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May 9: This Day in TV History

Just a few random TV related events that happened on May 9. Discuss or comment as you please……

1918: Journalist Mike Wallace (Night Beat, The Mike Wallace Interview, 60 Minutes) is born in Brookline, Massachusetts.

1930: Meteorologist Bill Kuster is born in Fernville, Pennsylvania. His career would include stints at KYW-TV in Philadelphia from 1963-79 and KUSA in Denver from 1979-96. (He retired in 1996, and died in 2006, aged 76.)

1946: The first regularly scheduled American variety show, Hour Glass, premieres on NBC.

1946: Actress Candice Bergen (Murphy Brown) is born in Beverly Hills, California.

1955: Sam and Friends, the first TV show to feature Jim Henson's Muppets, premieres on Washington’s WRC-TV.

1961: FCC Chair Newton Minow delivers his famous “vast wasteland” speech at the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB). For those who didn’t get it imprinted into their brains in school, the relevant paragraph: “When television is good, nothing -- not the theater, not the magazines or newspapers -- nothing is better. But when television is bad, nothing is worse. I invite you to sit down in front of your television set when your station goes on the air and stay there without a book, magazine, newspaper, profit and loss sheet or rating book to distract you -- and keep your eyes glued to that set until the station signs off. I can assure you that you will observe a vast wasteland.” (If Minow could see what TV has subsequently become, I believe he would have used stronger -- perhaps unprintable -- descriptors than “vast wasteland...”)

1979: Robert Conrad and Ross Martin reunite for the first of two television movies, The Wild Wild West Revisited.

1986: File under that big “critically acclaimed but watched by almost no one” heading: Joe Bash, starring Peter Boyle, airs the last of just 6 episodes on ABC. Though one critic said, “Peter Boyle [is] outstanding as a grumpy cop in this...moody tragicomedy on loneliness,” viewers apparently preferred more upbeat fare to a “moody tragicomedy.”

2004: Comedian Alan King dies in New York City of cancer, aged 76. (My favorite Alan King anecdote...after participating in a Command Performance for the British Royal Family, he was brought before Queen Elizabeth II. “And how are you, Mr. King?” asked Her Royal Highness. “And how are you, Mrs. Queen?” King replied. She was not amused...)

(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:
Just a few random TV related events that happened on May 9. Discuss or comment as you please……

1930: Meteorologist Bill Kuster is born in Fernville, Pennsylvania. His career would include stints at KYW-TV in Philadelphia from 1963-79 and KUSA in Denver from 1979-96. (He retired in 1996, and died in 2006, aged 76.)

I remember Bill Kuster when he was at Denver's KUSA back when I attended the University Of Denver back in 1990. Back then Kuster was doing the weather for the Noon edition of "9 News" and back then like they do now, a good chunk of KUSA's weathercast was done outside in the "backyard". I am not sure how far the "9 News backyard" was from street level back then at KUSA's former location but it must had been rather close. Once when Kuster was doing the weather somebody threw a rather large sex toy at Kuster live on the air, it didnt hit him but the object did land in the bushes behind him ( right next to the channel 9 logo too ) and of course it wasnt hard to see what it was.

I actually spit out my Diet Coke in laughter when I saw that.

Sad to learn that Kuster has since passed on. I have always wondered whatever happened to him.
 
When Old Newt made that statement, it was the talk of the nation. Every news broadcast reported it and every show talked about it for weeks. Jack Paar talked about it for night after night.
 
>>Comedian Alan King dies in New York City of cancer, aged 76. (My favorite Alan King anecdote...after participating in a Command Performance for the British Royal Family, he was brought before Queen Elizabeth II. “And how are you, Mr. King?” asked Her Royal Highness. “And how are you, Mrs. Queen?” King replied. She was not amused...)>>

I am--that's quite funny.
 
ricksegers said:
Wasn't it Paar who said the reason they call TV a medium is it is not rare or well done?

He may have said it, but I think it was first attributed to radio comedian Fred Allen, who himself found it hard to adapt to Television. His only decent success in the medium was his 1954-56 stint as a "What's My Line?" panelist..When sadly, he passed away on a Sunday night just after doing the show..
 
