Re: Most Inexplicable Network Program Pre-Emption
Charles1 said:
It wasn't because of a "liberal bias" as much as it was that Channel 6's newscast was a cash cow for the station...plus, it was that much better than Channel 13's newscast. Throughout the 50's, 60's, and well into the '70's, WBRC was so dominant over the other two commercial stations in Birmingham (WAPI-13 and WBMG-42), that they could have shown anything and had a commanding ratings lead. Keep in mind, also, that ABC was a distant third in the national news race at the time.
Birmingham wasn't shut out from the national newscasts, though. Channel 13 showed Huntley-Brinkley, and Channel 42 carried Walter Cronkite.
Also, remember that in the late '60s and early '70s ABC had about a 60% clearance rate for its newscast;
things didn't begin to turn around until two things happened. First, in December 1970, Harry Reasoner moved
over from CBS and co-anchored with Howard K. Smith, which caused an uptick in the ratings. Second, as I've
mentioned more than once, Reasoner chastised the holdout affiliates at the 1971 ABC affiliates' convention,
saying that "any station with a network affiliation and not carrying that network's news is a disgrace."
(I remember that not long after that, Smith and Reasoner began airing in Atlanta.) The main reason ABC took
so long to achieve parity with CBS and NBC was, of course, ratings, but a number of affiliates had dropped the
broadcast in 1968 because they did believe Frank Reynolds (whom Reasoner replaced) was too liberal in his
commentaries (Smith was brought in in 1969 to balance him).
In Birmingham, I believe Channel 6 dropped ABC's newscast when it expanded from 15 to 30 minutes in 1967,
then began doing its own 15-minute "world news" program with Joe Langston. That little 15-minute broadcast
beat both Cronkite and Huntley-Brinkley for more than five years. Although I was living in Birmingham in 1972,
I never saw or heard a specific reason why 6 decided to pick up ABC's newscast (probably pressure from the
network), but in '72 and '73 6 was undergoing a massive overhaul of its late-afternoon/early-evening schedule,
dropping its 3:30 movie in favor of syndicated reruns, and (because of the access rule) replacing its 6 PM block
of Westerns with To Tell The Truth five nights a week at 6, and once-or-twice-a-week game shows like Hollywood Squares and the Dennis James version of The Price Is Right at 6:30.