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July 29: This Day in TV History

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

1924: Actor Robert Horton (Wagon Train, A Man Called Shenandoah) is born in Los Angeles.

1933: Actor Robert Fuller (Laramie, Wagon Train, Emergency) is born (as Buddy Lee) in Troy, New York.

1938: Peter Jennings is born (full name Peter Charles Archibald Ewart Jennings) in Toronto, Ontario.

1953: Documentary director/producer Ken Burns (The Civil War, Baseball, Jazz, The War) is born in Brooklyn, New York.

1956: WCKT (channel 7) begins broadcasting in Miami, Florida. The calls would change to WSVN in 1983 after the original owner (a partnership of the Cox and Knight publishing families who owned Miami's two major newspapers) lost the station’s license due to violations of FCC rules as well as various ethics violations.

1957: Jack Parr becomes the new permanent host of The Tonight Show.

1963: Actress Alexandra Paul (Baywatch) is born in New York City.

1972: Actor Wil Wheaton (Star Trek: The Next Generation) is born in Burbank, California.

1979: Game show producer Bill Todman (Card Sharks, Family Feud, Match Game, Password, The Price is Right, To Tell the Truth, etc, etc., etc.) dies in New York City, aged 62.

1982: Television pioneer Vladimir Zworykin dies in Princeton, New Jersey, aged 92. The Russian-born engineer is regarded by some as the “true” inventor of television, having invented a television transmitting and receiving system employing cathode ray tubes. He was also instrumental in the practical development of charge storage-type tubes, infrared image tubes, and the electron microscope.

1982: Actress Allison Mack (Smallville) is born in Preetz, Germany.

1983: Friday Night Videos premieres on NBC late night.

2005: Radar’s teddy bear from the series M*A*S*H (which had for a time been housed in the Smithsonian) is sold at auction for $11,800.

2007: Tom Snyder dies in San Francisco of leukemia, aged 71.

2007: Investigative reporter Marvin Zindler dies in Houston, Texas of pancreatic cancer, aged 85. One of the most influential local TV personalities in the country, his career at Houston’s KTRK-TV spanned 34 years. He is best known for his reports leading to the closing down of the infamous “Chicken Ranch” brothel in Fayette County (the subject of the Broadway and film musical “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas”). As a result, he was assaulted by a very angry Fayette County Sheriff T.J. Flournoy, in a fight that left Zindler with two fractured ribs and a snatched toupee.

(Just a little featurette I hope to do as time permits…..don’t expect it every single day. 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:
1956: WCKT (channel 7) begins broadcasting in Miami, Florida. The calls would change to WSVN in 1983 after the original owner (a partnership of the Cox and Knight publishing families who owned Miami's two major newspapers) lost the station’s license due to violations of FCC rules as well as various ethics violations.

Actually, the station lost its license in 1962; after that point, a new broadcasting group, Sunbeam Television, bought the station and kept the WCKT calls. The station became WSVN in 1983, after Ed Ansin bought Sunbeam.
 
Stanislav said:
2007: Investigative reporter Marvin Zindler dies in Houston, Texas of pancreatic cancer, aged 85. One of the most influential local TV personalities in the country, his career at Houston’s KTRK-TV spanned 34 years. He is best known for his reports leading to the closing down of the infamous “Chicken Ranch” brothel in Fayette County (the subject of the Broadway and film musical “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas”). As a result, he was assaulted by a very angry Fayette County Sheriff T.J. Flournoy, in a fight that left Zindler with two fractured ribs and a snatched toupee.

Marvin was still doing his reports from his hospital bed up until the week he died.

We miss ya, Marvin :-[
 
Stanislav said:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on July 29. Discuss or comment as you please……

2007: Tom Snyder dies in San Francisco of leukemia, aged 71.

...a very sad day in my life, as I knew Tom personally. Not a very close friendship, mind you, but a couple of times in the late '90s he would call me when visiting Milwaukee and the two of us would meet up at the I-94 A&W just inside Racine County or The Brat Stop at I-94 and Highway 50 outside Kenosha and waste three or four hours the way you'd think Tom Snyder would have wanted to. He was a marvelous audience for my ideas and I like to think I was a good audience for his. He was one helluva guy and I miss him sorely...
 
