w9wi said:
bpatrick said:
In a market like Great Falls, which is outside the top 50, the access rule would not have come into play, and it would have been perfectly legal to run delayed network shows (or live feeds of shows airing 8-9 ET) in the 6-7 slot.
(emphasis mine)
You mention the Prime Time Access Rule in passing. By my reading, this rule would have prevented the extended prime time concept for significant periods.
The rule went into effect in late 1971 and as I understand it, initially applied to *all* stations. (regardless of market size) It was later amended to apply to only top-50 markets (when?), and repealed in 1996.
What the rule did, was to prevent stations from airing network programs for more than 3 of the 4-hour "prime time" period.
The first year of the rule (1971-72) the networks were restricted to 21 hours a week of prime time; there were some cases that first year where the networks would have to make up the time; for example, ABC programmed 7:30-11 on Tuesday and made up the 7:30 Tuesday half-hour on Mondays at 8:30 (a number of stations in NFL cities ran local coaches' shows before "Monday Night Football"); NBC programmed 7:30-11 Sunday and made up the half-hour on Fridays at 10:30, while CBS aired three hours every night, but from 7:30-10:30 on Tuesday and Sunday. The affiliates themselves, regardless of market size, could carry anything they wanted (WAGA, for example, reran "I Dream Of Jeannie" at 7:30 that first year).
It was in the fall of 1972 that the no-off-network reruns rule went into effect in the top 50 markets; if a station did air a delayed network program it would have to make up the time somewhere else (WBTV Charlotte would run "The Waltons" on a week-behind Thursdays at 7:30, followed by a syndicated show at 8:30, so there was no violation of the rule). ABC went with an 8-11 schedule every night; CBS and NBC chose to go 7:30-10:30 Sundays (mainly because Disney was on NBC) and give back 10:30-11; ABC did this as well in the 1973-74 season. In 1975 the rule was amended again, allowing the networks to program 7-11 Sundays, but the first hour had to be either public affairs or children's programming (this allowed CBS to put "60 Minutes" at 7 against kids' programming on ABC and NBC, and the rest is history).
True, some non-top-50 market stations would air network shows (WMAZ Macon, GA, a CBS primary, aired delayed ABC shows like "The Odd Couple" and "The Partridge Family" at 7:30, but it would make up the difference with a syndicated show, usually Friday 8-9, when CBS was weak). So if I understand you, and I believe you are correct, those stations in Great Falls could have aired network shows from 6-7 (MT), provided they made up the time somewhere else; if so, my mistake, since I thought the access rule had no restrictions outside the top 50.
One other point: technically, the rule applied to 7-8 PM (ET/PT); however, affiliates were allowed to carry network news at 7, and generally got around the rule by airing an hour of local news beforehand (at one time, all three affiliates in New York, Los Angeles, Washington, Boston, and Atlanta had their network newscasts at 7).
And yes, the rule was eliminated in 1996 and yes, stations still want the 7:30 timeslot for themselves, since it's very lucrative.