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Retro: Cleveland/Akron--Wed, Jan 2, 1974

Cleveland Press TV Showtime, December 28, 1973-January 4, 1974--cover, Lee Meriwether ("Barnaby Jones")

Cleveland, Ohio:
(3) WKYC (NBC)
(5) WEWS (ABC)
(8) WJW (CBS)--now FOX affiliate
(25) WVIZ (PBS)*
(43) WUAB (Ind.)--now MyNetworkTV affiliate
(61) WKBF (Ind.)--frequency now occupied by WQHS-TV (Univision)

Akron, Ohio:
(23) WAKR (ABC)--now WVPX, an ION television affiliate

*Because of the school holidays, WVIZ did not begin broadcasting until 4 p.m.

MORNING
7:00
(3) Today Show--Frank McGee, Barbara Walters
(5) WEWS News
(8) CBS Morning News--Hughes Rudd, Sally Quinn (infamous "beauty and the grouch" pairing that did not work due to Quinn's lack of TV savvy; Quinn, now the wife of retired Washington Post publisher Ben Bradlee, left the show in February)

7:30
(5) Casper--children's cartoon

8:00
(5) Morning Exchange--long-running local talk/variety show; reputed to have been a model for "Good Morning America," which premiered in 1975
(8) Captain Kangaroo

9:00
(3) Mike Douglas (90-minute version; show began as local show on channel 3 in 1961. When the FCC ordered NBC, which owned its Philadelphia station, to swap stations with channel 3 (then KYW-TV) owner Westinghouse/Group W in 1965 due to NBC's essentially blackmailing Group W nearly a decade earlier, Douglas (and the callsign, among other things) went to Philadelphia with the ownership. Still, the Cleveland station kept airing the now-syndicated Douglas show for years.
(8) Phil Donahue (60-minute version; Donahue was a native of Cleveland)

9:30
(23) It is Written--WAKR ran a large amount of paid religious programming not only on Sundays, but during the week as well; this was likely due to the large evangelical Christian population in the Akron area, many of whom were industrial workers who migrated to the area from the Southern U.S. The constituency was so large that two prominent televangelists of the day, Rex Humbard and Ernest Angley, based their operations in Akron.

10:00
(5) Split Second--one-day delay
(8) Joker's Wild
(23) Insight--religion

10:30
(3) Baffle--game show hosted by sportscaster Dick Enberg
(5) I Dream of Jeannie--sitcom rerun
(8) $10,000 Pyramid
(43) Romper Room--local version of franchised children's show
(23) (61) Jack LaLanne

11:00
(3) Wizard of Odds
(5) Love, American Style--one-day delay
(8) Gambit
(23) Romper Room--apparently the franchisor, Claster Television, considered Akron a separate TV market and did not regard it as conflicting with the WUAB version, broadcast the previous half hour
(43) Coffee Shoppee--local women's show hosted by Alice Weston; "Shoppe" deliberately spelled with an extra "e" on the end, apparently in order for the two words to rhyme
(61) Newsroom--probably local

11:30
(3) Hollywood Squares
(5) (23) Brady Bunch--sitcom rerun
(8) Love of Life
(43) Romper Room (another episode or a repeat of an hour earlier?)
(61) Kimba--early Japanese anime children's show

11:55
(8) CBS News--Douglas Edwards

AFTERNOON
12:00
(3) Jeopardy
(5) (23) Password--version with original rules, still hosted by Allen Ludden
(8) WJW News (titled "City Camera" for many years)
(43) Real McCoys
(61) Banana Splits--rerun of 1968-70 Saturday-morning children's show

12:30
(3) Who, What or Where Game (cancelled two days later)
(5) WEWS News
(8) Search for Tomorrow
(23) Split Second--game show hosted by Tom Kennedy
(43) Movie--"Deep Valley," 1947

12:55
(3) NBC News--Edwin Newman

1:00
(3) Dinah's Place--tape-delayed from earlier in the day
(5) (23) All My Children
(8) Young and the Restless--tape-delayed from earlier
(61) I Love Lucy

1:30
(3) Three on a Match--game show hosted by Bill Cullen
(5) (23) Let's Make a Deal
(8) As the World Turns--then TV's highest-rated soap opera
(61) Dick Van Dyke

2:00
(3) Days of Our Lives
(5) (23) Newlywed Game
(8) Guiding Light
(61) Make Room for Daddy--sitcom rerun starring Danny Thomas

2:30
(3) Doctors
(5) (23) Girl in My Life--daytime update of "Queen for a Day"
(8) Edge of Night
(43) Barnaby--longtime Cleveland children's show hosted by Linn Sheldon that began on WKYC in 1957 and moved to WUAB in 1968; ran until 1990, a very long run for that genre
(61) New Zoo Revue--syndicated children's show

3:00
(3) Another World
(5) (23) General Hospital (still at that timeslot today)
(8) Price is Right
(43) Adventures of Superman--rerun of 1952-58 series, with George Reeves in the title role
(61) Magilla Gorilla--1960s Hanna-Barbera cartoon

