Just a few random TV related events that happened on October 3. Discuss or comment as you please……
1942: Actor Alan Rachins (L.A. Law, Dharma & Greg) is born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
1947: D.C.’s second TV station WTVW (shortly thereafter to become WJLA-TV) debuts on channel 7. It is the first VHF hi-band station in the U.S. (The WTVW calls would, of course, soon end up on another channel 7 in Evansville, Indiana.)
1954: KFVS-TV (channel 12) launches in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.
1954: The first of 203 episodes of Father Knows Best airs on CBS.
1955: A double treat for the kiddies: Captain Kangaroo debuts on CBS, and The Mickey Mouse Club launches on ABC.
1955: WDBJ (channel 7) signs on in Roanoke, Virginia.
1960: The Andy Griffith Show premieres on CBS.
1961: The Dick Van Dyke Show debuts on CBS.
1964: There’s no need to fear.....Underdog premieres on NBC.
1970: WAPT (channel 16) signs on in Jackson, Mississippi. Its first broadcast is, appropriately enough, ABC coverage of an Ole Miss football game.
1973: Actress Neve Campbell (Party of Five) is born in Guelph, Ontario.
1976: Quincy M.E. premieres on NBC.
1983: Delivering a live NBC News Update, anchor Jessica Savitch appears drugged and incoherent; slurring her words, repeating phrases, and deviating from her script. The video of the infamous “meltdown” is impounded by NBC, but copies eventually get into circulation anyway.
1988: Doesn’t Ted Turner have enough channels yet? TNT launches on cable.
1992: Singer Sinéad O'Connor creates major controversy when she rips up a picture of Pope John Paul II (saying “Fight the real enemy”) on Saturday Night Live after singing an a cappella version of Bob Marley's "War." The act catches the production staff totally off-guard (in the dress rehearsal, she had instead held up a photo of a starving African child). NBC has as a matter of policy used the innocuous dress rehearsal footage in rebroadcasts, although footage of the Pope incident was released on an SNL DVD.
2001: A special, hastily-written episode of NBC’s The West Wing, addressing the issue of terrorism in the wake of the September 11th attacks, airs in place of the scheduled broadcast. The episode, “Isaac and Ishmael,” is considered to be a special standalone episode that is not officially part of the show’s continuity.
2001: According to Jim premieres on ABC.
2002: Producer/director Bruce Paltrow (The White Shadow, St. Elsewhere, Homicide: Life on the Street) dies in Rome, Italy, aged 58.
2003: Port Charles is canceled by ABC, ironically shortly after the series received its first Daytime Emmy nomination.
2004: Boston Legal and Desperate Housewives both have their ABC debuts.
2005: British comedian Ronnie Barker (The Two Ronnies) dies in Adderbury, Oxfordshire, aged 76.
(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…..)
1942: Actor Alan Rachins (L.A. Law, Dharma & Greg) is born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
1947: D.C.’s second TV station WTVW (shortly thereafter to become WJLA-TV) debuts on channel 7. It is the first VHF hi-band station in the U.S. (The WTVW calls would, of course, soon end up on another channel 7 in Evansville, Indiana.)
1954: KFVS-TV (channel 12) launches in Cape Girardeau, Missouri.
1954: The first of 203 episodes of Father Knows Best airs on CBS.
1955: A double treat for the kiddies: Captain Kangaroo debuts on CBS, and The Mickey Mouse Club launches on ABC.
1955: WDBJ (channel 7) signs on in Roanoke, Virginia.
1960: The Andy Griffith Show premieres on CBS.
1961: The Dick Van Dyke Show debuts on CBS.
1964: There’s no need to fear.....Underdog premieres on NBC.
1970: WAPT (channel 16) signs on in Jackson, Mississippi. Its first broadcast is, appropriately enough, ABC coverage of an Ole Miss football game.
1973: Actress Neve Campbell (Party of Five) is born in Guelph, Ontario.
1976: Quincy M.E. premieres on NBC.
1983: Delivering a live NBC News Update, anchor Jessica Savitch appears drugged and incoherent; slurring her words, repeating phrases, and deviating from her script. The video of the infamous “meltdown” is impounded by NBC, but copies eventually get into circulation anyway.
1988: Doesn’t Ted Turner have enough channels yet? TNT launches on cable.
1992: Singer Sinéad O'Connor creates major controversy when she rips up a picture of Pope John Paul II (saying “Fight the real enemy”) on Saturday Night Live after singing an a cappella version of Bob Marley's "War." The act catches the production staff totally off-guard (in the dress rehearsal, she had instead held up a photo of a starving African child). NBC has as a matter of policy used the innocuous dress rehearsal footage in rebroadcasts, although footage of the Pope incident was released on an SNL DVD.
2001: A special, hastily-written episode of NBC’s The West Wing, addressing the issue of terrorism in the wake of the September 11th attacks, airs in place of the scheduled broadcast. The episode, “Isaac and Ishmael,” is considered to be a special standalone episode that is not officially part of the show’s continuity.
2001: According to Jim premieres on ABC.
2002: Producer/director Bruce Paltrow (The White Shadow, St. Elsewhere, Homicide: Life on the Street) dies in Rome, Italy, aged 58.
2003: Port Charles is canceled by ABC, ironically shortly after the series received its first Daytime Emmy nomination.
2004: Boston Legal and Desperate Housewives both have their ABC debuts.
2005: British comedian Ronnie Barker (The Two Ronnies) dies in Adderbury, Oxfordshire, aged 76.
(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…..)