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January 29: This Day in TV History

Just a few random TV related events that happened on January 29. Discuss or comment as you please……

1901: Television pioneer Allen B. DuMont is born in Brooklyn, New York.

1918: Actor John Forsythe (Bachelor Father, To Rome with Love, Charlie’s Angels, Dynasty) is born (as John Lincoln Freund) in Penns Grove, New Jersey. DYK: Prior to his acting career, Forsythe was for a brief period the announcer at Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field.

1945: Actor Tom Selleck (Magnum P.I.) is born in Detroit.

1950: Actress Ann Jillian (It’s a Living) is born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

1954: Media mega-diva Oprah Winfrey is born in Kosciusko, Misissippi.

1962: Actor Nicholas Turturro (NYPD Blue) is born in Queens, New York.

1975: Actress Sara Gilbert (Roseanne) is born (as Sara Rebecca Abeles) in Santa Monica, California.

1975: Actress Kelly Packard (Baywatch, California Dreams) is born in Glendale, California.

1977: Comedian/actor Freddie Prinze (Chico and the Man) dies in Los Angeles from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, aged 22. Initially ruled a suicide, years later (after much campaigning by his mother) the cause of his death would be officially changed to "accidental shooting due to the influence of Quaaludes." Despite writing a suicide note, the fact that he committed the act in the presence of a witness (very rare for suicides) -- as well as having a history of playing with guns and faking suicide attempts to playfully scare his friends -- gave some credence to the notion that he was not seriously planning to take his own life.

1980: Singer/comedian/actor Jimmy Durante dies of pneumonia in Santa Monica, California, aged 86. Universally regarded as one of the nicest guys in show business, it was once said of Durante, “you could warm your hands on this man.”

1989: Shining Time Station premieres on PBS.

2006: Journalist Bob Woodruff, recently elevated to anchor of ABC’s World News Tonight, and Canadian cameraman Doug Vogt are seriously injured by an improvised explosive device near Taji, Iraq. Woodruff would undergo major surgeries, a medically induced coma, a battle with speech problems and aphasia, and a long period of rehabilitation before slowly beginning to resume his career.

2007: i: Independent Television (formerly PAX TV) rebrands as Ion Television. Two name changes in 18 months fail to alter its status as the lowliest broadcast network.

(Just a little featurette I hope to do as time permits. 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:
1977: Comedian/actor Freddie Prinze (Chico and the Man) dies in Los Angeles from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, aged 22. Initially ruled a suicide, years later (after much campaigning by his mother) the cause of his death would be officially changed to "accidental shooting due to the influence of Quaaludes." Despite writing a suicide note, the fact that he committed the act in the presence of a witness (very rare for suicides) -- as well as having a history of playing with guns and faking suicide attempts to playfully scare his friends -- gave some credence to the notion that he was not seriously planning to take his own life.

...Prinze's death led to a rather interesting monologue by one of the students in the movie Fame, as well as the 1977 "tribute" record "Freddie" by Charlene, which barely scratched into the Billboard Hot 100; Charlene's previous single, "I've Never Been to Me," would be a massive hit upon its reissue in 1982...
 
1927: Don Morrow, host of the original Camouflage,
and perhaps better known as the Shell Answer Man, is
born in Stamford, CT. He's still going strong, teaching
voiceover techniques both at his school in Danbury, CT,
and through his mail-order course. (I have a particular
interest in him; not only was Camouflage one of
my favorite game shows when I was a kid, he put my
favorite ABC affiliate, WFAA (then KBTV) Dallas, on the
air in 1949.)
 
While not really a TV historical moment, a key day here in Illinois history is one year ago tomorrow--and the subject of this day later went on to reality TV infamy while awaiting trial on corruption charges:

2009: After an extensive trial in the Illinois State Senate, former Governor Rod Blagojevich is removed from office by a unanimous 59-0 Senate vote. Then-Lieutenant Governor Pat Quinn is sworn in as Governor within 90 minutes of the Blago ouster vote.