3:30
(3) Return to Peyton Place--unsuccessful daytime adaptation of 1960s smash prime-time soap opera; two days later, NBC canceled the show
(5) (23) One Life to Live
(8) Match Game '73--less than a year old and already daytime's highest-rated show
(43) Speed Racer--cartoon
(61) Three Stooges--probably a single short with at least 7 minutes of commercials

4:00
(3) Somerset--soap that struggled over a 7-year existence
(5) That Girl--sitcom rerun
(8) Adventure Road--long-running daily travelogue; WWJ (now WDIV) in Detroit did something similar in the afternoons during this time with host George Pierrot
(23) Love, American Style--half-hour rerun
(25) Sesame Street
(43) Lost in Space--rerun
(61) Little Rascals--probably same format as "Three Stooges" at 3:30

4:30
(3) Beat the Clock--famous stunt game, syndicated and recorded in Canada
(5) Big Valley--rerun
(8) Merv Griffin (90-minute version)
(23) Tarzan--rerun of 1960s series
(61) Munsters--sitcom rerun

5:00
(3) Mod Squad--rerun of 1968-73 crime drama
(25) Misterogers (Neighborhood)
(43) Gilligan's Island--rerun
(61) Flintstones

5:30
(5) Bowling for Dollars--local version of game-show format popular among stations in the Northeast and Midwest; Don Webster, host
(23) Garner Ted Armstrong--televangelist affiliated with an apocalyptic, "end-times" church
(25) Zoom--children's activity-based show; revived during 1999-2005
(43) Patty Duke--sitcom rerun

EVENING
6:00
(3) WKYC News
(5) WEWS News
(8) WJW News
(23) WAKR News
(25) Coming of a Comet--documentary about the comet Kohoutek
(43) Gomer Pyle, USMC--sitcom rerun
(61) Lucy (Lucille Ball) Show

6:30
(3) NBC Nightly News--John Chancellor
(5) (23) ABC Evening News--Howard K. Smith, Harry Reasoner
(8) CBS Evening News--Walter Cronkite
(43) Green Acres--rerun
(61) Beverly Hillbillies--rerun; viewers could take their pick of one of the two "rural shows" CBS cancelled back in 1971

7:00
(3) WKYC News--station was one of the few in the Eastern Time Zone to run a local newscast in this timeslot; WKYC revived a 7 p.m. newscast in 2000
(5) To Tell the Truth--syndicated version hosted by Garry Moore
(8) Truth or Consequences--Bob Barker in his 17th year of hijinks and stunts; the show would continue in production for another year and a half
(23) The Man from U.N.C.L.E.--rerun
(25) Electric Company--fondly-remembered children's reading-skills show; featured humorous sketches in the lessons
(43) Hogan's Heroes--rerun; first episode of one-hour block
(61) Mission: Impossible--rerun

7:30
(3) Wait till Your Father Gets Home--syndicated adult cartoon by Hanna-Barbera; essentially, an animated "All in the Family"
(5) To be announced (WEWS normally ran a so-called "checkerboard" variety of syndie games and family shows in the slot)
(8) Dating Game--syndicated; had been cancelled six months earlier on ABC daytime
(25) French Chef--Julia Child came on a bit too late to help housewives with their dinner preparations (!)
(43) Hogan's Heroes (see 7:00 above)

8:00
(3) Adam-12--durable Jack Webb-packaged half-hour show about two cops on the L.A. beat; perhaps a forerunner of "COPS"
(5) (23) Dick Clark Special--probably a retrospective of the 1950s and 1960s
(8) Sonny and Cher--last season for the duo (and the last year of their marriage)
(25) Bill Moyers' Journal--the veteran journalist kicked around PBS while not working for CBS or other projects
(43) Untouchables--rerun; the show that caused such an outcry in the early 1960s had been rendered pretty harmless by the passage of time (and vastly more violent TV fare therein)
(61) Night Gallery--rerun of early 1970s Rod Serling anthology on NBC

8:30
(3) NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie--"Tenafly" (essentially a rip-off of the "Shaft" phenomenon featuring an African-American gumshoe; this was the last episode, and NBC would ditch the midweek version of its successful Sunday night feature at the end of the season)
(5) (23) Movie--"A Brand New Life," 1973 (made-for-TV)
(25) Conflicts--anthology series

9:00
(8) Cannon
(43) Movie--"From Hell to Texas," 1958
(61) Movie--"Captain Horatio Hornblower," 1951

9:30
(25) Woman--feminist-oriented women's documentary/interview series

10:00
(3) Love Story--romantic anthology; as far as can be determined, had no relation to the 1970 Erich Segal movie (final episode)
(5) (23) Owen Marshall, Counselor at Law--crime drama starring Arthur Hill
(8) Kojak--the 1973-74 TV season's greatest new hit (by a long shot)
(25) Firing Line--William F. Buckley, Jr.'s weekly forum for intellectual and political-oriented discussion