Ultimajock said:
Stanislav said:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on July 29. Discuss or comment as you please……

2007: Tom Snyder dies in San Francisco of leukemia, aged 71.

...a very sad day in my life, as I knew Tom personally. Not a very close friendship, mind you, but a couple of times in the late '90s he would call me when visiting Milwaukee and the two of us would meet up at the I-94 A&W just inside Racine County or The Brat Stop at I-94 and Highway 50 outside Kenosha and waste three or four hours the way you'd think Tom Snyder would have wanted to. He was a marvelous audience for my ideas and I like to think I was a good audience for his. He was one helluva guy and I miss him sorely...

This is just supposition on my part, but he worked at KYW-TV 3 while it was still in Cleveland in early 1965. If the Cleveland/Philly TV-Radio swap had not been reversed, I think he might have stayed in Cleveland for a number of years. I always liked him on "Tomorrow"..He seemed very unpretentious on the air..And he really was interested in what his guests were saying, unlike some interviewers..
 
...the key to understanding Tom Snyder, as it was with Jack Paar and Irv Kupcinet before him, is that he loved conversation moreso than the question-and-answer "interview" (the latter was more Edwin Newman's "Speaking Freely" or David Susskind's style). He hd his own observations with which to enrich the discussion, and that aways led to a much more satisfying product...
 
Stanislav said:
1953: Documentary director/producer Ken Burns (The Civil War, Baseball, Jazz, The War) is born in Brooklyn, New York.

Speaking of Ken Burns, I have learned recently that a sequel to his 1994 "Baseball" documentary is set to air on PBS in spring 2010, "The Tenth Inning," which covers the game from 1993-2009 (e.g. the '94 strike, the Mark McGwire-Sammy Sosa HR chase of '98, the Red Sox breaking the "Curse of the Bambino" in 2004, etc.).

http://www.pbs.org/aboutpbs/news/20090107_pbsbaseball.html
 
Ultimajock said:
Stanislav said:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on July 29. Discuss or comment as you please……

2007: Tom Snyder dies in San Francisco of leukemia, aged 71.

...a very sad day in my life, as I knew Tom personally. Not a very close friendship, mind you, but a couple of times in the late '90s he would call me when visiting Milwaukee and the two of us would meet up at the I-94 A&W just inside Racine County or The Brat Stop at I-94 and Highway 50 outside Kenosha and waste three or four hours the way you'd think Tom Snyder would have wanted to. He was a marvelous audience for my ideas and I like to think I was a good audience for his. He was one helluva guy and I miss him sorely...

Tom Snyder was a great interviewer.
Regarding the A&W on I-94 and Hwy 50, they have the best black cows in the world.
 
Tim from Springfield said:
1981: Watched by a global TV audience of around 750 million, Lady Diana Spencer marries Charles, Prince of Wales at St. Paul's Cathedral in London.

I recall watching it on the then still wet behind the ears CNN. They managed to get BBC2 to agree to let them use their coverage, but they cut to the satellite feed a few minutes early. Thus, U.S. viewers were treated to several nice clear BBC2 graphics and promos (including one for the Bob Hope movie "Son of Paleface") until the wedding coverage began! (I took a few photos off-screen at the time, which have long since been lost to the ages through various moves and purges of my junk...) :)
 
Tim from Springfield said:
Stanislav said:
1953: Documentary director/producer Ken Burns (The Civil War, Baseball, Jazz, The War) is born in Brooklyn, New York.

Speaking of Ken Burns, I have learned recently that a sequel to his 1994 "Baseball" documentary is set to air on PBS in spring 2010, "The Tenth Inning," which covers the game from 1993-2009 (e.g. the '94 strike, the Mark McGwire-Sammy Sosa HR chase of '98, the Red Sox breaking the "Curse of the Bambino" in 2004, etc.).

http://www.pbs.org/aboutpbs/news/20090107_pbsbaseball.html

It will air September 28 and 29.
 
Shortly before his death a reporter had asked Vladimir Zworykin what he thought of the current state of his invention.

"Technically, it is excellent!" he replied. "Far beyond my wildest expectations.
But the programming is really awful!" :D
 
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