Now, part two with the nighttime shows on March 15, 1969:
TV Guide, Northern Alabama edition--cover, Buddy Foster, Ken Berry ("Mayberry R.F.D.")
NOTE: Channels in parentheses were originally designated by black bullets; those in brackets by white.
Birmingham, Alabama:
[6] WBRC (ABC; now FOX affiliate on digital 50; PSIP 6)
[10] WBIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now PBS affiliate on digital 10; PSIP same)
[13] WAPI ("cherry-picked" both CBS and NBC; now WVTM, sole NBC affiliate, on digital 13; PSIP same)
[42] WBMG (took WAPI rejects; now WIAT, sole CBS affiliate, on digital 30; PSIP 42)
Cheaha State Park, Alabama:
[7] WCIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now PBS affiliate on digital 7; PSIP same)
Florence, Alabama:
(15) WOWL (NBC primary, CBS secondary; now WHDF, CW affiliate serving entire Huntsville-Decatur-Florence market, on digital 14; PSIP 15)
Russellville, Alabama:
(36) WFIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now licensed to Florence as PBS affiliate on digital 22; PSIP 36)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama:
[33] WCFT (same network programming as WBMG above; now ABC affiliate on digital 33; PSIP same)
Huntsville, Alabama:
(19) WHNT (CBS; now digital 19; PSIP same)
(25) WHIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now PBS affiliate on digital 24; PSIP 25)
(31) WAAY (NBC; now ABC affiliate on digital 32; PSIP 31)
(48) WMSL (ABC; now WAFF, NBC affiliate, on digital 48; PSIP same)
Nashville, Tennessee:
(4) WSM (NBC; now WSMV on digital 10; PSIP 4)
(5) WLAC (CBS; now WTVF on digital 25; PSIP 5)
(8) WSIX (ABC; now WKRN on digital 27; PSIP 2)
Columbus, Mississippi:
[4] WCBI (CBS primary, ABC secondary; now sole CBS affiliate on digital 35; PSIP 4)
EVENING
6:00 p.m.
[4] WCBI News (b&w)
(4) Flatt and Scruggs--legendary bluegrass music duo, known mostly to mainstream America for their theme for "The Beverly Hillbillies," appeared in this entry, yet another one from Music City, U.S.A. (Flatt and Scruggs, however, broke up later that year)
(5) WLAC News (color)
[6] Death Valley Days--probably then-current episode, with Robert Taylor as host
[13] Beverly Hillbillies--CBS tape-delay from previous week (see other posts about Birmingham stations' practices; no need to explain it all again here)
(15) (31) Huntley-Brinkley Report
(19) Skippy
[33] [42] CBS Evening News
(48) WMSL News (color)
6:30
[4] (5) (19) Jackie Gleason--"The Great One" held court in Miami Beach with Sid Caesar and George Jessel, among others
(4) (15) (31) [33] [42] Adam-12--first season for durable Jack Webb police drama and Martin Milner's second show where he spent most of his time behind the wheel ("Route 66")
[6] Festival of Arts--WBRC special about annual Birmingham celebration
(8) (48) Dating Game--primetime version of daytime hit; celebrities were featured often if not exclusively
[13] Green Acres
7:00
(4) (15) (31) [33] [42] Get Smart--Don Adams to Edward Platt: "Well, sorry, about that, Chief." (personal note: my family used that phrase for years when I was little, and I never knew its source until I learned about it in Adams' obituary in 2005--I never saw the show in afternoon reruns in the Seventies, since not one station in three different markets carried it--that is the God's honest truth)
[6] (8) (48) Newlywed Game--Chuck Barris rolling in the primetime dough with this and "Dating" above (the gravy train came to an end, though, with PTAR in 1971--both shows wound up with several syndie versions for decades afterward, certainly something the FCC did not intend when it formulated that infamous rule)
[13] Family Affair
7:30
[4] (5) (19) [33] [42] My Three Sons--RIP Don Grady (1944-2012)
(4) [13] (15) (31) Ghost and Mrs. Muir--Hope Lange in this hybrid sitcom/horror show; NBC cancelled this not long afterward and it wound up on ABC for another year
[6] (8) (48) Lawrence Welk--"A one, and a two ..."
