Years ago I was reading in some TV trivia book about WLWT Cincinatti's Ruth Lyons. Back in the 50s and 60s she was the host of the local 50/50 Club. Back in the 50's NBC (?) offered Ruth the chance to make her show go from just Cincinatti to nationwide. However Ruth was quite happy just having her show be a local one. Oddly I believe Bob Braun ( same city and station ) in the 80s was given the chance to have his regional talk show go nationwide too. But like Lyons, Braun said no.
Any other examples of this?
I can think of only two.
Bob McAllister who hosted New York City's Wonderama, I seem to recall Metromedia wanted to syndicatethat show nationwide on stations not owned by Metromedia. But for some reason that never happened though Wonderama was seen in a few markets coast to coast but only on those stations owned by Metromedia.
KUSA/KBTV Denver's Paula Woodward. Well known in Colorado for her "9 wants to know" features. In one of my old TV Guides from the late 80's there was a small story that appeared in there where "plans" were made for Paula Woodward and her "9 wants to know" to go nationwide by 1990. I guess the idea was to make Paula Woodward a female David Horowitz who was popular at the time for his "Fight Back" show. According to KUSA's website Paula Woodward is still with KUSA and "9 wants to know" is still around so I assume either Paula didn't want to leave Denver or that whoever wanted to make Paula a nationwide star had lost interest.
Any other examples of this?
I can think of only two.
Bob McAllister who hosted New York City's Wonderama, I seem to recall Metromedia wanted to syndicatethat show nationwide on stations not owned by Metromedia. But for some reason that never happened though Wonderama was seen in a few markets coast to coast but only on those stations owned by Metromedia.
KUSA/KBTV Denver's Paula Woodward. Well known in Colorado for her "9 wants to know" features. In one of my old TV Guides from the late 80's there was a small story that appeared in there where "plans" were made for Paula Woodward and her "9 wants to know" to go nationwide by 1990. I guess the idea was to make Paula Woodward a female David Horowitz who was popular at the time for his "Fight Back" show. According to KUSA's website Paula Woodward is still with KUSA and "9 wants to know" is still around so I assume either Paula didn't want to leave Denver or that whoever wanted to make Paula a nationwide star had lost interest.