Therefore, what you're about to see is a broadcast schedule that was never aired, at least not in the same way in which it's presented here. I'm sure all of these episodes wound up being telecast eventually, but not in the same order, not with the same vibe, so to speak; the waves being transmitted from the antennas were, like snowflakes, similar but different. You didn't have this specific episode of Lawrence Welk on at the same time as that specific episode of Get Smart, for example, and the scheduled baseball Game of the Week on NBC (Cleveland vs. Detroit) was never aired at all.*
*Nor was the Minnesota Twins game vs. the Washington Senators, which was to be played at Washington's D.C. Stadium. By this same time next year, the Senators were playing in Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium.
Look on at what follows, courtesy of the Minnesota State Edition.
| 
KGLO, Channel 3 (Mason City, IA)
  (CBS) 
Morning | |
| 
07:00a | 
Captain
  Kangaroo (guest soccer player George Kirby)   | 
| 
08:00a | 
Frankenstein
  Jr. and The Impossibles   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The
  Herculoids   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Shazzan!   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Space
  Ghost and Dino Boy   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Moby Dick and
  Mighty Mightor   | 
| 
10:30a | 
The
  Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure   | 
| 
11:30a | 
Jonny Quest   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
The Lone
  Ranger   | 
| 
12:30p | 
The
  Road Runner   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Here’s Allen   | 
| 
01:15p | 
Movie
  – “Dakota Incident” (1956) | 
| 
02:45p | 
Movie –
  “Accused of Murder” (1957) | 
| 
04:00p | 
Movie
  – “Dakota Incident” (1956) | 
| 
05:30p | 
CBS Saturday
  News (Roger Mudd)   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
News   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Prisoner   | 
| 
07:30p | 
My Three Sons   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Hogan’s
  Heroes   | 
| 
08:30p | 
Petticoat
  Junction   | 
| 
09:00p | 
Mannix   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News   | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie
  – “Across the Bridge” (English, 1958) | 
Following RFK's assassination, violence on television would again be under the microscope, but prior to that it was the Saturday morning cartoon, and the concern over superheroes and other supernatural types, as we saw here. With this lineup, it's easy to see why.
| 
KDAL, Channel 3 (Duluth) (CBS) 
Morning | |
| 
07:00a | 
Farm
  and Home  | 
| 
07:15a | 
Treetop House   | 
| 
07:30a | 
Captain
  Kangaroo (guest soccer player George Kirby)   | 
| 
08:00a | 
Frankenstein
  Jr. and The Impossibles   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The
  Herculoids   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Shazzan!   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Space
  Ghost and Dino Boy   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Moby Dick and
  Mighty Mightor   | 
| 
10:30a | 
The
  Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure   | 
| 
11:30a | 
Jonny Quest   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
The Lone
  Ranger   | 
| 
12:30p | 
The
  Road Runner   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Stories of
  Success   | 
| 
01:30p | 
Movie
  – “Varan the Unbelievable” (Japanese-American, 1962) | 
| 
02:45p | 
Movie – “When
  the Girls Take Over” (1962) | 
| 
04:00p | 
Upbeat   | 
| 
05:00p | 
All-Star
  Wrestling | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
CBS Saturday
  News (Roger Mudd)   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Prisoner   | 
| 
07:30p | 
My Three Sons   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Hogan’s
  Heroes   | 
| 
08:30p | 
Petticoat
  Junction   | 
| 
09:00p | 
Mannix   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News   | 
| 
10:15p | 
Movie
  – “Bonjour Tristesse” (English, 1957) | 
The Prisoner - it's still hard to believe that CBS used this as the summer replacement for The Jackie Gleason Show. In other ways, though, it was perfect for the paranoia of the era.