8:00
[4] (5) (19) [33] [42] Hogan's Heroes--Vito Scotti in this episode as an Italian defector who wanders onto Stalag 13
(4) (15) (31) Movie--"The Vikings," 1958 (Kirk Douglas, Tony Curtis)
[13] NBA Basketball--Atlanta Hawks vs. Philadelphia 76ers (the team's first season in the ATL, with Skip Caray, years before his stint with the baseball Braves behind the mike--probably WSB origination. Also, Caray came with the team from its original home in St. Louis, where papa Harry was still calling Cardinals baseball)
8:30
[4] Fun at the Races--probably a prototype of the later franchised grocery-store promotion "Let's Go to the Races" that was a staple in some places in the Seventies
(5) (19) [33] [42] Petticoat Junction--June Lockhart (as Janet) taking over for the late Bea Benaderet's Kate Bradley character this season
[6] (8) (48) Hollywood Palace--straight-ahead variety show; Sammy Davis, Jr. was tonight's host (no fixed one from week to week), with the following on the bill: James Brown (doing a medley of his classics), Peggy Lipton of "The Mod Squad," Charo, and Nipsey Russell (this lineup would have been a winner in my book)
9:00
[4] (19) Mannix--For the second season, producer Bruce Geller dropped the techno themes from 1967-68 and had Mike Connors' title character go into business for himself
(5) Death Valley Days
[33] Bill Anderson
[42] Wrestling--again, the Gulas promotion, this time hosted by WBMG sports anchor Sterling Brewer
9:30
(5) WLAC News (color)
[6] Movie--"It's Always Fair Weather," 1955
(8) Nashville Country Jamboree--live, in-studio WSIX production, featuring country performers who, in the main, were not scheduled to appear on that night's Grand Ole Opry show (still at the Ryman Auditorium in downtown Nashville then)
[33] Movie--"The Big Beat," 1958 (musical montage of then-popular standards, jazz, R&B, and big-band acts--with no rock and roll!)
(48) The Answer--Southern Baptist-produced religious drama, recorded back in the late 1950s (long shelf life, apparently)
10:00
[4] Jonathan Winters--famed comic had two-season CBS variety show (tape-delayed from previous week)
(5) Mannix--strange: WLAC tape-delayed the show from the CBS feed just the hour before (why?)
[13] Jackie Gleason--CBS tape-delay from 6:30 p.m.
(19) Movie--"The Green-Eyed Blonde," 1957
(48) ABC News--anchor not given
10:15
(48) Movie--no title given
10:30
(4) WSM News (color)
(15) Tonight Show--NBC Saturday rerun of Carson
(31) Movie--"Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women," 1966 (no, it was straight sci-fi, not a comedy as it seems)
[42] Movie--"Project Moonbase," 1953
10:45
(4) Movie--"Western Union," 1941 (Randolph Scott Western flick)
11:00
[4] Big Picture
(5) World of Sports--probably local
[13] Tonight Show--same as WOWL at 10:30 p.m. (but here's where things get interesting: WCFT and WBMG cleared the WEEKNIGHT first-run episodes, while WAPI ran NBC and CBS reruns at 10 p.m. Monday-Friday and movies after the 11 p.m. news--again, ask bpatrick or others why, because I wasn't around then)
11:05
(5) Movie--"Timberjack," 1955
11:15
[6] ABC News
(48) Championship Bowling
11:30
[6] News in Review--unsure if syndicated or local (and boy, what a weird timeslot for it, too ... also aired the next morning at 11:30 a.m.)
11:50
(31) Movie--"Safari," 1956
12:00 a.m.
[6] Movie--"Nero and the Burning of Rome," Italian; 1955 (natch!)
[13] Movie--"Blackwell's Island," 1939
(19) The Beat!!!--syndicated soul and R&B-music show hosted by legendary Nashville disc jockey Bill "Hoss" Allen (but the show itself was recorded in Dallas back in the mid-Sixties, since none of the Nashville stations, or those in nearby markets, had color cameras and VTR equipment then)
[42] WBMG Salute--too bad VCRs were not around in 1969; this would have been a gas to check out (!!)
