| 
WRCV, Channel 3 (NBC) 
Morning | |
| 
06:25a | 
Thought
  for Today | 
| 
06:30a | 
Farm, Home and
  Garden | 
| 
07:00a | 
Cartoon
  Comics | 
| 
08:00a | 
The Catholic
  Hour | 
| 
08:30a | 
It
  is Written (color) | 
| 
09:00a | 
Satellite
  Police | 
| 
10:00a | 
Come
  Little Children (color) | 
| 
10:30a | 
Abbott and
  Costello | 
| 
11:00a | 
Bertie
  the Bunyip | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Buckskin
  Billy Playhouse – “Northwest
  Trail” | 
| 
01:00p | 
Danger is my
  Business (color) | 
| 
01:30p | 
Pinpoint | 
| 
02:00p | 
I Search for
  Adventure | 
| 
02:30p | 
Tales
  of the 77th Bengal Lancers | 
| 
03:00p | 
Hollywood
  Playhouse – “The Kid
  from Cleveland” | 
| 
04:30p | 
Kingdom
  of the Sea (color) | 
| 
05:00p | 
Kaleidoscope | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
Meet the Press
  (guest Abba Eban) | 
| 
06:30p | 
Chet
  Huntley Reporting | 
| 
07:00p | 
The
  Honeymooners | 
| 
07:30p | 
Steve
  Allen (guests George
  Gobel, Diahann Carroll, Vaughn Monroe, the Pensacola Naval Air Training
  Center Cadet Choir, the Nicholas Dancers) (color) | 
| 
08:30p | 
Pete Kelly’s
  Blues | 
| 
09:00p | 
Dinah
  Shore (guests Van
  Johnson, Peggy Lee, Cliff Arquette, Sujata and Asoka) (color) | 
| 
10:00p | 
Loretta Young | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie
  3 – “The Wild
  Dakotas” | 
| 
11:00p | 
News (Paul Taylor)  | 
| 
11:10p | 
Movie
  Continues | 
| 
12:30a | 
Science
  Fiction Theater | 
| 
01:00a | 
News (local)  | 
| 
01:05a | 
Thought for
  Today | 
Bertie the Bunyip was a popular kids' show in Philly, hosted by Lee Dexter and running from 1954 to 1966, featuring puppet characters. And what, you may ask, is a Bunyip? According to the always-reliable Wikipedia, "The bunyip is a large mythical creature from Australian Aboriginal mythology, said to lurk in swamps, billabongs, creeks, riverbeds, and waterholes. The origin of the word bunyip has been traced to the Wemba-Wemba or Wergaia language of Aboriginal people of South-Eastern Australia." Here's what a bunyip looks like, more or less (the bunyip is on the left, Lee Dexter on the right):
| 
WFIL, Channel 6 (ABC) 
Morning | |
| 
08:45a | 
Through
  the Porthole | 
| 
09:00a | 
Adventures in
  Israel | 
| 
09:30a | 
Christian
  Science  | 
| 
09:45a | 
The
  Christopher Program | 
| 
10:15a | 
The
  Way | 
| 
10:45a | 
Bozo Cartoon
  Theater | 
| 
11:15a | 
Chief
  Halftown’s Pow-Wow | 
| 
11:30a | 
Halls of Ivy | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Gateway to the
  World | 
| 
12:30p | 
Your
  Star Showcase | 
| 
01:30p | 
Chief
  Halftown’s Pow-Wow  | 
| 
01:45p | 
News (Bill
  Webber) | 
| 
01:50p | 
Baseball
  Warmup | 
| 
02:00p | 
Baseball
  (Phillies vs. Cardinals) | 
| 
04:50p | 
Grandstand
  Manager | 
| 
05:00p | 
Pioneer
  Playhouse | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
Tugboat
  Annie | 
| 
06:30p | 
Sergeant
  Preston of the Yukon | 
| 
07:00p | 
You
  Asked For It | 
| 
07:30p | 
Maverick | 
| 
08:30p | 
The
  Lawman | 
| 
09:00p | 
Colt .45 | 
| 
09:30p | 
Talk
  Back | 
| 
10:00p | 
Heart of the
  City | 
| 
10:30p | 
Meet
  McGraw | 
| 
11:00p | 
News (John Roberts)  | 
| 
11:10p | 
Weather
  (Francis Davis)   | 
| 
11:15p | 
World’s Best
  Movies – “Conquest”,
  “Yank on the Burma Road” | 
Chief Halftown was another legendary childrens' program, running for fifty years (1950-1999). Its star, Traynor Ora Halftown was, interestingly enough, 100% Seneca, and always preferred Indian to Native American. He was also a professional bowler and spokesman for Brunswick.
