1977 in American television
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2016) |
List of years in American television: |
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1976–77 United States network television schedule |
1977–78 United States network television schedule |
List of American television programs currently in production |
This is a list of American television-related events in 1977.
Events
Date | Event |
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January 3 | Holly Hallstrom becomes the third model on the The Price Is Right along with Janice Pennington and Dian Parkinson. This lineup would remain unchanged for the next thirteen years until Kathleen Bradley joined in 1990.
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January 15 | Bill Murray joins the cast of NBC's Saturday Night Live, replacing Chevy Chase who left the previous year. |
January 30 | Joe Hardy, and Pamela Sue Martin stars as Nancy Drew. The series at first alternated between the two characters, with The Brady Bunch Hour airing sporadically.
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February 4 | Booker T and the MGs perform "Roll Over Beethoven ."
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February 27 | Fed up with excessive violence and distorted images of sex on TV, the Reverend Donald Wildmon declares "Turn the Television Off Week." He is largely ignored. |
March 1 | The CBS game show Match Game is named the #1 rated game show on television for the fifth year in a row. |
March 4 | Freddie Prinze makes his final appearance on the NBC sitcom Chico and the Man. Prinze had actually taped the episode in question a mere hours before he fatally shot himself on January 28, 1977. |
March 7 | Second Chance, the forerunner to Press Your Luck, premieres on ABC. |
March 11 | Sesame Street broadcasts its 1,000th episode. |
March 15 | Renata Scotto and Luciano Pavarotti are seen in "La bohème" on PBS and heard in stereo on local (mostly NPR) stations in the first live "simulcast" from the Met. |
March 19 | The series finale of The Mary Tyler Moore Show is broadcast on CBS. |
March 27 | In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, ABC affiliate WITI and CBS affiliate WISN-TV swap affiliations, reversing a swap that took place in 1961.[1][2] |
March 30 | Esther Rolle departs the CBS sitcom Good Times shortly after the conclusion of the two-part fourth-season finale, "Love Has a Spot On Its Lung." due to the dismissal of John Amos (who portrayed her on-screen husband James Evans) and the stereotypical behavior of its de facto star Jimmie Walker (who portrayed her son J.J. Evans). Rolle does not return until the sixth and final season in September 1978. |
April 22 | Cleveland's CBS station WJW-TV changes its name to WJKW-TV. |
June 6 | Lisa Peluso makes her first appearance on the CBS soap opera Search for Tomorrow as Wendy Wilkins, a role she would play until December 1985. |
June 27 | In . |
August 14 | NBC affiliate WRDU-TV changes its call sign to WPTF-TV, following Durham Life's purchase of the station. |
August 16 | Television stations nationwide interrupt regular programming following news of the death of Elvis Presley. As a result, Elvis in Concert airs on CBS on October 3 that year to bad reviews. |
September 5 | In Baton Rouge, Louisiana, ABC affiliate WRBT (now WVLA-TV) and NBC affiliate WBRZ-TV swap affiliations. WBRZ-TV makes its move in search for stronger programming (ABC is, at the time, the nation's #1 rated television network, while NBC is in last place). The move is a precursor to similar events that will take place in the course of the next few years. |
September 14 | A tube top-clad woman named Yolanda Bowsley is called into Contestants' Row on the The Price Is Right , and while running down her breasts pop out of her shirt. The incident was censored with a large blue bar but it is still remembered today.
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second season premiere of Charlie's Angels .
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September 20 | The fifth season premiere of Happy Days airs on ABC. The episode is highlighted by a scene in which Fonzie literally jumps over a shark while on water-skis.
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September 21 | Eleven-year old Janet Jackson joins the cast of the CBS sitcom Good Times for its final two seasons as Penny Gordon, an upstairs neighbor who is abused by her biological mother (Chip Fields), later adopted by Willona (Ja'Net DuBois), in the four-part season opener "The Evans Get Involved". Comedian Johnny Brown, who recurred as the building superintendent Bookman from Seasons 2 to 4, also joins the main cast. |
September 24 | Marla Gibbs joins the cast of the CBS sitcom The Jeffersons as a series regular in the fourth season as fan-favorite Florence Johnston. Zara Cully, who portrayed Mother Jefferson, appears in only three episodes that season, prior to her death at age 86 in February 1978. |
October 23 | Knight-Ridder sign an affiliation deal for the station with ABC.