12:30
(8) ABC News
TV Guide, Northern Alabama edition--cover, Buddy Foster, Ken Berry ("Mayberry R.F.D.")
NOTE: Channels in parentheses were originally designated by black bullets; those in brackets by white.
Birmingham, Alabama:
[6] WBRC (ABC; now FOX affiliate on digital 50; PSIP 6)
[10] WBIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now PBS affiliate on digital 10; PSIP same)
[13] WAPI ("cherry-picked" both CBS and NBC; now WVTM, sole NBC affiliate, on digital 13; PSIP same)
[42] WBMG (took WAPI rejects; now WIAT, sole CBS affiliate, on digital 30; PSIP 42)
Cheaha State Park, Alabama:
[7] WCIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now PBS affiliate on digital 7; PSIP same)
Florence, Alabama:
(15) WOWL (NBC primary, CBS secondary; now WHDF, CW affiliate serving entire Huntsville-Decatur-Florence market, on digital 14; PSIP 15)
Russellville, Alabama:
(36) WFIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now licensed to Florence as PBS affiliate on digital 22; PSIP 36)
Tuscaloosa, Alabama:
[33] WCFT (same network programming as WBMG above; now ABC affiliate on digital 33; PSIP same)
Huntsville, Alabama:
(19) WHNT (CBS; now digital 19; PSIP same)
(25) WHIQ (NET)--translator of Alabama Educational (Public) Television (now PBS affiliate on digital 24; PSIP 25)
(31) WAAY (NBC; now ABC affiliate on digital 32; PSIP 31)
(48) WMSL (ABC; now WAFF, NBC affiliate, on digital 48; PSIP same)
Nashville, Tennessee:
(4) WSM (NBC; now WSMV on digital 10; PSIP 4)
(5) WLAC (CBS; now WTVF on digital 25; PSIP 5)
(8) WSIX (ABC; now WKRN on digital 27; PSIP 2)
Columbus, Mississippi:
[4] WCBI (CBS primary, ABC secondary; now sole CBS affiliate on digital 35; PSIP 4)
EVENING
6:00 p.m.
[4] WCBI News (b&w)
(4) Flatt and Scruggs--legendary bluegrass music duo, known mostly to mainstream America for their theme for "The Beverly Hillbillies," appeared in this entry, yet another one from Music City, U.S.A. (Flatt and Scruggs, however, broke up later that year)
(5) WLAC News (color)
[6] Death Valley Days--probably then-current episode, with Robert Taylor as host
[13] Beverly Hillbillies--CBS tape-delay from previous week (see other posts about Birmingham stations' practices; no need to explain it all again here)
(15) (31) Huntley-Brinkley Report
(19) Skippy
[33] [42] CBS Evening News
(48) WMSL News (color)
6:30
[4] (5) (19) Jackie Gleason--"The Great One" held court in Miami Beach with Sid Caesar and George Jessel, among others
(4) (15) (31) [33] [42] Adam-12--first season for durable Jack Webb police drama and Martin Milner's second show where he spent most of his time behind the wheel ("Route 66")
[6] Festival of Arts--WBRC special about annual Birmingham celebration
(8) (48) Dating Game--primetime version of daytime hit; celebrities were featured often if not exclusively
[13] Green Acres
7:00
(4) (15) (31) [33] [42] Get Smart--Don Adams to Edward Platt: "Well, sorry, about that, Chief." (personal note: my family used that phrase for years when I was little, and I never knew its source until I learned about it in Adams' obituary in 2005--I never saw the show in afternoon reruns in the Seventies, since not one station in three different markets carried it--that is the God's honest truth)
[6] (8) (48) Newlywed Game--Chuck Barris rolling in the primetime dough with this and "Dating" above (the gravy train came to an end, though, with PTAR in 1971--both shows wound up with several syndie versions for decades afterward, certainly something the FCC did not intend when it formulated that infamous rule)
[13] Family Affair
7:30
[4] (5) (19) [33] [42] My Three Sons--RIP Don Grady (1944-2012)
(4) [13] (15) (31) Ghost and Mrs. Muir--Hope Lange in this hybrid sitcom/horror show; NBC cancelled this not long afterward and it wound up on ABC for another year
[6] (8) (48) Lawrence Welk--"A one, and a two ..."