Tim L said:
ricksegers said:
Wasn't it Paar who said the reason they call TV a medium is it is not rare or well done?

He may have said it, but I think it was first attributed to radio comedian Fred Allen, who himself found it hard to adapt to Television. His only decent success in the medium was his 1954-56 stint as a "What's My Line?" panelist..When sadly, he passed away on a Sunday night just after doing the show..

Fred Allen was actually WAY ahead of his time by making that statement. WAY WAY ahead actually. As the years go by it does seem, ( to me anyway ) that more and more TV stars are actually ANTI-TV, so much so that not only do they do not watch it but dont even own the set. Of course their reasons why they feel that way may or may not necessary be the same as Fred Allen's. For example Alan Alda as I remember often would slam TV in the press even while at the same time he did M*A*S*H over quality of TV in general while some members of the cast of Friends like Lisa Kudrow felt that TV was poison to kids..yes even Nickelodeon and how parents are "unfit" if they would allow their kids to watch any TV. And just last year Jason Lee from the NBC show "My Name is Earl", it was reported I believe in People ( or one of those magazines ) where he felt the whole idea of stations spending so much money going DTV was "retarded", and no Lee doesn't own a set and a converter box either.

Before Fred Allen, it was unwise to well..bite the hand that feeds you. Imagine say if Lucille Ball during the her days at doing radio's My Favorite Husband would had made some statement to the press that "CBS is trash". Chances are "I Love Lucy" would never had existed. Paley never would had stand for it, and Sarnoff too if we were talking about NBC.
 
radioman148 said:
>>Comedian Alan King dies in New York City of cancer, aged 76. (My favorite Alan King anecdote...after participating in a Command Performance for the British Royal Family, he was brought before Queen Elizabeth II. “And how are you, Mr. King?” asked Her Royal Highness. “And how are you, Mrs. Queen?” King replied. She was not amused...)>>

I am--that's quite funny.
Even if it's not true! ;)
(If it IS true, it raises too many questions-did King really perform at a Royal Command Performance? And if so...why? Considering the type of humor he was known for...and how popular was he in the UK?)
 
onairb said:
radioman148 said:
>>Comedian Alan King dies in New York City of cancer, aged 76. (My favorite Alan King anecdote...after participating in a Command Performance for the British Royal Family, he was brought before Queen Elizabeth II. “And how are you, Mr. King?” asked Her Royal Highness. “And how are you, Mrs. Queen?” King replied. She was not amused...)>>

I am--that's quite funny.
Even if it's not true! ;)
(If it IS true, it raises too many questions-did King really perform at a Royal Command Performance? And if so...why? Considering the type of humor he was known for...and how popular was he in the UK?)

I don't know how popular he was in the UK, but he was always on Ed Sullivan. King made more appearances on Sullivan's show than anyone else.
 
Tim L said:
ricksegers said:
Wasn't it Paar who said the reason they call TV a medium is it is not rare or well done?

He may have said it, but I think it was first attributed to radio comedian Fred Allen, who himself found it hard to adapt to Television. His only decent success in the medium was his 1954-56 stint as a "What's My Line?" panelist..When sadly, he passed away on a Sunday night just after doing the show..

Thanks..I knew it was Fred Allen but when I saw Jack Paar the old brain went wild.
 
Tim L said:
ricksegers said:
Wasn't it Paar who said the reason they call TV a medium is it is not rare or well done?

He may have said it, but I think it was first attributed to radio comedian Fred Allen, who himself found it hard to adapt to Television. His only decent success in the medium was his 1954-56 stint as a "What's My Line?" panelist..When sadly, he passed away on a Sunday night just after doing the show..

...Fred Allen died the night before a scheduled What's My Line? broadcast, not just after one. He died on St. Patrick's Day of 1956, which was a Saturday...
 
mleach said:
. . . For example Alan Alda as I remember often would slam TV in the press even while at the same time he did M*A*S*H over quality of TV in general . . .

Other than perhaps political considerations, could Alan Alda's view of TV mentioned in mleach's quote above explain why some believe scripts for M*A*S*H toward the end of its run (particularly 1980-83) became Alda's "personal soapbox" (as some people often have believed and criticized)?
 
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