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October 24 | A new Peanuts special, It's Your First Kiss, Charlie Brown, airs on CBS. It shows and names "Heather", the Little Red-Haired Girl, thereupon ending the 'mystery'. |
November 6 | KTVZ in Bend, Oregon signs-on as an NBC affiliate. Bend is technically still part of the Portland DMA at the time, but in 1981, it becomes its own television market. |
November 30 | CBS commentator The CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite, after 48 years at CBS News .
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December 2 | The $20,000 Pyramid . The record still stands today.
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December 11 | In Huntsville, Alabama, NBC affiliate WAAY-TV swaps affiliations with ABC affiliate WYUR in search for stronger programming (at the time, NBC is in last place among the three major networks, and ABC is in first place). |
Programs
Debuting this year
Resuming this year
Title | Final aired | Previous network | New title | Returning network | Date of return |
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The Mickey Mouse Club | 1959 | ABC | The New Mickey Mouse Club | Syndication | January 17 |
Ending this year
Date | Title | Debut |
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January 7 | New Howdy Doody Show
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1976 |
January 26 | The Practice | |
March 3 | The McLean Stevenson Show | |
March 13 | Phyllis | 1975 |
March 18 | Sanford and Son | 1972 |
March 19 | The Mary Tyler Moore Show
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1970 |
March 30 | The Streets of San Francisco | 1972 |
April 13 | Sirota's Court | 1976 |
April 15 | The Electric Company | 1971 |
April 17 | McCloud | 1970 |
April 24 | McMillan & Wife | 1971 |
April 27 | Loves Me, Loves Me Not | 1977 |
May 16 | The Andros Targets | |
May 27 | Hunter | |
July 30 | The Feather and Father Gang
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1976 |
August 24 | Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected | 1977 |
August 31 | The Kallikaks | |
September 2 | Let's Make a Deal | 1971 |
October 4 | The Richard Pryor Show | 1977 |
October 14 | Sanford Arms | |
November 16 | Busting Loose | |
November 30 | The Oregon Trail | |
December 3 | Emergency! | 1972 |
December 13 | Mulligan's Stew | 1977 |
December 19 | The San Pedro Beach Bums | |
December 30 | Storybook Squares | 1969 |
Changing networks
Show | Moved from | Moved to |
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The Bionic Woman | ABC | NBC |
Wonder Woman | CBS | |
The Tony Randall Show | ||
Tattletales | CBS | Syndication |
The Mickey Mouse Club | ABC | Syndication |
Made-for-TV movies
Debut | Name | Network |
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May 13 | The San Pedro Bums
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ABC |
October 10[3] | Killer on Board | NBC |
November 10 | The Incredible Hulk | CBS |
November 23 | The Last of the Mohicans
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NBC |
November 26 | The Hobbit | NBC |
December 11 | It Happened One Christmas | ABC |
Miniseries
Debut | Name | Network |
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January 23 | Roots | ABC |
April 3 | Jesus of Nazareth
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NBC |
Networks and services
Launches
Network | Type | Launch date | Notes | Source |
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CBN Satellite Channel | Satellite television | April 29 | ||
Tri-State Christian Television | Cable television | May 20 | ||
Madison Square Garden Sports Network | Cable television | September 22 |
Conversions and rebrandings
There are no conversions and rebrandings for Cable and satellite television channels in this year.
Closures
There are no closures for Cable and satellite television channels in this year.