11:00
(3) WKYC News
(5) WEWS News
(8) WJW News
(23) Bill Anderson--syndicated country-music show; WAKR ran a "checkerboard" of similar Nashville-based shows in this timeslot on weeknights
(43) Boris Karloff Presents--rerun of his "Thriller," which ran from 1960 to 1962 on NBC
(61) Avengers--rerun of British hybrid of crime drama and fantasy

11:30
(3) Tonight Show--Johnny Carson
(5) (23) Wide World of Entertainment--"On Location -- Rod Serling at Los Angeles International Airport" (This is remarkable--Serling appears on two different shows in the Cleveland market on the same day, neither of which is "Twlight Zone")
(8) Movie--"Crimson Pirate," 1952

1:00 a.m.
(3) Tomorrow--Tom Snyder (once a news anchor at Cleveland's channel 3 in the early 1960s, then known as KYW-TV)
(5) Inner Circle--unknown

1:30
(5) WEWS News

1:40
(8) Movie--"The Last Wagon," 1956
 
A few observations and questions . . .
- I noticed that four of the five NBC O&O's had The Mike Douglas Show on their schedules. (Besides WKYC, there was WMAQ-TV Chicago, WRC-TV Washington, DC and KNBC Los Angeles.) The only exception was in New York - where it was aired on CBS-owned WCBS-TV.
- Would I be correct or not in assuming that WKYC was the only one of the NBC O&O's of the time not to have their own movie show (i.e. WNBC-TV's Movie 4 / Cinema 4 or WMAQ-TV's Movie 5)? Or would it have aired on weekends, if at all?
 
Cleveland Press TV Showtime, December 28, 1973-January 4, 1974--cover, Lee Meriwether ("Barnaby Jones")

Cleveland, Ohio:
(3) WKYC (NBC)
(5) WEWS (ABC)
(8) WJW (CBS)--now FOX affiliate
(25) WVIZ (PBS)*
(43) WUAB (Ind.)--now MyNetworkTV affiliate
(61) WKBF (Ind.)--frequency now occupied by WQHS-TV (Univision)

Akron, Ohio:
(23) WAKR (ABC)--now WVPX, an ION television affiliate

*Because of the school holidays, WVIZ did not begin broadcasting until 4 p.m.


9:30
(23) It is Written--WAKR ran a large amount of paid religious programming not only on Sundays, but during the week as well; this was likely due to the large evangelical Christian population in the Akron area, many of whom were industrial workers who migrated to the area from the Southern U.S. The constituency was so large that two prominent televangelists of the day, Rex Humbard and Ernest Angley, based their operations in Akron.

While not nationally known as such, Charles Billington founded Akron Baptist Temple in 1934. This church also had a lot of transplanted Southerners in the congregation and was known as a very large fundamental work in its day, and had a large TV and Radio Ministry for years. Two prominent members founded large congregations of their own that had extensive broadcast ministries..Dr. Harold Henniger of Canton Bapist Temple and Dr. Bruce D. Cummons of Massillon Baptist Temple..

10:30
(43) Romper Room--local version of franchised children's show

11:00
(23) Romper Room--apparently the franchisor, Claster Television, considered Akron a separate TV market and did not regard it as conflicting with the WUAB version, broadcast the previous half hour

I beleve this was a Sytndicated version of Romper Room...They may have both been the same episode.
12:30
(5) WEWS News
Eyewitness News Noon Report



2:30
(43) Barnaby--longtime Cleveland children's show hosted by Linn Sheldon that began on WKYC in 1957 and moved to WUAB in 1968; ran until 1990, a very long run for that genre
Sheldon was at WKBF-61 for a while in 1968..He took a break from Barnaby in the late 1960's, reviving hin in 1969 at Channel 43.

(61) New Zoo Revue--syndicated children's show
Till recentily still being shown on Multicutural stations, including WOAC-TV 67 Canton


5:30
(5) Bowling for Dollars--local version of game-show format popular among stations in the Northeast and Midwest; Don Webster, host
WJW-TV's Dick Goddard also hosted a version in the late 1970's at 7PM weeknights

Also:KYW/WKYC had a 5:00 Movie from 1959-early 1970's. They probably had canceled it not long before this
 
Tim L said:
10:30
(43) Romper Room--local version of franchised children's show

11:00
(23) Romper Room--apparently the franchisor, Claster Television, considered Akron a separate TV market and did not regard it as conflicting with the WUAB version, broadcast the previous half hour

I beleve this was a Sytndicated version of Romper Room...They may have both been the same episode.

Though of course, there's a chance that they might've been different episodes -- because most syndicated programming was "bicycled" (in other words, a station gets its tapes or film from another station, then, after shown, sends it to the next station in the queue), the episode on WAKR might've been different than that on WUAB.
 
Uh- Maybe because he wants to. If he's willing to do it, It adds a lot to the posting instead of just being a program list..Dont think its up to you to say anyhow..
 
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