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August 1: This Day in TV History

Just a few random TV related events that happened on August 1 (big day!). Discuss or comment as you please……

1933: Actor/comedian Dom DeLuise is born in Brooklyn, New York.

1949: The FCC sends a letter to CATV pioneer L.E. Parsons in Astoria, Oregon, requesting that he "furnish the Commission full information with respect to the nature of the system you may have developed and may be operating." This is the first known involvement of the FCC in CATV.

1952: Television broadcasting begins in the Dominican Republic as La Voz Dominicana (based on the radio station of the same name) signs on for the first time.

1953: KBES-TV (later KTVM, then KOBI) signs on for the first time in Medford, Oregon.

1955: WILL-TV begins broadcasting on channel 12 from the University of Illinois in Urbana.

1956: KRCR-TV (channel 7) begins broadcasting in Redding, California. Until 2006, they were one of very few ABC affiliates that operated on channel 7, but didn't use any version of the famous “Circle 7” logo.

1959: WAFG-TV begins operations on channel 31 in Huntsville, Alabama. In 1963, the station would be sold to Smith Broadcasting, adopting the present WAAY-TV calls.

1963: WQAD-TV begins serving the IA/IL Quad Cities on channel 8.

1965: Cigarette ads are banned from television in the U.K. Pipe tobacco and cigar ads, however, would continue until 1992.

1967: Non-commercial WBRA-TV (channel 15) signs on for the first time in Roanoke, Virginia. The station would become the flagship of Blue Ridge Public Television.

1968: WXIX-TV (channel 19) officially begins operating in Newport, Kentucky. The station had previously run some sporadic test transmissions, including "mini-shows" featuring The Larry Smith Puppets promoting the sale of UHF converters.

1971: CBS begins presenting the first U.S. airing of the acclaimed 6-hour BBC miniseries The Six Wives of Henry VIII, broadcast over six consecutive Sundays.

1975: Death Valley Days ends its long original run (558 episodes over 23 years) in syndication.

1977: Francis Gary Powers, the former U-2 Pilot shot down over the USSR in one of the most potentially volatile Cold War incidents, dies while piloting a news helicopter for KNBC-TV in Los Angeles. Powers had been covering brush fires in Santa Barbara County in the station’s “Telecopter” (one of the first equipped with 360-degree cameras) when he ran out of fuel and crashed just a few miles from Burbank Airport. KNBC cameraman George Spears was also killed in the crash.

1978: Harry Reasoner returns to CBS after taking advantage of an escape clause in his contract with ABC.

1979: Good Times ends its network run on CBS.

1980: WXAO-TV (Channel 47) signs on in Jacksonville, Florida. Originally a primarily Christian outlet with a few (wholesome) secular shows, the station would gradually reduce the percentage of religious programs in favor of a more general entertainment schedule, and change calls to WNFT (North Florida Television) in 1983. In 1995, they would become a charter UPN affiliate, and again change calls, this time to WTEV. In 2002, WTEV would gain the CBS affiliation that had surprisingly been allowed to lapse by long-time affiliate WJXT.

1981: MTV (Music Television) launches its culture-changing cable channel. Only seen by a few thousand subscribers to a northern New Jersey cable system, the inaugural transmission begins with the words "Ladies and gentlemen…rock and roll" spoken by original COO John Lack, immediately followed by the original MTV theme song playing over a montage of images of the Apollo 11 moon landing.

1995: Longtime CJOH-TV (Ottawa, Ontario) sports anchor Brian Smith is shot in the station's parking lot by Jeffrey Arenburg, a released mental patient with a past history of threatening media personalities. (Arenburg thought the station was broadcasting messages in his head.) Smith died in the hospital the following day.

(Just a little featurette I hope to do as time permits…..don’t expect it every single day. 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:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on August 1 (big day!). Discuss or comment as you please……

1980: WXAO-TV (Channel 47) signs on in Jacksonville, Florida. Originally a primarily Christian outlet with a few (wholesome) secular shows, the station would gradually reduce the percentage of religious programs in favor of a more general entertainment schedule, and change calls to WNFT (North Florida Television) in 1983. In 1995, they would become a charter UPN affiliate, and again change calls, this time to WTEV. In 2002, WTEV would gain the CBS affiliation that had surprisingly been allowed to lapse by long-time affiliate WJXT.

It wasn't allowed to lapse. CBS, at the time, demanded WJXT pay reverse compensation in order to continue carrying the network. Post-Newsweek declined and Clear Channel-owned WTEV picked up the affilation.

CBS pulled the stunt after seeing that NBC had been successful in getting then-Granite-owned KNTV-San Jose to pony up $362 Million over three years in reverse compensation, after losing the bidding war for KRON-4 to Young Broadcasting. Young declined to pay NBC's retaliatory reverse compensation demand and later could not come to terms on its attempt to sell the station to NBC for its original purchase price of $800 Million.

Granite, however, missed the first payment in early 2002 and a clause in the contract allowed NBC to take over the station as owner.
 
Stanislav said:
1965: Cigarette ads are banned from television in the U.K. Pipe tobacco and cigar ads, however, would continue until 1992.

Are there still places that continue to allow cigarettes to advertise on TV? As recently as a few years ago I heard that not only are such ads were still allowed on TV in Japan and China but some of those ads featured some big name stars who would never appear in an ad for anything in the states like Brad Pitt, Jodie Foster and even the Backstreet Boys.