| 
WCCO, Channel 4 (CBS) 
Morning | |
| 
06:00a | 
Summer
  Semester   | 
| 
06:30a | 
Siegfried and
  His Flying Saucer   | 
| 
07:00a | 
Captain
  Kangaroo (guest soccer player George Kirby)   | 
| 
08:00a | 
Frankenstein
  Jr. and The Impossibles   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The
  Herculoids   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Shazzan!   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Space
  Ghost and Dino Boy   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Moby Dick and
  Mighty Mightor   | 
| 
10:30a | 
The
  Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure   | 
| 
11:30a | 
Jonny Quest   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
News   | 
| 
12:30p | 
Marshal
  Dillon | 
| 
01:00p | 
Jobs Now!   | 
| 
01:30p | 
Movie
  – “Master of the World” (1961)   | 
| 
03:30p | 
Cimarron Strip   | 
| 
05:00p | 
The
  Outdoorsman   | 
| 
05:30p | 
CBS Saturday
  News (Roger Mudd)   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
News   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Prisoner   | 
| 
07:30p | 
My Three Sons   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Hogan’s
  Heroes   | 
| 
08:30p | 
Petticoat
  Junction   | 
| 
09:00p | 
Mannix   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News   | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie
  – “The Road to Rio” (1947) | 
| 
12:30a | 
News, Weather   | 
| 
12:45a | 
This
  Must Be the Place   | 
| 
01:15a | 
Nite Kapers  | 
I do remember this much - well, other than my grandfather coming up from the basement, where he had his workbench, every few hours to ask "is that still on?" - I stayed up past midnight to see The Bedtime Nooz, Dave Moore's satirical program, only to find that because of the day's events he was delivering a straight news broadcast. It was a bitter disappointment, but then what did I know? I was only eight.
| 
KSTP, Channel 5 (NBC) 
Morning | |
| 
07:00a | 
Movie
  (Western) | 
| 
08:00a | 
The Super 6   | 
| 
08:30a | 
Super
  President   | 
| 
09:00a | 
The
  Flintstones   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Young
  Samson   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Birdman and
  the Galaxy Trio   | 
| 
10:30a | 
George
  of the Jungle   | 
| 
11:00a | 
Cool McCool   | 
| 
11:30a | 
West
  Point | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Science
  Fiction Theater   | 
| 
12:30p | 
Branded   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Baseball
  (Indians at Tigers)   | 
| 
04:00p | 
Porter Wagoner
  (guest Diana Trask)   | 
| 
04:30p | 
The
  Outer Limits | 
| 
05:30p | 
NBC News
  (Frank McGee)   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
News   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Saint   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Get Smart   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Saturday
  Night at the Movies – “Girls, Girls, Girls” (1962)   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News   | 
| 
10:30p | 
The
  Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson (guests Alan King, Della Reese, Rhodes
  Brothers)   | 
| 
12:00a | 
Alan Burke
  (guests Roger Puggart, Pauline Peavy)   | 
Since NBC's coverage continued until midnight, it's possible that the nationally-syndicated Alan Burke could have presented a special show, or it could have been replaced by local news. Because the funeral coverage ran so far over, even a look at the morning's TV listings wouldn't tell us for sure what the station had planned.
| 
WDSM, Channel 6 (Duluth) (NBC) 
Morning | |
| 
07:00a | 
Film
  Feature | 
| 
07:30a | 
Cartoon
  Theater   | 
| 
08:00a | 
The
  Super 6   | 
| 
08:30a | 
Super President   | 
| 
09:00a | 
The
  Flintstones   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Young Samson   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Birdman
  and the Galaxy Trio   | 
| 
10:30a | 
George of the
  Jungle   | 
| 
11:00a | 
Cool
  McCool   | 
| 
11:30a | 
Film Feature | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:30p | 
Film Feature | 
| 
01:00p | 
Baseball
  (Indians at Tigers)   | 
| 
04:00p | 
Film Feature | 
| 
05:00p | 
Danger
  is My Business   | 
| 
05:30p | 
NBC News
  (Frank McGee)   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
News   | 
| 
06:15p | 
Cartoon
  Carnival   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The Saint   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Get
  Smart   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Saturday Night
  at the Movies – “Girls, Girls, Girls” (1962)   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News   | 
| 
10:30p | 
Cameo Theater   | 
| 
11:30p | 
Wendy
  and Me | 
| 
12:00a | 
Focus   | 
Danger is My Business was produced and hosted by Col. John Craig, a man who was no stranger to either danger or adventure. This series, one of five he did, documented what could be said to have been dangerous occupations - lion tamer, for example. He was also responsible for a show that we see frequently in listings from this era - Of Lands and Seas.
