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History of NBC weekend newscasts in the 1960s

bpatrick's Carolina/Tennessee thread just now tantalized me about something. It has become accepted wisdom to us "geeks" through Wikipedia and the like that NBC did not begin full-fledged early evening newscasts on Saturday until early 1969, and on Sunday until 1970, two days after Chet Huntley retired. But one station in that edition bpatrick posted carried, in 1963, a 15-minute newscast at 6:45 ET anchored by Sander Vanocur. Information has surfaced also that Ray Scherer, longtime NBC correspondent, and Robert MacNeil, later of PBS fame, co-anchored on Saturday evenings sometime around 1965 or so, a la "Huntley-Brinkley." Meanwhile, NBC fixture Frank McGee had his documentary-style "Frank McGee Report" air on Saturdays and/or Sundays from about the mid-1960s until 1970, when "Nightly News" expanded to seven nights a week.

Allegedly, the first several months of the 1969 Saturday evening broadcast had Huntley or David Brinkley soloing at the desk on alternate weeks, but NBC, not getting good enough ratings, assigned others to that duty.

I wish I could pinpoint dates accurately, but the Vanderbilt TV News Archive does not have any listing for NBC's Saturday newscasts in the late 1960s. This is because local affiliate WSM-TV in Nashville (from which these archives were--and are--taped) preempted the 5:30 CT slot for years with syndicated country-music shows on Saturdays until sometime in the late 1970s. And those archives only go back to August 1968, so there are no records of any NBC weekend newscasts prior to that time except from newspaper and TV Guide listings from that period. I only have a few TVGs from the 1960s, and I recall seeing only the "Frank McGee Report" listed. For one thing, I do not know when McGee started his show.

Another thing to take into consideration is that few stations bothered to produce even LOCAL newscasts on weekends until the 1970s or so, so it stands to reason that relatively few would be interested in clearing a network newscast when they could get far more money running, say, an old movie, before network prime time. When one thinks about it, it may well be amazing that NBC's launches on Saturdays in '69 and Sundays in '70 took off and have remained to this day.

Do any of you have listings from the 1960s that could answer some of these questions? I think the Wikipedia article could well use some updating if there is any firm info about starting dates and anchors and so on.
 
some good weekend anchors for NBC included Tom Snyder, Floyd Kalber, and Chuck Scarbourgh, Jessica Savitch.
for CBS Ed Bradley, Bob Schieffer, Mike Wallace, Connie Chung, Harry Reasoner.
as for abc i remember Bob Young and Peter Jennings who was just getting his start.
 
Besides the national NBC news broadcasts, two of the names you mentioned - Robert MacNeil and Frank McGee - also anchored daily local newscasts on the network's New York flagship, WNBC-TV. MacNeil, in fact, replaced Bill Ryan as Gabe Pressman's co-anchor on the early evening edition when it was expanded from 30 minutes to an hour on May 10, 1965. As for McGee, at one time around 1965 he was anchoring the Eleventh Hour News, and from late 1969 to mid-1970 he was anchor of the Sixth Hour News. But as far as his national news duties went, the Frank McGee Report dated as far back to at least 1963 or '64, and aired more around 3 or 4 P.M.
 
Odd coincidence about CBS Sunday Late (11PM) News with Harry Reasoner in the Cleveland Market about 1964-65. Neither WJW-8 Cleveland or WKBN-27 Youngstown cleared this newscast. Therefore, the Newscast was aired on WYTV-33 Youngstown and WAKR-TV 49 Akron, Both ABC affiliates who otherwise, never carried another network's shows...
 
radioman148 said:
Floyd Kalber also anchored a 5 minute network newscast weekday on NBC.

Until the mid-1970's, he was based out of Chicago, where he was anchor for years of WMAQ-TV's evening newscasts. One edition from 1967 (during that year's major Chicago blizzard) of WMAQ's late-evening NBC News Night Report has been online for years.
 
wbhist said:
Besides the national NBC news broadcasts, two of the names you mentioned - Robert MacNeil and Frank McGee - also anchored daily local newscasts on the network's New York flagship, WNBC-TV. MacNeil, in fact, replaced Bill Ryan as Gabe Pressman's co-anchor on the early evening edition when it was expanded from 30 minutes to an hour on May 10, 1965. As for McGee, at one time around 1965 he was anchoring the Eleventh Hour News, and from late 1969 to mid-1970 he was anchor of the Sixth Hour News. But as far as his national news duties went, the Frank McGee Report dated as far back to at least 1963 or '64, and aired more around 3 or 4 P.M.