YouTube has the opening 7:42 of Champaign/Decatur/Springfield CBS affiliate WCIA-3 10PM news from Jan. 29, 2009 with the impeachment of Blagojevich and his replacement by Quinn:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Em1eHDXE2k

In addition, WCIA closed their news from that evening with some final thoughts on that historical week in Illinois history, and their SkyCam shot of the Illinois state capitol complex--showing a sense of calm on that cold January night after the storm of an impeachment trial.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ygkgKjh_ghA&feature=related
 
Ultimajock said:
Stanislav said:
1977: Comedian/actor Freddie Prinze (Chico and the Man) dies in Los Angeles from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, aged 22. Initially ruled a suicide, years later (after much campaigning by his mother) the cause of his death would be officially changed to "accidental shooting due to the influence of Quaaludes." Despite writing a suicide note, the fact that he committed the act in the presence of a witness (very rare for suicides) -- as well as having a history of playing with guns and faking suicide attempts to playfully scare his friends -- gave some credence to the notion that he was not seriously planning to take his own life.

...Prinze's death led to a rather interesting monologue by one of the students in the movie Fame, as well as the 1977 "tribute" record "Freddie" by Charlene, which barely scratched into the Billboard Hot 100; Charlene's previous single, "I've Never Been to Me," would be a massive hit upon its reissue in 1982...

For many many years I have heard the story where the same day Prinze had died, NBC would shoot an episode of Chico & The Man showing only Jack Albertson and with very little script as in just Albertson one minute crying his eyes out while looking at Chico's things and the next screaming "...damn it..GOD damn YOU...DAMN DAMN DAMN !!!". The last scene was Albertson smashing Freddie's guitar...somewhat shades of that Florida Evans' scene of her husband's funeral on Good Times.

For years there was actually a debate between people who had sworn they had seen this, some even claiming they had seen it on You Tube while others had siad there never was such an episode of Chico & The Man and the show itself never did mention anything about Prinze's death.

BTW..that Charlene record...talk about an "accidental hit", the son was recorded some five years before it was a hit. NYC radio announcer the slate Scott Muni found "I've never been to Me" in his station's music library and after the success of another record "..for the ladies", Bertie Higgin's Key Largo, Muni thought now was a good time for the Charlene song and he was right. The song was a big hit on the then-brand new slew of AC and Light AC radio stations.
 
bk77 said:
Ultimajock said:
Stanislav said:
1977: Comedian/actor Freddie Prinze (Chico and the Man) dies in Los Angeles from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, aged 22. Initially ruled a suicide, years later (after much campaigning by his mother) the cause of his death would be officially changed to "accidental shooting due to the influence of Quaaludes." Despite writing a suicide note, the fact that he committed the act in the presence of a witness (very rare for suicides) -- as well as having a history of playing with guns and faking suicide attempts to playfully scare his friends -- gave some credence to the notion that he was not seriously planning to take his own life.

...Prinze's death led to a rather interesting monologue by one of the students in the movie Fame, as well as the 1977 "tribute" record "Freddie" by Charlene, which barely scratched into the Billboard Hot 100; Charlene's previous single, "I've Never Been to Me," would be a massive hit upon its reissue in 1982...

For many many years I have heard the story where the same day Prinze had died, NBC would shoot an episode of Chico & The Man showing only Jack Albertson and with very little script as in just Albertson one minute crying his eyes out while looking at Chico's things and the next screaming "...damn it..GOD damn YOU...DAMN DAMN DAMN !!!". The last scene was Albertson smashing Freddie's guitar...somewhat shades of that Florida Evans' scene of her husband's funeral on Good Times.

For years there was actually a debate between people who had sworn they had seen this, some even claiming they had seen it on You Tube while others had siad there never was such an episode of Chico & The Man and the show itself never did mention anything about Prinze's death.

BTW..that Charlene record...talk about an "accidental hit", the son was recorded some five years before it was a hit. NYC radio announcer the slate Scott Muni found "I've never been to Me" in his station's music library and after the success of another record "..for the ladies", Bertie Higgin's Key Largo, Muni thought now was a good time for the Charlene song and he was right. The song was a big hit on the then-brand new slew of AC and Light AC radio stations.

OK - here's my memory. In the show, Chico didn't die, he just went away suddenly. I do remember a scene in which Albertson is in the garage and alone and talking to the absent Chico - feeling sad and lonely because he loved Chico, who has abruptly left his life. But Chico hadn't "died," it was only one scene out of a full episode, and it wasn't as dramatic as that - no screaming "God Damn you" or anything like that.
 
BTW..that Charlene record...talk about an "accidental hit", the son was recorded some five years before it was a hit. NYC radio announcer the slate Scott Muni found "I've never been to Me" in his station's music library and after the success of another record "..for the ladies", Bertie Higgin's Key Largo, Muni thought now was a good time for the Charlene song and he was right. The song was a big hit on the then-brand new slew of AC and Light AC radio stations.

So Scottso was to blame for that turd inflicting our radios?
 
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