K
K.M. Richards
Guest
i wonder how nbc handled Sliver Spoons and Punky Brewster and the NFL? diffrent show than 60 Minutes in that they were half hour comdies
You wonder too much, I think.
i wonder how nbc handled Sliver Spoons and Punky Brewster and the NFL? diffrent show than 60 Minutes in that they were half hour comdies
Having watched a few NFL games from NBC on YouTube from the 1970s, they would often switch live to another regional game for a brief update, or if the main game was a blowout. I thought that was impossible, but NBC use to have a separate line so that they could switch to another game in case of a rout. CBS had to catch up to NBC big time. NBC could also delay Wonderful World of Disney in all markets if needed to finish a game that was exciting too. CBS might start 60 Minutes in one set of markets, but switch another set to a game in progress. When Terry O Neil came to CBS in 1981, he got them to change the format quite a bit, from having Bent Musburger cut in more often with updates, and also start 60 Minutes at the same time everywhere if needed. But NBC also pioneered the live switches during the NCAA Tournament, and ESPN soon followed too. ABC never did it with CFB, until the NCAA changed the rules in 1982. However, CBS had done that with the NBA in the 70s as well, so i can't say that NBC was the first to do live switches on sports.
NBC could also delay Wonderful World of Disney in all markets if needed to finish a game that was exciting too.
There's a one-word reason why NBC delayed Disney to finish exciting NFL games everywhere too: "Heidi."
There's a one-word reason why NBC delayed Disney to finish exciting NFL games everywhere too: "Heidi."
In 1975, NBC preempted the first 40+ minutes of Willy Wonka because the Raiders-Redskins game went into OT. Not surprisingly, the reverse Heidi move brought with it plenty of complaining phone calls.
CBS would "normalize" the network. That was one reason, once your game was over, they would join another game in progress. Eventually, everyone would be on the same game and the CBS Sports would sign off the entire network at the same time 93 seconds later (except on the west coast), 60 Minutes would start. Other times, after each game was over, they'd join the post-game show in progress.
I remember one time, in 1986 when WSPA/7 was showing 60 Minutes after the Falcons/Dolphins game, but WBTV/3 was showing the Eagles/Raiders game, which was still in progress. that happened a lot back then, since sometimes the stations might be showing diffrent games, and 60 Minutes would start at diffrent times
I've always wondered why CBS doesn't just start 60 Minutes at 8, since most games don't end by 7:30 eastern anyway.
NBC usually(but not always) had the 7pm show eat the bonus game's overrun, if needed. Sometimes, they would even not schedule anything for 7e/6c if they had more than one late game.
I've always wondered why CBS doesn't just start 60 Minutes at 8, since most games don't end by 7:30 eastern anyway.
Great topic. I'd love to know more of the history, and which lines went where.
For instance, I know AT&T distributed NBC. But, at least in my area of north and east Texas, CBS & ABC were distributed via Western Union.
I know the two systems were interconnected, since at one affiliate, Western Union could switch me to an AT&T line for NBC. It always came to me via the same line as our ABC programming.
I can only imagine how intricate the system must have been. On a Sunday afternoon for football, there were multiple NBC and CBS feeds to be distributed across the nation. When, as a CBS affiliate in Sherman-Ardmore, we were running a noon game but the NFL required us to switch to a Dallas Cowboys game at 3:00, a Western Union operator in Dallas made the switch for us.I know the Jerry Lewis telethon came to us in Tyler via our Western Union lines. In Sherman, we got it via KXAS in Fort Worth (which is also where we got our NBC feed). Our engineer always had to make a trip to a little shack behind KXAS and move a patch to get the right feed. But he'd have to stay to switch us back to NBC after the telethon and before the Tonight Show that night.
Great topic. I'd love to know more of the history, and which lines went where.
For instance, I know AT&T distributed NBC. But, at least in my area of north and east Texas, CBS & ABC were distributed via Western Union.
I know the two systems were interconnected, since at one affiliate, Western Union could switch me to an AT&T line for NBC. It always came to me via the same line as our ABC programming.
I can only imagine how intricate the system must have been. On a Sunday afternoon for football, there were multiple NBC and CBS feeds to be distributed across the nation. When, as a CBS affiliate in Sherman-Ardmore, we were running a noon game but the NFL required us to switch to a Dallas Cowboys game at 3:00, a Western Union operator in Dallas made the switch for us.
I know the Jerry Lewis telethon came to us in Tyler via our Western Union lines. In Sherman, we got it via KXAS in Fort Worth (which is also where we got our NBC feed). Our engineer always had to make a trip to a little shack behind KXAS and move a patch to get the right feed. But he'd have to stay to switch us back to NBC after the telethon and before the Tonight Show that night.
A bit of trivia: when the two coasts were joined on September 4, 1951, there were 107 stations on the air (the last pre-freeze licensee, Atlanta's Ch. 11, then WLTV Ch. 8, would sign on Sept. 30). One station, however, was not linked into the system: KOB Albuquerque, and I don't know when it was. To mark the occasion, President Harry S Truman addressed the UN, then still headquartered in San Francisco, and Douglas Edwards began using his longtime opening, "Good evening everyone, from coast to coast." Still, there was some crazy scheduling in those early days; I once posted a retro for San Francisco for a Monday in 1951; KPIX carried the live feed of "Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts" at 5:30 (PT)/8:30 (ET), while Los Angeles saw it on "fast kine" three hours later (or someone at the station made the kinescope during the live feed).
Somebody mentioned the practice of welcoming new stations to a broadcast; sometimes that was the biggest news of the day, and the networks (particularly ABC) wanted to promote their steady expansion. I still remember Aug. 1, 1962, the day WRAL switched from NBC to ABC and became the second fulltime ABC affiliate in North Carolina (after WLOS); it was mentioned on three daytime shows, "Yours For A Song" with Bert Parks, "Camouflage" with Don Morrow, and "American Bandstand," all of which were live. And even when ABC began picking off other networks' affiliates in the '70s and '80s, the practice continued; I remember the morning in 1990 when WHAS Louisville joined ABC and Charlie Gibson acted delighted that one of the oldest and most prestigious stations in the country had moved from CBS to ABC.
It's still probably a hassle to switch football games; CBS went to bonus coverage of the Browns-Titans game yesterday, but both WCBS and KCBS had to cut away by NFL rules to show the Jets-Chargers game in its entirety. WFMY and WRAL, my local CBS affiliates, stayed with the Browns-Titans game to the end.
But this discussion is otherwise getting too technical for me; all I know is that the first live network broadcast we got in North Carolina came in 1950, before I was born; WFMY carried DuMont's telecast of the North Carolina-Notre Dame football game on the day live network programming was extended southward from Richmond at least to Birmingham. I do have some insight now as to how, if in the '50s I had worked at a station that carried both Jackie Gleason (CBS) and Sid Caesar (NBC) on Saturday nights, I could have switched from CBS to NBC at 9, when Gleason went off and Caesar came on, to use one example (or in the '60s, how CBS/ABC affiliate WMAZ Macon, GA could go directly from Gleason to Lawrence Welk (ABC) at 8:30).