| 
KAUS, Channel 6 (Austin) (ABC) 
Morning  | |
| 
08:00a | 
The
  New Casper Cartoon Show   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The Fantastic
  Four   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Spider-Man   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Journey to the
  Center of the Earth   | 
| 
10:00a | 
King
  Kong   | 
| 
10:30a | 
Atom
  Ant/Secret Squirrel   | 
| 
11:00a | 
The
  Beatles   | 
| 
11:30a | 
American
  Bandstand ’68 (guests the People, B.J. Thomas)   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:30p | 
Happening ’68   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Movie
  – “The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas” (1957) | 
| 
02:30p | 
Food and Fiber | 
| 
03:00p | |
| 
04:00p | 
Wide World of
  Sports (Indianapolis 500, U.S. Open preview)   | 
| 
05:30p | 
Death
  Valley Days   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
News   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The Dating
  Game (guest Annemarie Huste)   | 
| 
07:00p | 
The
  Newlywed Game   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Lawrence Welk   | 
| 
08:30p | 
The
  Hollywood Palace (host George Gobel, guests the King Family, Enzo Stuarti,
  Lainie Kazan, Desmond and Marks, Baby Sabu)   | 
| 
09:30p | 
Western Star
  Theater | 
| 
10:00p | 
ABC
  Weekend News (Keith McBee)   | 
| 
10:15p | 
News   | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie
  – “The Egyptian” (1954) | 
| 
12:00a | 
News   | 
| 
KCMT, Channel 7 (Alexandria) NBC/ABC 
Morning | |
| 
08:00a | 
The
  Super 6   | 
| 
08:30a | 
Super
  President   | 
| 
09:00a | 
The
  Flintstones   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Young Samson   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Birdman
  and the Galaxy Trio   | 
| 
10:30a | 
George of the
  Jungle   | 
| 
11:00a | 
Cool
  McCool   | 
| 
11:30a | 
American
  Bandstand ’68 (guests the People, B.J. Thomas)   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:30p | 
Happening ’68   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Baseball
  (Indians at Tigers)   | 
| 
04:00p | 
Sergeant
  Preston | 
| 
04:30p | 
Film
  Feature   | 
| 
05:00p | 
Dream House | 
| 
05:30p | 
NBC
  News (Frank McGee)   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
News,
  Weather, Sports | 
| 
06:30p | 
The Saint   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Get
  Smart   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Saturday Night
  at the Movies – “Girls, Girls, Girls” (1962)   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie – “Inside
  Detroit” (1956) | 
Not much to say about Channel 7 this week. No, really, nothing to say.
| 
WKBT, Channel 8 (La Crosse) (CBS) 
Morning | |
| 
07:00a | 
Captain
  Kangaroo (guest soccer player George Kirby)   | 
| 
08:00a | 
Frankenstein
  Jr. and The Impossibles   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The
  Herculoids   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Shazzan!   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Space
  Ghost and Dino Boy   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Moby Dick and
  Mighty Mightor   | 
| 
10:30a | 
The
  Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure   | 
| 
11:30a | 
Jonny Quest   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
The Lone
  Ranger   | 
| 
12:30p | 
The
  Road Runner   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Music Carousel | 
| 
01:30p | 
Movie
  – “The Unseen” | 
| 
03:00p | |
| 
04:00p | 
Wide
  World of Sports (Indianapolis 500, U.S. Open preview)   | 
| 
05:30p | 
Hogan’s Heroes   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
Bewitched   | 
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Prisoner   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Lawrence Welk   | 
| 
08:30p | 
Petticoat
  Junction   | 
| 
09:00p | 
Mannix   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie – “Walk
  on the Wild Side” (1062) | 
Craig Breedlove, the focus of the ABC profile The Racers, was at the time the holder of the world land speed record, breaking the 600 mph barrier in his Spirit of America. His wife Lee held the women's world land speed record at over 300 mph, making the Breedloves the world's fastest couple (a record they still hold). This program will be rescheduled for a later date.
