weeknight (Wednesday I think) by whoever the evening DJ was - Sam Riddle and Humble Harve(y Miller) were the two I remember.

Casey was the fill-in and Sunday jock on lower-rated rival KRLA, which was going for a "hipper" audience, and had dropped the countdown show and stopped publishing their playlist. So Casey picked up the countdown for his Sunday afternoon show, using the Top 40 list from Cashbox magazine. It fit in well with his schmaltzy style and rock-biography story-telling.

After doing that for a couple of years on KRLA, he got together with Ron Jacobs to syndicate it as AT40 using the Billboard list.

But countdown shows were already a widely used gimmick on most Top 40 stations - at least in major markets - well before AT40.
 
Lkeller said:
bpatrick said:
1959: Final telecast of the original "Your Hit Parade."
The top three songs that night are "Come Softly To
Me," "Venus," and "Pink Shoelaces," typical of what
had caused the show's undoing starting around 1955:
rock 'n' roll. A Saturday-night institution since its
beginnings in the 1930s, "Hit Parade" aired Friday nights
on CBS during its last season. Chuck Barris made an
unsuccessful attempt to revive it in 1974, with Chuck
Woolery, Sheralee Lucas (of "The 700 Club"), and Kelly
Garrett recreating shows from the '40s, with the "Hit
Parade Extras" being current tunes performed by the
original artists.

For those unfamiliar with "Your Hit Parade," it was a
countdown of the week's top seven songs (as determined
by a method never really made clear), plus some old-time
"extras." The show began on radio in 1935, moving to
television in 1950; during the '40s Frank Sinatra was an
on-again, off-again regular, but the singers usually associated
with the show were all in the '50s: Dorothy Collins, Russell
Arms, Gisele MacKenzie, and Snooky Lanson (Collins and Johnny
Desmond were the only regulars in the 1958-59 season).
I guess it took Casey Kasem and "American Top 40" to bring
the countdown format successfully into the rock era
.

I'm going to quibble with that...just a little.

Weekly count-down shows were a staple of Top 40 radio stations as far back as the early 60s - possibly earlier, though I guess you can give Casey Kasem (and producer Ron Jacobs) credit for producing the first syndicated version in 1970. For example, in Los Angeles, KHJ started doing the weekly "Boss 30" countdown as soon as the station premiered in 1965. The countdowns were done on a weeknight (Wednesday I think) by whoever the evening DJ was - Sam Riddle and Humble Harve(y Miller) were the two I remember.

Casey was the fill-in and Sunday jock on lower-rated rival KRLA, which was going for a "hipper" audience, and had dropped the countdown show and stopped publishing their playlist. So Casey picked up the countdown for his Sunday afternoon show, using the Top 40 list from Cashbox magazine. It fit in well with his schmaltzy style and rock-biography story-telling.

After doing that for a couple of years on KRLA, he got together with Ron Jacobs to syndicate it as AT40 using the Billboard list.

But countdown shows were already a widely used gimmick on most Top 40 stations - at least in major markets - well before AT40.

WIND in Chicago did a weekly countdown show in the late 50s. WLS had a daily countdown of their Top 40 starting in 1960 in afternoon drive.
 
"Lucky Numbers" bears little resemblance to the original Nick Perry lotto scandal.
The original story is much more interesting. I know people who worked at WTAE
at the time, and they were in complete denial because a) the whistle had been blown by Tony Grosso, well-known local mobster and (illegal) numbers king, and b) he had done it on KDKA, which they believed was just scheming to get the lottery contract away from WTAE for competitive reasons. (at the same time, the lounge where they all ate lunch was jokingly referred to as "Nick's Diner", because Perry owned an interest in the vending company that had placed the machines in there.....you can draw your own conclusions from that)
 
The poster who explained the selection of the week's
top hits on "Your Hit Parade" is correct. However, the
opening was never precise as to how it was done (Lucky
Strike's ad agency never revealed the exact procedure),
which is why I phrased my comments on that the way I did.

Also, having never lived in Chicago or LA, I'm not familiar with
the local countdown shows; we may have had one in Raleigh
on WKIX, but I don't recall now. I was thinking of Casey as
a national personality with a syndicated radio show, but come
to think of it, Dick Clark ran down the weekly top ten on "American
Bandstand" from the beginning in 1957.
 
firepoint525 said:
KML-224 said:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't George Harrison eventually show up and perform on the show? I seem to remember SNL airing a clip around the time George passed away in 2001.
He appeared with Paul (Simon, that is, not McCartney), and performed "Here Comes the Sun" and one of Simon's songs.

..."Homeward Bound"...and do I misremember this, or did John Lennon and Art Garfunkel both pop up on the Grammy Awards the same year and comment about how both had ex-partners named Paul?...
 
Ultimajock said:
firepoint525 said:
KML-224 said:
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't George Harrison eventually show up and perform on the show? I seem to remember SNL airing a clip around the time George passed away in 2001.
He appeared with Paul (Simon, that is, not McCartney), and performed "Here Comes the Sun" and one of Simon's songs.

..."Homeward Bound"...and do I misremember this, or did John Lennon and Art Garfunkel both pop up on the Grammy Awards the same year and comment about how both had ex-partners named Paul?...

Lennon and Garfunkel, to my knowledge, appeared during the 1975 Grammys. Harrison and Simon's SNL duet was late 1976.
 
Stanislav said:
1980: WTAE-TV (Pittsburgh) personality Nick Perry, who hosts Bowling for Dollars and also calls the lottery drawings for the Pennsylvania Lottery, fixes the Lottery's Daily Number so that the drawing would come up as "666." Thus begins the Pennsylvania Lottery Scandal, colloquially known as the “Triple Six Fix.” Perry would eventually serve jail time, and production of the Lottery broadcasts would move to WHP-TV in Harrisburg a year later. (In addition, broadcasts of the drawings would also be taken from WTAE, moving to KDKA.) The debacle would result in lotteries being audited and monitored with witnesses from the government and/or accounting firms hired by them. The real-life incident also would be the inspiration for the 2000 movie “Lucky Numbers.”

It seems to me a lottery draw in Wisconsin in 1996 resulted in the numbers "666" coming up, completely by fluke.
 
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