8:00
[4] (5) (19) [33] [42] Hogan's Heroes--Vito Scotti in this episode as an Italian defector who wanders onto Stalag 13
(4) (15) (31) Movie--"The Vikings," 1958 (Kirk Douglas, Tony Curtis)
[13] NBA Basketball--Atlanta Hawks vs. Philadelphia 76ers (the team's first season in the ATL, with Skip Caray, years before his stint with the baseball Braves behind the mike--probably WSB origination. Also, Caray came with the team from its original home in St. Louis, where papa Harry was still calling Cardinals baseball)
8:30
[4] Fun at the Races--probably a prototype of the later franchised grocery-store promotion "Let's Go to the Races" that was a staple in some places in the Seventies
(5) (19) [33] [42] Petticoat Junction--June Lockhart (as Janet) taking over for the late Bea Benaderet's Kate Bradley character this season
[6] (8) (48) Hollywood Palace--straight-ahead variety show; Sammy Davis, Jr. was tonight's host (no fixed one from week to week), with the following on the bill: James Brown (doing a medley of his classics), Peggy Lipton of "The Mod Squad," Charo, and Nipsey Russell (this lineup would have been a winner in my book)
9:00
[4] (19) Mannix--For the second season, producer Bruce Geller dropped the techno themes from 1967-68 and had Mike Connors' title character go into business for himself
(5) Death Valley Days
[33] Bill Anderson
[42] Wrestling--again, the Gulas promotion, this time hosted by WBMG sports anchor Sterling Brewer
9:30
(5) WLAC News (color)
[6] Movie--"It's Always Fair Weather," 1955
(8) Nashville Country Jamboree--live, in-studio WSIX production, featuring country performers who, in the main, were not scheduled to appear on that night's Grand Ole Opry show (still at the Ryman Auditorium in downtown Nashville then)
[33] Movie--"The Big Beat," 1958 (musical montage of then-popular standards, jazz, R&B, and big-band acts--with no rock and roll!)
(48) The Answer--Southern Baptist-produced religious drama, recorded back in the late 1950s (long shelf life, apparently)
10:00
[4] Jonathan Winters--famed comic had two-season CBS variety show (tape-delayed from previous week)
(5) Mannix--strange: WLAC tape-delayed the show from the CBS feed just the hour before (why?)
[13] Jackie Gleason--CBS tape-delay from 6:30 p.m.
(19) Movie--"The Green-Eyed Blonde," 1957
(48) ABC News--anchor not given
10:15
(48) Movie--no title given
10:30
(4) WSM News (color)
(15) Tonight Show--NBC Saturday rerun of Carson
(31) Movie--"Voyage to the Planet of Prehistoric Women," 1966 (no, it was straight sci-fi, not a comedy as it seems)
[42] Movie--"Project Moonbase," 1953
10:45
(4) Movie--"Western Union," 1941 (Randolph Scott Western flick)
11:00
[4] Big Picture
(5) World of Sports--probably local
[13] Tonight Show--same as WOWL at 10:30 p.m. (but here's where things get interesting: WCFT and WBMG cleared the WEEKNIGHT first-run episodes, while WAPI ran NBC and CBS reruns at 10 p.m. Monday-Friday and movies after the 11 p.m. news--again, ask bpatrick or others why, because I wasn't around then)
11:05
(5) Movie--"Timberjack," 1955
11:15
[6] ABC News
(48) Championship Bowling
11:30
[6] News in Review--unsure if syndicated or local (and boy, what a weird timeslot for it, too ... also aired the next morning at 11:30 a.m.)
11:50
(31) Movie--"Safari," 1956
12:00 a.m.
[6] Movie--"Nero and the Burning of Rome," Italian; 1955 (natch!)
[13] Movie--"Blackwell's Island," 1939
(19) The Beat!!!--syndicated soul and R&B-music show hosted by legendary Nashville disc jockey Bill "Hoss" Allen (but the show itself was recorded in Dallas back in the mid-Sixties, since none of the Nashville stations, or those in nearby markets, had color cameras and VTR equipment then)
[42] WBMG Salute--too bad VCRs were not around in 1969; this would have been a gas to check out (!!)
12:30
(8) ABC News