Hey Fred,
I too made the same points you did more or less in this post in another thread a while when the orgininal poster asked a very similair question
http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php/topic,56231.msg392175.html#msg392175
By the way Fred, I see your still more nit-picky than ever since your recent return...
Err, yes they were. Read that again, you definition doesn't make sense. What would you call it then if a local replaced a network show? A PRE-EMPTION.
Officially, a "pre-emption" is the act or right of claiming or purchasing before or in preference to others.
I too made the same points you did more or less in this post in another thread a while when the orgininal poster asked a very similair question
http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php/topic,56231.msg392175.html#msg392175
genius said:It wasn't an uncommon thing for a station to run network daytime programs out-of pattern in the 70s, 80s, and early 90s. It mainly depended what was aired-usually a high-rated syndicated program or popular local program with good revenue would win out over a low-rated soap. This type of approach caused the deaths of many soaps, most notably Edge of Night, Search For Tomorrow, and Ryan's Hope, though the last one was mostly due to an ABC screw-up of programming. Of course O&Os weren't not immune to this*SNIP*
By the way Fred, I see your still more nit-picky than ever since your recent return...
First of all, network shows were not pre-empted. A station did not carry them. Pre-emption is when a show is replaced by a news event, ballgame or special.
Err, yes they were. Read that again, you definition doesn't make sense. What would you call it then if a local replaced a network show? A PRE-EMPTION.
Officially, a "pre-emption" is the act or right of claiming or purchasing before or in preference to others.