| 
KMSP, Channel 9 (ABC) 
Morning | |
| 
07:30a | 
Cartoons | 
| 
08:00a | 
The New Casper
  Cartoon Show   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The
  Fantastic Four   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Spider-Man   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Journey
  to the Center of the Earth   | 
| 
10:00a | 
King Kong   | 
| 
10:30a | 
Atom
  Ant/Secret Squirrel   | 
| 
11:00a | 
The Beatles   | 
| 
11:30a | 
American
  Bandstand ’68 (guests the People, B.J. Thomas)   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:30p | 
Happening
  ’68   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Kit Carson | 
| 
01:30p | 
Arrest
  and Trial | 
| 
03:00p | |
| 
04:00p | 
Wide
  World of Sports (Indianapolis 500, U.S. Open preview)   | 
| 
05:30p | 
Route 66 | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:30p | 
The Dating
  Game (guest Annemarie Huste)   | 
| 
07:00p | 
The
  Newlywed Game   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Lawrence Welk   | 
| 
08:30p | 
Movie
  – “The Bravados” (1958)   | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie – “Too
  Late Blues” (1962) | 
| 
12:25a | 
ABC
  Weekend News (Keith McBee)   | 
| 
WDIO, Channel 10 (Duluth) (ABC) 
Morning | |
| 
08:00a | 
The
  New Casper Cartoon Show   | 
| 
08:30a | 
The Fantastic
  Four   | 
| 
09:00a | 
Spider-Man   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Journey to the
  Center of the Earth   | 
| 
10:00a | 
King
  Kong   | 
| 
10:30a | 
Atom
  Ant/Secret Squirrel   | 
| 
11:00a | 
The
  Beatles   | 
| 
11:30a | 
American
  Bandstand ’68 (guests the People, B.J. Thomas)   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:30p | 
Happening ’68   | 
| 
01:00p | 
Movie
  – “Dakota Incident” (1956) | 
| 
02:30p | 
To Be
  Announced | 
| 
03:00p | |
| 
04:00p | 
Wide World of
  Sports (Indianapolis 500, U.S. Open preview)   | 
| 
05:30p | 
Polka
  Varieties   | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Dating Game (guest Annemarie Huste)   | 
| 
07:00p | 
The Newlywed
  Game   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Lawrence
  Welk   | 
| 
08:30p | 
The Hollywood
  Palace (host George Gobel, guests the King Family, Enzo Stuarti, Lainie
  Kazan, Desmond and Marks, Baby Sabu)   | 
| 
09:30p | 
Dream
  House   | 
| 
10:00p | 
ABC Weekend News (Keith McBee)   | 
| 
10:15p | 
News   | 
| 
10:30p | 
Movie – “The
  Emperor Waltz” (1948)   | 
Dream House is one of those game shows that appeared in both primetime and daytime versions. The primetime version, which was first, ran from March to September 1968, while the daytime edition made its debut earlier this month, settling in until January 1970. One of the grand prizes was a new house worth more than $40,000, plus $7,000 to purchase the land. I wonder how much that would be worth in today's dollars?
| 
WTCN, Channel 11 (Ind.) 
Morning | |
| 
09:00a | 
Flower
  Gardening   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Farm Forum   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Whirlybirds | 
| 
10:30a | 
Cartoon
  Cut-Ups   | 
| 
11:00a | 
Lunch
  with Casey | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Harmon
  Killebrew   | 
| 
12:10p | 
Halsey Hall   | 
| 
12:25p | 
Baseball
  (Twins at Senators)   | 
| 
03:00p | 
Scoreboard
  (time approximate)  | 
| 
03:15p | 
Movie
  – “The Bacchantes” (Italian, 1961)   | 
| 
05:00p | 
The Rifleman | 
| 
05:30p | 
All-Star
  Wrestling | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
07:00p | 
Movie
  – “Leave Her to Heaven” | 
| 
09:00p | 
Movie – “Pork Chop
  Hill” (1959) | 
| 
11:00p | 
News,
  Weather, Sports | 
| 
11:30p | 
Bat Masterson | 
I'll be honest - I'm not sure what Channel 11 did today. They might have covered the funeral through some kind of syndicated coverage, or by piggybacking on one of the network feeds, or they could have continued with their regularly scheduled programming - either as-is, or adjusted to fit the more somber mood. (For some reason, I seem to faintly recall Lunch with Casey being more serious, carrying on without the usual tomfoolery, but perhaps I'm just projecting my expectations.) Maybe some of you can shed some light on it.
