Alan Brady's Hair
10-17-2014, 05:05 PM
I mentioned this in the Britcom forum, and couldn't find anything else on it, so I thought I'd start a thread. In the early 70s, the US government decided the broadcast networks had too much control over original programming, and ordered them to give back a half hour (usually 7:30-8:00 in the East) to local stations. Sundays were exempted.
Eventually the local stations figured out they could make a ton of money by just strip scheduling game shows and old sitcoms in that half hour, but for a while 7:30 to 8:00 was like a programming Wild West, with all kinds of stuff popping up. The powerful Westinghouse-owned group of stations produced original programming for the half hour, including:
David Frost Revue: a sketch show hosted by the British interviewer;
Street People: an interview show where a guy just walked around with a camera and talked to people he met;
Doctor in the House: Britcom acquired from the UK.
A couple of shows cancelled by the networks in 1971, Hee Haw and the Lawrence Welk Show, took advantage of the need for non-network programming, went into syndicated production and stayed on for 20 years.
Edit: it looks like the rule was largely rescinded in 1996, because the networks had lost a lot of their programming dominance over the years.
Eventually the local stations figured out they could make a ton of money by just strip scheduling game shows and old sitcoms in that half hour, but for a while 7:30 to 8:00 was like a programming Wild West, with all kinds of stuff popping up. The powerful Westinghouse-owned group of stations produced original programming for the half hour, including:
David Frost Revue: a sketch show hosted by the British interviewer;
Street People: an interview show where a guy just walked around with a camera and talked to people he met;
Doctor in the House: Britcom acquired from the UK.
A couple of shows cancelled by the networks in 1971, Hee Haw and the Lawrence Welk Show, took advantage of the need for non-network programming, went into syndicated production and stayed on for 20 years.
Edit: it looks like the rule was largely rescinded in 1996, because the networks had lost a lot of their programming dominance over the years.