I congratulate you as the only poster on this thread so far who has stayed on this subject. So, it appears we can establish that "Nightly News" did not really succeed "Frank McGee Report" so much as supplant it; that is, to make it superfluous or unnecessary. Incidentally, an hourlong episode of the "Report" from early 1968 covering the Tet Offensive in Vietnam is one of the "NBC News Time Capsule" (a/k/a "Time and Again") broadcasts available from iTunes. That episode pretty much conveys the tenor of that program, with McGee's classic straightforward, no-nonsense style standing out clearly.

Thinking more about it, I suspect that NBC attempted weekend newscasts off and on from the JFK assassination onward before getting serious in 1969, the year after the murders of MLK and RFK and the turmoil at the Democratic National Convention. By this point, the network discerned that some people wanted news every day of the week, and built up to the 1970 consummation on "Nightly News." We must also remember that McGee, after his stint on WNBC's evening desk, went into a three-man platoon of anchors on "Nightly News" for a year with John Chancellor and David Brinkley; all three of them were on rotation duty seven days a week, with no separate weekend anchors. In late summer 1971, NBC called a halt to the arrangement and reduced Brinkley to twice- or thrice-weekly three-minute commentaries and sent McGee to the "Today Show." Chancellor took over as head anchor at that time Mondays through Fridays, with Garrick Utley working the weekends.

Maybe we can see some more skeds from the 60s posted and figure out NBC's erratic news programming habits on the weekends.
 
I wish to add that after McGee was made part of the three-man NBC Nightly News rotation, he was replaced as anchor of WNBC's Sixth Hour News by John Palmer (who, I.I.N.M., later anchored the news updates on the Today show). Then in early 1971, Palmer in turn was replaced on the local WNBC early-evening newscast by . . . Sander Vanocur, who as you may have noted had anchored some weekend NBC News broadcasts circa 1963. (This was a measure of the extent to which WNBC's news department was directly under the thumb of NBC News in those days.)
 
As best I can gather from Castleman and Podrazik's
"The TV Schedule Book":

"The NBC Saturday Night Report" (Sander Vanocur):
1961-65 (Vanocur was a favorite of JFK, although he
continued to do the broadcast after JFK was killed.)

"The Scherer/MacNeil Report": 1965-67

"The Frank McGee Saturday Report": 1967-69

"The Huntley-Brinkley Report": 1969 until Huntley's
retirement in 1970

"NBC Nightly News": 1970-
 
bpatrick said:
As best I can gather from Castleman and Podrazik's
"The TV Schedule Book":

"The NBC Saturday Night Report" (Sander Vanocur):
1961-65 (Vanocur was a favorite of JFK, although he
continued to do the broadcast after JFK was killed.)

"The Scherer/MacNeil Report": 1965-67

"The Frank McGee Saturday Report": 1967-69

"The Huntley-Brinkley Report": 1969 until Huntley's
retirement in 1970

"NBC Nightly News": 1970-

bpatrick, you come through again! I think with that, we can let Sunday ride, because, as I remember, for a time in the early 1960s, "Meet the Press" was fed to affiliates late Sunday afternoons, and thus was the de facto Sunday newscast back then, until McGee started up on Sundays with "The Report." I owe you one.
 
Thanks, Mike. "Meet The Press'" aired at 6 PM
Sundays from about 1953 to (I know) 1965, and
was nearly always followed at 6:30 by an entertainment
show. From 1963 to 1965, "GE College Bowl" was "Meet
The Press"s lead-in, so there wasn't much room for a
newscast at that time.

CBS, by the way, wasn't much better. They had an
early-Saturday-afternoon newscast anchored (usually)
by Robert Trout (sometimes by Cronkite or Reasoner)
from 1959 to 1966, when Roger Mudd's Saturday-evening
newscast (with sports reporter Heywood Hale Broun) started
(the 11 PM Sunday news dates back to 1951). CBS, too,
didn't have much room for an early-Sunday-evening newscast
in the '60s, with such shows as "College Bowl" (1959-63),
"Ted Mack's Amateur Hour," "The Twentieth Century," and
"Mister Ed" occupying the 5-7 PM slot.

ABC didn't even get into the weekend news business, aside
from its 11 PM Saturday and Sunday newscasts, until "The
Reasoner Report" in 1973, and that was more like a cutdown
"60 Minutes." Ted Koppel, I remember, did a straight newscast
at 6:30 around 1977 but I never could find it: WXIA Atlanta had
its local news at that time, and WFAA Dallas had "The Gong Show"
at 5:30 (CT).
 