| 
WGAL, Channel 8 (Lancaster) (CBS,
  NBC) 
Morning | |
| 
10:30a | 
The
  Catholic Hour | 
| 
11:00a | 
The
  Christopher Program | 
| 
11:30a | 
This
  is the Life | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Search
  for Health  | 
| 
12:15p | 
Your City
  Schools | 
| 
12:30p | 
Championship
  Bowling | 
| 
01:00p | 
The Big
  Picture (Army) | 
| 
01:30p | 
Film Feature | 
| 
02:00p | 
Baseball (Phillies vs. Cardinals) | 
| 
04:30p | 
Film Features | 
| 
05:00p | 
Kaleidoscope | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
Doorway to
  Life  | 
| 
06:20p | 
News, Weather
  (Bill Wright) | 
| 
06:30p | 
The Twentieth
  Century | 
| 
07:00p | 
Peter
  Gunn | 
| 
07:30p | 
Jack Benny | 
| 
08:00p | 
Ed
  Sullivan (guests Louis
  Prima and Keely Smith, Shelly Berman, Jack Carter, Frank Libuse, Al Hibbler,
  Conrad Buckner, Baron Buika, U.S. Military Academy Cadet Choir) | 
| 
09:00p | 
Dinah Shore (guests Van Johnson, Peggy Lee, Cliff Arquette,
  Sujata and Asoka) (color) | 
| 
10:00p | 
Loretta
  Young | 
| 
10:30p | 
What’s My
  Line? (guest
  panelist Eamonn Andrews) | 
| 
11:00p | 
Sunday
  News Special (Walter
  Cronkite) | 
| 
11:15p | 
Weather (Bill Wright)  | 
| 
11:20p | 
Victory
  at Sea | 
| 
11:50p | 
News and Sports | 
The Christophers, as it was often known, wasn't a kids' show, but it was a long-running religious program that was seen in almost every market in the country at one time or another, including both Lancaster and Philadelphia. The religious order was founded by Fr. James Keller; their motto, "It is better to light one candle than to curse the darkness," always reminds me of a Peanuts strip in which Linus quotes the saying, followed by a frame showing Lucy standing outside at night shouting, "You stupid darkness!"