| 
WEAU, Channel 13 (Eau Claire) (NBC) 
Morning | |
| 
07:00a | 
Salvation
  Army  | 
| 
07:15a | 
Light Time | 
| 
07:30a | 
Cartoons | 
| 
08:00a | 
The Super 6   | 
| 
08:30a | 
Super
  President   | 
| 
09:00a | 
The
  Flintstones   | 
| 
09:30a | 
Young
  Samson   | 
| 
10:00a | 
Birdman and
  the Galaxy Trio   | 
| 
10:30a | 
George
  of the Jungle   | 
| 
11:00a | 
Cool McCool   | 
| 
11:30a | 
George
  of the Jungle   | 
| 
Afternoon | |
| 
12:00p | 
Discovery
  ‘68 | 
| 
12:30p | 
Harbor Lights | 
| 
01:00p | 
Baseball
  (Indians at Tigers)   | 
| 
04:00p | 
Rugby League
  Cup (Leeds vs. Wakefield-Trinity) (joined in progress)   | 
| 
05:00p | 
Polka
  Varieties | 
| 
Evening | |
| 
06:00p | 
Campus
  Comment   | 
| 
06:15p | 
Sports,
  Weather, News | 
| 
06:30p | 
The
  Saint   | 
| 
07:30p | 
Get Smart   | 
| 
08:00p | 
Saturday
  Night at the Movies – “Girls, Girls, Girls” (1962)   | 
| 
10:00p | 
News | 
| 
10:30p | 
Wagon
  Train   | 
| 
12:00a | 
Movie – “Andy”
  (1965) | 





The Prisoner:
ReplyDelete- The obvious summer replacement for Jackie Gleason's show would have been Dom DeLuise's variety hour, which was owned and produced by Gleason's company (and taped in Miami Beach, "the Sun and Fun Capital of the World!").
As I recall, that was how the show was originally announced to air.
The Prisoner was a late addition to the summer schedule; nobody at CBS had any idea what it would be about.
This is guesswork: somebody at CBS remembered that Patrick McGoohan's Secret Agent had been a mild success on Saturday nights a couple of years before, and made the switch accordingly - after all, who the heck watches TV in the summer, anyway?
Dream House's normal ABC timeslot was Wednesdays at 7:30 CDT, in between The Avengers and the ABC movie.
You might want to check and see what these ABC affiliates thought would draw better than the game show.
By the way, when fall came around, this timeslot went to the second weekly segment of Peyton Place (the first one was Monday, same time), in what proved to be its final season.
But that's another story ...
- If memory serves, Major League Baseball did not cancel its schedule for this Saturday.
I don't know what Channel 11's deal was with the Twins, but my guess would be if the Twins were playing, ch11 would be covering the game as scheduled.
I'd also guess that DC Stadium, where the game was to played, would have been packed, regardless of national mourning.
Correction welcomed, if necessary.
Interesting question, and it provides a story that could be an article of its own. Several of the owners and/or teams were determined not to play on Saturday out of respect to RFK. Then-Commissioner Eckert, in what the Chicago Tribune would later call "an attempt to please everyone," moved the start time of afternoon games to the evening, presumably after the funeral had concluded.
DeleteAs we all know, the funeral was not done by early evening, which meant that games not played on the West Coast did indeed start before the events had concluded, and this caused a lot of problems - for example, Reds player rep Milt Pappas resigned over Cincinnati management's determination to play even though a majority of the players wanted to wait. The Mets refused to play the Giants, and the game was postponed until another day. The Astros said they would refuse to play the Pirates both Saturday and Sunday.
Bottom line: no games were played during the day, several games were played at night but before the funeral was over, and some games were postponed outright (including the Twins-Senators game). It was that kind of vacillation that caused the owners to oust Eckert as Commissioner, eventually replacing him with Bowie Kuhn.
Today, I suspect the answer would be straightforward, and similar to 9/11 - all games cancelled until further notice.
On "The Prisoner": Last-minute addition or not, that CBS put that in Gleason's time slot - while shifting his company's summer-replacement DeLuise show to Wednesdays, in "The Jonathan Winters Show's" time slot - was the first hint that the clout Jackie Gleason enjoyed at the network was beginning to fade, and the next group of network executives that came through the pike was not nearly as tolerant of his incessant demands as those who'd come before them. I see that as much a motivating factor as the network's remembering McGoohan's prior "Secret Agent."
DeleteAccording to baseball reference, the Twins and Senators played a DH on Friday, and a single game on Sunday. Perhaps, they played the DH on Friday, instead of the Saturday game. Attendance for Friday was 16,334 with a nice crowd on Sunday of 33,977. There were only six games played on that Saturday (I don't know why there were postponements). The Tigers behind Mickey Lolich beat the Indians and Sam McDowell 3-1.
ReplyDeleteGood info, Randy. Based on what I've been able to find out (in addition to what I remembered), I think the postponements were in fact due to players not wanting to play the day of the funeral. I noticed that neither New York team played, which makes perfect sense.