A friend of mine swears that when he was in Germany about 5 years ago, cigarette ads were still allowed on TV there as well. I would imagine its the same way in France since cigarette smoking is still acceptable there.
 
Stanislav said:
1968: WXIX-TV (channel 19) officially begins operating in Newport, Kentucky. The station had previously run some sporadic test transmissions, including "mini-shows" featuring The Larry Smith Puppets promoting the sale of UHF converters.
This was the second known WXIX-TV. The first, based in Milwaukee, WI, later moved to Channel 18 and is now known as WVTV.
 
wbhist said:
KML-224 said:
I think the TV ban on ads here started in 1972?
1971, actually.

That was when the total nationwide ban of cigarette ads on American TV began though some stations ( Group W for one ) started banning those ads even earlier, 1968/1969.

Someone told me years ago that Salt Lake City's KSL as far back as the 40's refused to carry cigarette ads on the local level even though they did air such ads when the network carried them.
 
mleach said:
Stanislav said:
1965: Cigarette ads are banned from television in the U.K. Pipe tobacco and cigar ads, however, would continue until 1992.

Are there still places that continue to allow cigarettes to advertise on TV? As recently as a few years ago I heard that not only are such ads were still allowed on TV in Japan and China but some of those ads featured some big name stars who would never appear in an ad for anything in the states like Brad Pitt, Jodie Foster and even the Backstreet Boys.

...I believe Malaysia and Indonesia still allow tobacco ads on TV as well...
 
Re, the cigarette ads:

The last ad, for Virginia Slims, aired in the Tonight show January 1, 1971. Let us not forget that the cigarette companies and broadcasters were not totally crying over this ban---because of the equal time rule that was then "enforced", stations and networks had to give equal time to the Cancer Society, the Lung Association et al. for their anti-smoking PSAs to counter all the cigarette commercials . No more tobacco ads, no more requirement to run anti-smoking PSAs.
 
Are there still places that continue to allow cigarettes to advertise on TV? As recently as a few years ago I heard that not only are such ads were still allowed on TV in Japan and China but some of those ads featured some big name stars who would never appear in an ad for anything in the states like Brad Pitt, Jodie Foster and even the Backstreet Boys.
There used to be a website (maybe still exists) called Japander.com that showed a bunch of Japanese commercials featuring stars that don't do commercials here in Amurrica.
 
oldschooler1 said:
Re, the cigarette ads:

The last ad, for Virginia Slims, aired in the Tonight show January 1, 1971. Let us not forget that the cigarette companies and broadcasters were not totally crying over this ban---because of the equal time rule that was then "enforced", stations and networks had to give equal time to the Cancer Society, the Lung Association et al. for their anti-smoking PSAs to counter all the cigarette commercials . No more tobacco ads, no more requirement to run anti-smoking PSAs.

Kinda curious if Boston's WBZ and Philly's KYW aired that last cigarette commerical since Group W had already banned such commericals on their own.

Tobacco ads did continue in the States long after those cigarette ads were banned. Not sure when pipe and cigar ads were banned but broadcast ads for smokeless tobacco/chewing tobacco were banned in 1986. In the latter the reason for the ban I believe was a result of some teenage high school football player how he had develop and died from mouth cancer because he had picked up a 2-3 can a day Copenhagen habit thanks to his coach.
 
In the summer of 1969, nearly two years prior to the cigarette ban taking effect in the U.S., NBC staff announcer Vic Roby made headlines when he put in an ad in Variety indicating that he would no longer be available for cigarette ads. One of his explanations was that "evidence indicates that smoking could lead to cancer, heart attacks, strokes, emphysema and fires." Mr. Roby did make a name as a public-affairs host on the local New York NBC flagship WNBC-TV (he hosted Direct Line at the time) . . . he was also one of a small group of New York-based announcers (including his NBC booth colleague Howard Reig and WOR-TV's Phil Tonken) who did commercials for products and services on both radio and TV that were on occasion seen and heard: a) nationally, and b) outside the scope of their regular employment. This item had been in some newspapers (either AP or UPI origin, can't tell which) on July 31, 1969.
 
Tim from Springfield said:
2007: In Minneapolis, MN, the Interstate 35W bridge over the Mississippi River collapses during rush hour, killing 13 and injuring 145. Eyewitness coverage of the bridge collapse from Twin Cities' TV stations is on YouTube at:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x-ckRu5jEY

As I recall, Fox News had quite an exclusive on that. For some reason, CNN and MSNBC's Twin Cities affiliates were unable to get a chopper in the air for quite some time, leaving only Fox with live aerial coverage of the disaster. One of the few times I have watched (and, in this case, taped) Fox News for any significant length of time. Shepard Smith was anchoring -- he's about the only on-air talent on that channel that I can stomach to any degree. He's got a good on-air manner, a delightful dry wit, and is nowhere near as reactionary as some of their other personalities. In fact, I think he's even criticized his own network's coverage a few times, which is generally a Big Bozo No-No. (I guess they cut him some slack because viewers like him, and he brings in the ratings...)
 
1970: After 14 years (and Chet Huntley's retirement), The Huntley-Brinkley Report becomes The NBC Nightly News, initially anchored by David Brinkley (Chet's former partner), John Chancellor and Frank McGee.
 
AH3RD said:
1970: After 14 years (and Chet Huntley's retirement), The Huntley-Brinkley Report becomes The NBC Nightly News, initially anchored by David Brinkley (Chet's former partner), John Chancellor and Frank McGee.
...any of these three men in their current state can do a better evening newscast than Williams, Couric and Sawyer...
 
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