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November 24: This Day in TV History

Just a few random TV related events that happened on November 24. Discuss or comment as you please……

1911: Actor Kirby Grant (Sky King) is born (as Kirby Grant Hoon, Jr.) in Butte, Montana.

1933: Actor René Enríquez (Hill Street Blues) is born in San Francisco.

1938: Actor David Newell (Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood) is born in O’Hara Township, Pennsylvania. Presumably, the birth was a “Speedy Delivery.” (OK....that was bad, even by MY standards...)

1947: Actor Dwight Schultz (The A-Team, Star Trek: The Next Generation) is born (as William Dwight Schultz) in Baltimore, Maryland.

1948: Kentucky’s first TV station, Louisville’s WAVE-TV, begins broadcasting on channel 5. They would move to channel 3 in 1953 due to mutual CCI problems with Cincinnati’s WLWT.

1957: Actress Denise Crosby (Star Trek: The Next Generation) is born in Hollywood, California.

1958: Viewed now in hindsight as sort of a retroactive “pre-pilot pilot,” the Rod Serling teleplay “The Time Element” is broadcast as an episode of CBS’ Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse. The critical success of the show (a time travel yarn involving Pearl Harbor) motivates the network to consider an anthology show based on similar scripts, and to begin talks with Serling about producing such a show. The rest, as they say, is history. (BTW, “The Time Element” is now rarely seen, and has never had an official DVD release in the U.S.)

1963: Lee Harvey Oswald is shot by Jack Ruby as he is led from Dallas Police HQ for transfer to the county jail. The incident airs live only on NBC (via WBAP-TV’s remote unit); CBS is there (courtesy of KRLD-TV) but makes the switch to Dallas late and misses carrying the shooting live by less than a minute (though videotape of it would run over and over on CBS that day, including the first improvised, manual slow-motion playing of videotape on TV). ABC is initially left in the cold as their affiliate WFAA’s remote unit is staged at the other end of the aborted transfer; the network has to make do with hastily developed newsreel footage of the shooting.

1976: Longtime WNBC-TV and WABC-TV weatherman Tex Antoine infamously follows a WABC report on the rape of a 5-year old girl by making a tasteless and utterly inappropriate joke during his weathercast. The quip kayos his employment at WABC – except for a subsequent brief stint at WNEW-TV, his TV career would soon come to an end.

1978: Actress Katherine Heigl (Roswell, Grey’s Anatomy) is born in Washington, D.C.

1981: Simon & Simon premieres on CBS.

1983: Sesame Street confronts the issue of death head-on in an episode in which Big Bird must come to grips with the fact that he will never see his friend, storekeeper Mr. Hooper (Will Lee), again. The bold move to incorporate actor Lee’s real-life death into the show via his character results in a moving episode that has always been considered one of the most influential moments in children’s television. The episode is purposefully scheduled to air on Thanksgiving Day, to allow parents to have an opportunity to talk to their children about the subject matter. DYK: The long, emotional scene in which the show’s adults try to explain Mr. Hooper’s death to Big Bird was accomplished in one single take.

1988: Mystery Science Theater 3000 premieres as a local show on Minneapolis-St. Paul’s KTMA-TV (channel 23). The show would go national on the Comedy Channel the following year.

2005: Actor Pat Morita (Happy Days) dies in Las Vegas, Nevada, aged 73.

(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:
1958: Viewed now in hindsight as sort of a retroactive “pre-pilot pilot,” the Rod Serling teleplay “The Time Element” is broadcast as an episode of CBS’ Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse. The critical success of the show (a time travel yarn involving Pearl Harbor) motivates the network to consider an anthology show based on similar scripts, and to begin talks with Serling about producing such a show. The rest, as they say, is history. (BTW, “The Time Element” is now rarely seen, and has never had an official DVD release in the U.S.)

...which, of course, raises the question as to whether or not a print of the episode even exists anymore. I was shocked to learn a few years back that the theatrical film Welcome to Arrow Beach -- a 1974 Warner Bros. release that turned out to be Laurence Harvey's last film (he both starred in and directed it) -- only exists today in a single, tattered 16mm print and a low-grade 1970s video transfer. If a major studio theatrical film like that can be (almost) lost after 34 years, certainly a TV film 16 years older than that can suffer a worse fate...
 
Stanislav said:
1938: Actor David Newell (Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood) is born in O’Hara Township, Pennsylvania. Presumably, the birth was a “Speedy Delivery.” (OK....that was bad, even by MY standards...)

So I guess Mr Newell visited Mrs Newell's 'neighborhood' for some McFeely (and that was bad by your standards too :p )
 
I have a DVD of "The Time Element". I purchased it a couple of years ago at a radio nostalgia convention here. The quality is very good. The (Westinghouse) commercials are not included and the only reference to that sponsor is in the opening of the program. The show is introduced by Desi Arnez.
 
