I wonder how did stations schedule the weekend syndie shows around sports. For example NFL games, or even baseball for example.
I assume you're talking about the pre-infomercial years...
It varied from station to station. Back in the day, lots of stations had syndicated movie packages, and if there was a 90-min. or 2-hour slot to fill, the station might throw in a movie. I remember a number of CBS and NBC affiliates even preempting "CBS Sports Spectacular" and "NBC Sportsworld" to run movies or other syndicated shows. Stations would sometimes burn-off an episode of an off-net syndicated show that they normally showed on weekdays, etc. 30-minute fishing shows were also quite popular back in the day, and stations could usually schedule them around network sports. It wasn't odd for stations to produce their own weekend public affairs shows, and those could be easily preempted for sports, if necessary. At least in the midwest and south, the ShowBiz-produced country music shows were popular. These shows were all 30 minutes and consisted of "The Porter Wagoner Show," "The Wilburn Brothers Show," "Dolly," "Pop! Goes the Country," as well as few others. Stations would usually have these scheduled late Saturday or Sunday afternoons (like before or after the network evening news, sometimes preempting the network news), in the access slot on weeknights, or maybe even in weekend late-night slots. Some stations would juggle these shows around as filler on weekend afternoons. In the late '70s and early '80s, my local CBS affiliate would sometimes tape the Sunday morning CBS cartoon reruns (which they regularly preempted for paid religious shows) and use them as filler on Saturday or Sunday afternoons.
I would assume that weekend afternoons were one of the biggest headaches for network affiilate program directors back in the day.
Baseball was the *toughest* to schedule around, like if a game went into a delay for rain, or if it was an extra inning contest. NBA games can do that too, since that could go multiple overtimes.
I assume you're talking about the pre-infomercial years...
It varied from station to station. Back in the day, lots of stations had syndicated movie packages, and if there was a 90-min. or 2-hour slot to fill, the station might throw in a movie. I remember a number of CBS and NBC affiliates even preempting "CBS Sports Spectacular" and "NBC Sportsworld" to run movies or other syndicated shows. Stations would sometimes burn-off an episode of an off-net syndicated show that they normally showed on weekdays, etc. 30-minute fishing shows were also quite popular back in the day, and stations could usually schedule them around network sports. It wasn't odd for stations to produce their own weekend public affairs shows, and those could be easily preempted for sports, if necessary. At least in the midwest and south, the ShowBiz-produced country music shows were popular. These shows were all 30 minutes and consisted of "The Porter Wagoner Show," "The Wilburn Brothers Show," "Dolly," "Pop! Goes the Country," as well as few others. Stations would usually have these scheduled late Saturday or Sunday afternoons (like before or after the network evening news, sometimes preempting the network news), in the access slot on weeknights, or maybe even in weekend late-night slots. Some stations would juggle these shows around as filler on weekend afternoons. In the late '70s and early '80s, my local CBS affiliate would sometimes tape the Sunday morning CBS cartoon reruns (which they regularly preempted for paid religious shows) and use them as filler on Saturday or Sunday afternoons.
I would assume that weekend afternoons were one of the biggest headaches for network affiilate program directors back in the day.
WREG CBS 3 in Memphis used to be the best station there about local programming during non-sports times on weekends. They would have movies if there were long enough blocks, and also reruns of MASH, then later Cheers, and Perry Mason. Now they're probably the worst with nothing but infomercials for hours. I checked and there no sports scheduled for tomorrow, and WREG is filling the entire time with infomercials.With this being the first weekend of college football you would have thought that CBS would have had at least one game.
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That does seem strange. Is CBS perhaps trying to build viewership of the largely ignored CBS Sports Network by moving games that otherwise would have been on OTA TV to cable?
I rechecked the schedules today, and Fox has two college football games today, ABC has three, and NBC has a Notre Dame game, but CBS has nothing. The only possible reason I can think of might be because they used to have US Open tennis on Labor Day weekend, but it moved to ESPN2, and they might could not get some SEC games scheduled to take the place of it. I hope that changes for next year..
And what gets me is today there were 4 CBS O&O stations that carried the ACC game of the week (syndicated) today
Boston
Miami
Baltimore
NYC
yet CBS O&O WCCO here in Minneapolis had nothing but paid programs on all afternoon
no Big 10 syndicated games anymore, what are the other CBS O&Os aring? infomercials probably
I rechecked the schedules today, and Fox has two college football games today, ABC has three, and NBC has a Notre Dame game, but CBS has nothing. The only possible reason I can think of might be because they used to have US Open tennis on Labor Day weekend, but it moved to ESPN2, and they might could not get some SEC games scheduled to take the place of it. I hope that changes for next year..
And then today and tomorrow afternoon NBC has the last two rounds of the PGA Dell Technologies championship.
I haven't heard, but will there be Florida-Michigan and Alabama-Florida State games next season? (unless those games are just two-year deals that expire after yesterday). IMO if Florida-Michigan was played in Gainesville rather than Ann Arbor it would have been a great SEC on CBS kickoff to the A.L. era (After Lundquist). Or for next year CBS tries to get the SEC to schedule a marquee conference game on Labor Day weekend (perhaps an interdivisional one).
Can a case be made to move up the start of the NFL season to Labor Day weekend (unless it's best to keep that as college football kickoff weekend)? Maybe at the expense of removing one preseason game. The last time the NFL started on Labor Day weekend was 1997.
As far as I know those two games on Saturday were one shot deals as they were kickoff games. Also the NFL doesn't want to open on Labor Day weekend as past ratings numbers indicate those games are much lower rated than other weekends. Also the NFL opened on LAbor Day Weekend in 1998.(Sunday was 9-6 with the Monday night game on 9-7)