| 
WCAU, Channel 10 (CBS) 
Morning | |
| 
06:55a | 
Give
  Us This Day | 
| 
07:00a | 
Sunday Seminar | 
| 
08:00a | 
Bill
  Bennett | 
| 
08:30a | 
Cartoon
  Theater | 
| 
09:30a | 
Sunday
  School | 
| 
10:00a | 
Lamp Unto My
  Feet | 
| 
10:30a | 
Look
  up and Live | 
| 
11:00a | 
Research | 
| 
11:30a | 
Camera
  Three  | 
| 
11:55a | 
News (Bob Collier) | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Shorty’s
  Cartoon Theater | 
| 
12:30p | 
Paul
  and Mary Ritts | 
| 
01:00p | 
Picture for a
  Sunday Afternoon – “Hobson’s
  Choice”, “Down Three Dark Streets” | 
| 
04:00p | 
Crisis
  in Education (special) | 
| 
05:00p | 
Face the
  Nation | 
| 
05:30p | 
G-E
  College Bowl (Wayne State
  vs. Goucher College) | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
Behind
  the News | 
| 
06:30p | 
The Twentieth
  Century | 
| 
07:00p | 
Lassie | 
| 
07:30p | 
Jack Benny | 
| 
08:00p | 
Ed
  Sullivan (guests Louis
  Prima and Keely Smith, Shelly Berman, Jack Carter, Frank Libuse, Al Hibbler,
  Conrad Buckner, Baron Buika, U.S. Military Academy Cadet Choir) | 
| 
09:00p | 
G.E. Theater | 
| 
09:30p | 
Alfred
  Hitchcock | 
| 
10:00p | 
Richard
  Diamond | 
| 
10:30p | 
What’s
  My Line? (guest
  panelist Eamonn Andrews) | 
| 
11:00p | 
Sunday News
  Special (Walter
  Cronkite) | 
| 
11:15p | 
News, Weather
  (Bob Collier)  | 
| 
11:20p | 
Frank
  Brookhouser | 
| 
11:30p | 
The
  Late Show – “Othello” | 
| 
01:00a | 
The Late, Late
  Show – “Tars and
  Spars” | 
| 
02:30a | 
Give
  Us This Day | 
Shorty's Cartoon Theater has a page as well, or at least its host does; Bill Hart was a legend in Philadelphia broadcasting circles, and while this show was only a small part of Hart's illustrious career, it shows how multitalented many local television personalities were; Count Floyd isn't the only newsman to do double duty at the station. Hart started out virtually when the station did in the mid 1940s, and remained there until 1986. We should all do that well, hmm? TV  








Love the tables for listing the shows! Nice work! :-)>
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteGlad you got a Count Floyd reference in , Mitchell...those scary monkeys from West Mifflin, PA...
ReplyDelete- Channel 3's Sunday afternoon movie, The Kid From Cleveland, starred the 1948 Cleveland Indians as themselves, with Rusty Tamblyn (later Russ) in the title role.
ReplyDeleteBill Veeck appeared as himself, to his lifelong embarrassment (at least that's what he always said afterwards).
- Noticing here that neither of the CBS stations is carrying The Last Word, which I mentioned last time - unless they're delaying it to another day. Delayed broadcasts and outright pre-emptions were often cited as the reasons why Last Word had such a short run.
- In Chicago, The Christophers was carried by Channel 7, the ABC station, Saturday mornings at 9:00.
This particular Saturday, here's what they had:
"How to Be A Safe Driver". Harry Von Zell and Carolyn Kearney give some helpful hints on how to show consideration for others while driving. (Film)
Channel 7 followed this immediately with Chuck Bill's Serial Theater, featuring Chapter 5 of Tailspin Tommy, plus a B-western with Don "Red" Barry. After that, Ch7' announcer Wayne Griffin's travel show had slides of a Canadian resort area, about which Steve Allen wrote one of his immortal songs:
"Let's Go To Lake Louise and Banff".)
- On Sunday aftenoon, in between movies, Channel 2 (the CBS station) had Insight, a discussion show with Frank Reynolds, who was ch2's #2 news anchor at the time.
Reynolds's guest (on videotape) was Mark Van Doren, who was likely plugging a book that day; this tape likely wasn't saved either (see yesterday), so I don't know whether Prof. Van Doren happened to mention his son Charles during the show.
In the listings for channel 3, I noticed a show called "Buckskin Billy Playhouse". Coincidentally, there was a legendary Baton Rouge kid's show host named "Buckskin Bill" Black, whose show aired from 1955-1990 (yes, 35 years).
ReplyDeleteI remember when Chief Halftown came to our grade school to promote the local bowling alley. You would have thought a head of state was visiting. He said if you liked Chief Halftown, be quiet when you go back to class. You could have heard a pin drop. His was a long legacy which that station still enjoys the fruits of today.
ReplyDeleteWas that WIBG Philly DJ Bill Wright moonlighting on WGAL-TV Lancaster ("a Steinman station, Clair McCollough, President") on Sunday evenings, doing news and weather?
ReplyDelete