Mike Stroud said:
Another thing to take into consideration is that few stations bothered to produce even LOCAL newscasts on weekends until the 1970s or so

That is very true in fact there were some local stations that didn't even bother doing weekend news well into the 80s. Of course many of those were in small markets and of course ( again ) it was usually about money. I have also heard in the past that there were some smaller markets who didn't do local news on Sundays because they believed Sunday was a "day of rest". Of course this rule didn't apply to them airing network news.
 
wbhist said:
Besides the national NBC news broadcasts, two of the names you mentioned - Robert MacNeil and Frank McGee - also anchored daily local newscasts on the network's New York flagship, WNBC-TV. MacNeil, in fact, replaced Bill Ryan as Gabe Pressman's co-anchor on the early evening edition when it was expanded from 30 minutes to an hour on May 10, 1965. As for McGee, at one time around 1965 he was anchoring the Eleventh Hour News, and from late 1969 to mid-1970 he was anchor of the Sixth Hour News. But as far as his national news duties went, the Frank McGee Report dated as far back to at least 1963 or '64, and aired more around 3 or 4 P.M.

and was sponsored as i remember by "Gulf" oil.
 
cspotrun said:
...as far as his national news duties went, the Frank McGee Report dated as far back to at least 1963 or '64, and aired more around 3 or 4 P.M.

and was sponsored as i remember by "Gulf" oil.
[/quote]

...which, I recall, was the longtime sponsor of NBC's coverage of the space race, into the mid-1970s.
 
"The Huntley-Brinkley Report": 1969 until Huntley's
retirement in 1970


"Goodnight, Chet"
"Goodnight, David"

They had drinks with us, smoked on t.v. and reported the news in a very serious, yet laid back manner...they were, after all, in our living rooms.
 
Silkie said:
"The Huntley-Brinkley Report": 1969 until Huntley's
retirement in 1970


"Goodnight, Chet"
"Goodnight, David"

They had drinks with us, smoked on t.v. and reported the news in a very serious, yet laid back manner...they were, after all, in our living rooms.

was there anyone "Cooler" under pressure than David Brinkley, i remember November 22nd 1963, he was the only one who wasn't "losing it" under a national emergency, although it might have been because he just got back from Happy Hour. 8)
 
azumanga said:
cspotrun said:
...as far as his national news duties went, the Frank McGee Report dated as far back to at least 1963 or '64, and aired more around 3 or 4 P.M.

and was sponsored as i remember by "Gulf" oil.

...which, I recall, was the longtime sponsor of NBC's coverage of the space race, into the mid-1970s.
[/quote]

Frank McGee anchored most of NBC's space flight programming.
 
cspotrun said:
Silkie said:
"The Huntley-Brinkley Report": 1969 until Huntley's
retirement in 1970


"Goodnight, Chet"
"Goodnight, David"

They had drinks with us, smoked on t.v. and reported the news in a very serious, yet laid back manner...they were, after all, in our living rooms.

was there anyone "Cooler" under pressure than David Brinkley, i remember November 22nd 1963, he was the only one who wasn't "losing it" under a national emergency, although it might have been because he just got back from Happy Hour. 8)

I think, had bug-eyed green aliens landed in Washington and taken over the city, Brinkley would have been reporting it with the same equanimity and calm as if he were reporting that the cost of living had risen 1/10 of 1 percent last month. I used to work for a guy like Brinkley (and he was, coincidentally, a fellow North Carolina boy) -- the same calm, unruffled, even temperament, no matter what chaos was breaking around him.
 
Stanislav said:
cspotrun said:
Silkie said:
"The Huntley-Brinkley Report": 1969 until Huntley's
retirement in 1970


"Goodnight, Chet"
"Goodnight, David"

They had drinks with us, smoked on t.v. and reported the news in a very serious, yet laid back manner...they were, after all, in our living rooms.

was there anyone "Cooler" under pressure than David Brinkley, i remember November 22nd 1963, he was the only one who wasn't "losing it" under a national emergency, although it might have been because he just got back from Happy Hour. 8)

I think, had bug-eyed green aliens landed in Washington and taken over the city, Brinkley would have been reporting it with the same equanimity and calm as if he were reporting that the cost of living had risen 1/10 of 1 percent last month. I used to work for a guy like Brinkley (and he was, coincidentally, a fellow North Carolina boy) -- the same calm, unruffled, even temperament, no matter what chaos was breaking around him.

David Brinkley was Mr. Dependable.
 
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