DeleteMitchell, I did some more research into this, and found an interesting tidbit on the Reds/Cards game in Cincy. The Cardinal players did not want to play, but would have to forfeit if the Reds players voted to play. Milt Pappas was the Reds player rep, and didn't want to play the game. An initial vote was 12 to 12 with one player abstaining. A second vote was 13 12 to play, so the Cardinals not wanting to forfeit agreed to play. Reds manager Dave Bristol labeled Pappas as a trouble maker and he was traded the next week to the Braves.
DeleteGood research! That all sounds about right for those days; I wonder how things would be different nowadays, when the union has so much more clout? Quite a bit, I suspect.
Delete''One of the grand prizes was a new house worth more than $40,000, plus $7,000 to purchase the land. I wonder how much that would be worth in today's dollars?''
ReplyDelete$47k in '68 = $330,247.93 http://www.usinflationcalculator.com/ comes in handy at times.
BTW, after the JFK assassination, NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle decided that following Sunday's games would be played as scheduled - a decision he regretted for the rest of his life.
ReplyDeleteThey had no choice but to cancel post-9/11, all air travel was grounded, pretty much making it impossible for most of the games to be played.
The scheduled taped showing of the Indianapolis "500" on "Wide World Of Sports" (taped nine days earlier on May 30th) finally aired the next week, June 15th.
ReplyDeleteAfter two more years (1969 and 1970) of showings about a week later on "Wide World", ABC began showing the Indy race on a same-day basis (in prime-time that night, about eight or nine hours after the race began) in 1971.
At first, the taped showing was two hours (commercials included), eventually expanding to three hours (again, including commercials).
Finally in 1986, ABC got to finally televise the race live.
One interesting footnote: During the years ABC aired Indy on a same-day tape-delay basis, Jim McKay and either Jackie Stewart or (in the mid-eighties) Sam Posey would call the start (about the first 15 laps) and finish (again, the last 15 or so laps) of the race live as they happened, but would do the commentary of most of the race as the edited tape was being broadcast.
It probably would have made a smoother broadcast that way, as McKay and company wouldn't have ended-up referring to something (had they called the whole race as it happened) edited-out of the final tape.
The Indianapolis 500 wasn't moved to same-day until the Uniform Monday Holiday Act. The post-production commentary was controversial as we learned in 1981 when it was discovered during an investigation into Bobby Unser's incident exiting pit road. It was not on the radio broadcast, it was added in post-production on television. USAC initially called the penalty based on what happened in post-production.
ReplyDeleteRugby, which has long been split into Union and League, is now split into three codes -- Union Fifteen, Union Sevens (for how many players participate), and League. All three are aired on television, with NBC carrying on the broadcast network Union Sevens both international and domestic club competitions. (Sevens matches last 20 minutes, and multiple matches are played in one setting; shortened matches are often prominent with these "exotic" sports; cricket is known for its limited overs matches, with the most prominent Twenty20, and both golf and tennis are adopting similar formats first trialed in Australia, Super6 and Fast4.)
Seems it wasn't until the late 1980's to early 1990's that the summer series have risen back to prominence. It made sense for special situations for shows to go to live specials regarding the seriousness of the incident.
Annemarie Huste worked for Jackie Kennedy after she left the White House and relocated to New York City.
ReplyDeleteAnd I'm not sure Alan Burke could have produced a themed show and get it out to his stations in time, in those pre-satellite days.
WCCO scheduled Cimarron Strip Sat 3:30-5:00. It aired on CBS Thu at 6:30 CT. What did 'CCO air in its network timeslot?
ReplyDeleteJohn, 'CCO had a movie - in this case, "The Mouse That Roared." They must have done that every week. Better ratings, perhaps?
DeleteHELLO! Has ANYONE noticed the switch at all?! George of the Jungle was an ABC show, not NBC-vice versa with Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel. What kind of scheduling were they doing? All tho, with KCMT, they could have switched to ABC at 10:30 for George, and then return to NBC at 11 AM for Cool McCool. Thereby airing AA/SS during a weekday afternoon slot, as was the case with dual network affiliates. Of course, had it not been for RFK's funeral, it all would have gone down like clockwork.
ReplyDeleteI remember, although I don't know that I have an example handy, that KCMT used to record three or four ABC Saturday morning cartoons and replay them in the after-school timeslot, along with Welcome Inn, the afternoon "variety" show. They'd show a different cartoon each day, and that was how they covered both networks' Saturday morning fare.
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