D
desertv
Guest
Why does network primetime programming start at 8 PM on the East and West Coasts (Instead of 7 PM as it is in the Rockies and Midwest)?
bpatrick said:You could put it here because the reasons go
back to the early days of television. In the
heyday of network radio, the networks found
that people tended to listen mainly between
7 and 9 PM, then turned off the radio, did the
dishes, got ready for bed, etc. When television
came along, they found that people did chores
first, then settled down in front of the tube.
Originally, CBS and NBC aired 15 minutes of news
and 15 minutes of music with people like Perry Como
and Dinah Shore from 7:30-8, starting their regular
entertainment shows at 8. ABC, in order to counter
and get a head start on the evening's viewing, put
its newscast at 7:15 in 1953, with primetime starting
at 7:30.
By the 1954-55 season ABC had three especially
popular shows at 7:30: "Disneyland," "The Lone Ranger,"
and "Rin Tin Tin." That prompted CBS to follow suit in
the fall of 1955 and it came up with three winners as
well: "Robin Hood," "Name That Tune," and "Sgt. Preston
Of The Yukon." NBC held out until 1957.
Then in 1970 the FCC decreed that the networks would
have to give back a half-hour in order to grant local entities
and small production companies whose shows weren't making
it to the networks "access" to the airwaves. The Prime Time
Access Rule went into effect in the fall of 1971; the networks
themselves chose to give 7:30 back to the affiliates, as the
audience at that time tended to be children and older people.
The first year, the networks started primetime at 7:30 some
nights, 8 PM others; the second year CBS and NBC started at
7:30 on Sundays, otherwise primetime started at 8. In 1975
the FCC allowed a 7 PM start on Sundays provided the first
hour was devoted to public affairs ("60 Minutes") or children's
programming (Disney). To make
a long story short, PTAR no longer exists but no affiliate is
going to give back 7:30 (although primetime starts at 7 on
Sundays).
Theoretically, too, the whole country could be placed on a
"clock time" schedule, with primetime 8 to 11 in all time zones.
The Central time zone was put on a 7 PM start back when the
technology forced its stations to go along with the East Coast,
and the networks assume that people are used to network news
at 5:30, primetime from 7-10, and late-night shows at 10:35
in the Central time zone. Someone else will have to tell you
why the Mountain time zone also goes 7-10; that time zone has
been a crazy patchwork of scheduling in the past.
While not an exhaustive history, I hope this answers some of
your questions.
bpatrick said:There have also been a few shows at 7
on Saturday, although I can't think of any
since Beany And Cecil on ABC in 1962.
MACK184 said:everytime a moose got in the way of a microwave horn, the feed to the xmtr went out, and there you sat with a blank screen.
Braves2005 said:bpatrick said:There have also been a few shows at 7
on Saturday, although I can't think of any
since Beany And Cecil on ABC in 1962.
The Lawrence Welk Show on ABC, I think, spent its entire 16 year network run on Saturday nights at 6:30 Central.
In the late 60's and early 70's, several network series appeared at 6:30 Central time on Saturday nights: Adam-12 on NBC in its 1st season(later moving to 7:30 Central after Andy Williams in 1969), Mission: Impossible on CBS during the 1970-1971 season, and The Andy Williams Show on NBC from 1969 to 1971.
genius said:Ah yes the Prime Time Access Rule...one of two big backfired FCC rulings from the 70s. The other one was "Family Viewing Hour". PTAR was supposed to be local time, with innovative programming like PM Magazine. Now if you're station isn't carrying a pair of game shows it's usually carrying sitcoms or who's shaving their head in Hollywood next...
Braves2005 said:The Lawrence Welk Show on ABC, I think, spent its entire 16 year network run on Saturday nights at 6:30 Central.
Ultimajock said:It was never run at 7:30/6:30 Central by ABC...