Ultimajock said:
Stanislav said:
1958: Viewed now in hindsight as sort of a retroactive “pre-pilot pilot,” the Rod Serling teleplay “The Time Element” is broadcast as an episode of CBS’ Westinghouse Desilu Playhouse. The critical success of the show (a time travel yarn involving Pearl Harbor) motivates the network to consider an anthology show based on similar scripts, and to begin talks with Serling about producing such a show. The rest, as they say, is history. (BTW, “The Time Element” is now rarely seen, and has never had an official DVD release in the U.S.)

...which, of course, raises the question as to whether or not a print of the episode even exists anymore. I was shocked to learn a few years back that the theatrical film Welcome to Arrow Beach -- a 1974 Warner Bros. release that turned out to be Laurence Harvey's last film (he both starred in and directed it) -- only exists today in a single, tattered 16mm print and a low-grade 1970s video transfer. If a major studio theatrical film like that can be (almost) lost after 34 years, certainly a TV film 16 years older than that can suffer a worse fate...

According to the Wikipedia entry, it had a DVD release, but only in Italy (?). So if that is true, a print of it must exist somewhere (though who knows in what condition). I think that is a bit hinky -- don't they release DVDs by region rather than just to a single country? (Unless it was actually a bootleg...)
 
Stanislav said:
don't they release DVDs by region rather than just to a single country? (Unless it was actually a bootleg...)

Not necessarily -- even here in Region 1, there are some R1 DVDs sold only in Canada (especially French-language titles in Quebec) and some sold only in the US. Rights and marketability dictate where they are sold.

R2 and R4 also transcends continents -- R2 in Europe and Japan; R4 in Australia and Latin America (including Mexico). In this case, in addition to rights, there's also color formats (Europe and Australia are PAL, Mexico and Japan are NTSC).
 
Stanislav said:
2005: Actor Pat Morita (Happy Days) dies in Las Vegas, Nevada, aged 73.

Morita spent one season IIRC as Arnold (of Arnold's) on HD (75-76). Did he have an option for more seasons, or did he move on to Mr. T and Tina of his own accord, or what? I liked him as Arnold.

IIRC Morita's Arnold, after MrT&T bombed, was seen on Blansky's Beauties with Nancy Walker (and a very young Scott Baio) before the 76-77 season was over.

ixnay
 
He went back to Happy Days for the 82-83 season after Al moved to Chicago for Joanie Loves Chachi.
 
I just visited Wiki to look up Antoine's joke, and it was about what I figured it would be...So how did the news guy get away with saying "Relax and enjoy the weather with Storm Field"?
 
Pat Morita was also on "M*A*S*H" a couple times as Captain Pak...He was in the episode where Radar hit the old guy who claimed he had whiplash. Funniest line was when he asked Radar to describe the guy: "Was he a little guy about five foot nothing? Somewhere between 50 and 200 years old? Looks like he fell off a charm bracelet?"
 
Stanislav said:
1976: Longtime WNBC-TV and WABC-TV weatherman Tex Antoine infamously follows a WABC report on the rape of a 5-year old girl by making a tasteless and utterly inappropriate joke during his weathercast. The quip kayos his employment at WABC – except for a subsequent brief stint at WNEW-TV, his TV career would soon come to an end.

According to some sources of the time (such as Ron Powers' 1980 book The Newscasters: The News Business as Show Business (2nd Edition)), the girl who was raped was 8 years old; whatever her age, Antoine's remark was beyond the pale just the same, and the outrage over his so-called "joke" was very much warranted.
 
What's more, it was none other than Roger Grimsby, on Nov. 29, who made that "lie back and enjoy the weather with Storm Field" comment. By all accounts, he was left speechless at the point of Antoine's career-ending comments.
 
1942: Scottish actor/comedian Billy Connolly is born in Anderston, Glasgow, Scotland. He was the teacher on "Head of the Class" in its final season (1990-91) after Howard Hesseman left the show.
 
Noriyuki "Pat" Morita, along with LaWanda "Aunt Esther" Page and several other "Sanford and Son' cast regulars were once members of Redd Foxx's raunchy, hilarious adult comedy touring and recording troupe during the '40s, '50s and '60s.

Listen to Page on You Tube...she'll clear your sinuses, curl your hair and change your attitude all at the same time! Talk about "blue comedy!"
 
All three Cincinnati TV stations: WLW-T (then Channel 4). WCPO-TV, (then Channel 7) and WKRC-TV (then Channel 11) televise the Thanksgiving Day college football game between the University of Cincinnati and Miami (Ohio) live from Nippert Stadium. UC wins the game,27-6.
 
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