Ultimajock said:
...if I recall correctly, Burnett's company, C.B. Distribution, insisted on unusually long-term contracts with stations that only allowed them to burn the deals off by airing the show somewhere on the station's schedule for the entire term. That was specifically because every other variety series that had offered reruns in syndication previously had stiffed, and Burnett wanted to be the first to buck that trend. Indeed, Burnett was so popular personally that the stations were more than willing to go along. But ratings-wise, Carol Burnett and Friends never caught on, and only Benny Hill and Dave Allen were able to have any kind of decade-long success with syndicated variety reruns...
And when it was first syndicated, only seasons 6-10 were edited for this package; seasons 1-5 were and still are co-owned by Bob Banner (per the terms of her 10-year CBS contract which ran from 1962 to 1972) which is the key reason why sketches like the "dentist sketch" with Harvey Korman and Tim Conway from 1969, or her parodies of such films as Rita Hayworth's
Gilda and the Ryan O'Neal/Ali MacGraw
Love Story were never included; and when the package was first prepared season 11 wasn't even produced yet (I remember the syndicated
CB&F first ran in fall 1977, the same year Dick Van you-know-who's

ill-fated tenure on the show commenced). I think the only time any edited episodes from season 11 ran was when WTBS aired them.
I wonder how many markets (besides New York circa 1986-87, on WOR/WWOR after Burnett's show had been on WNEW for years) had a station that aired both the Benny Hill repeats and
CB&F, and if so were they run back-to-back? I also know that for a time in 1979, Hill's show was run back-to-back with the failed half-hour edits of Jackie Gleason's 1962-66
American Scene Magazine. And Hill, on some occasions, had invited comparisons to both Gleason and Burnett in different ways (not to mention Red Skelton).
(I also must add that while Dave Allen ran for many years on some U.S. stations [notably Chicago public TV outlet WTTW], in New York he'd flopped ignominiously; first on WPIX in 1975, and then on WOR in 1980. A shame really, as I saw his show on both occasions when it was run.)
Speaking of Gleason, and in keeping with the original intent of this thread, a few things: a) Milton Berle had learned that Buick had bolted him for Gleason (and the ultimately one-season "Classic 39"
Honeymooners) in 1955 due to passing by a newsstand and seeing a headline in weekly
Variety; and b) Gleason himself, when his own show was finally cancelled in 1970, learned about it by reading it in the newspaper.