Television stations
Sign-ons
Date | Market
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Station | Channel | Affiliation | Notes/Ref. |
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January 17 | Medford, Oregon | KSYS
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8 | PBS | |
March 6 | Plattsburgh, New York | WCFE-TV | 57 | ||
April | Corpus Christi, Texas | KORO
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28 | Spanish International Network
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Now a Univision affiliate |
April 10 | Fresno, California | KMTF | 18 | PBS | |
May 1 | Mason City, Iowa | KYIN
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24 | Part of Iowa Public Television
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June 30 | Long Beach/Los Angeles, California | KSCI | 18 | Independent | |
September 10 | South Bend, Indiana | WHME | 46 | ||
October 17 | Boston, Massachusetts
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WXNE-TV
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25 | ||
October 21 | Rock Springs, Wyoming | KTUX
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13 | CBS | |
November 6 | Bend, Oregon | KTVZ | 21 | NBC | |
December 1 | New Haven, Connecticut | WEDY
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65 | PBS | Part of Connecticut Public Television |
December 8 | Fayetteville, Arkansas | KTVP
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29 | CBS | |
December 15 | Park Falls/Superior, Wisconsin (Duluth, Minnesota) |
WLEF-TV
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36 | PBS | Part of Wisconsin Public Television
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December 21 | Fort Wayne, Indiana | WFFT-TV | 55 | Independent | |
December 28 | Sheridan, Wyoming | KSGW-TV | 12 | NBC (primary) CBS (secondary) |
Satellite of KOTA-TV/Rapid City, South Dakota |
Unknown | New York City | W60AI | 60 | Independent | Signed on as a translator of WWHT |
Network affiliation changes
Date | Market
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Station | Channel | Old affiliation | New affiliation | Notes/Ref. |
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March 27 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin
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WISN-TV | 12 | CBS | ABC | |
WITI | 6 | ABC | CBS | |||
June 27 | San Diego, California
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KCST-TV
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39 | ABC | NBC | These affiliation changes were part of ABC's retaliation for KCST-TV previously forcing the ABC affiliation to move to that station from XETV in nearby Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, four years earlier. |
KGTV | 10 | NBC | ABC | |||
September 5 | Baton Rouge, Louisiana | WBRZ-TV | 2 | NBC | ABC | |
WRBT | 33 | ABC | NBC | |||
October 23 | Adams, Massachusetts | WCDC-TV
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19 | ABC | CBS | WCDC-TV is a satellite of WTEN/Albany, New York |
Albany, New York | WTEN | 10 | ||||
December 11 | Huntsville, Alabama | WAAY-TV | 31 | NBC | ABC | |
WYUR
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48 | ABC | NBC |
Station closures
Date | Market
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Station | Channel | Affiliation | Notes/Ref. |
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May 4 | Fort Dodge, Iowa | KVFD-TV | 21 | NBC | November 23, 1953 |
Births
Deaths
Date | Name | Age | Notability |
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January 28 | Burt Mustin | 92 | Actor (Leave It to Beaver) |
January 29 | Freddie Prinze | 22 | Actor and comedian (Chico and the Man) |
February 28 | Eddie "Rochester" Anderson | 71 | Comedian (The Jack Benny Program) |
March 27 | Diana Hyland | 41 | Actress (The Fugitive, Peyton Place) |
April 21 | Gummo Marx | 84 | Actor |
June 13 | Matthew Garber | 21 | English actor (Mary Poppins) |
June 14 | Alan Reed | 69 | Actor (original voice of Fred Flintstone on The Flintstones) |
August 16 | Elvis Presley | 42 | Singer and actor (The Ed Sullivan Show) |
August 17 | Quincy Howe | 76 | Journalist and presidential debate moderator |
August 19 | Groucho Marx | 86 | Comedian, television host (You Bet Your Life) |
August 22 | Sebastian Cabot | 59 | Actor (Family Affair) |
August 29 | Jean Hagen | 54 | Actress ( Make Room for Daddy )
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October 14 | Bing Crosby | 74 | Singer, actor, TV producer (Hogan's Heroes) |
Television debuts
- Richard Dean Anderson – General Hospital
- Jack Angel – The All-New Super Friends Hour
- Rosanna Arquette – Having Babies II
- Christine Baranski – Busting Loose
- Carole Bouquet – La famille Cigale
- Sofia Coppola – The Godfather Saga
- Jane Curtin – The Love Boat
- Robert Davi – Contract on Cherry Street
- Robert De Niro – The Godfather Saga
- Brian Dennehy – Kojak
- Robert Englund – The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries:Mystery of the Fallen Angels
- Adam Godley – The Ballad of Salomon Pavey
- William Hurt – Kojak
- Nastassja Kinski – Tatort
- Jennifer Jason Leigh – Baretta
- David Margulies – Kojak
- Joe Pantoliano – McNamara's Band
- Mandy Patinkin – Charleston
- Annie Potts – Black Market Baby
- Dennis Quaid – Baretta
- James at 16
- John Shea – Eight Is Enough
- Meryl Streep – The Deadliest Season
- Jeffrey Tambor – Kojak
- Am dam des
- Ray Winstone – Scum
- John Witherspoon – The Richard Pryor Show
See also
References
- ^ "In Brief." Broadcasting, September 27, 1976, pg. 28. [1][permanent dead link] (the text incorrectly states that WISN-TV had been a CBS affiliate since 1954, omitting the 1961 affiliation switch.)
- ^ "Milwaukee connection." Broadcasting, October 18, 1976, pg. 36[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Killer on Board (TV Movie 1977)". iMDb. Retrieved January 31, 2024.
- ^ "Shakira: Colombian Pop Star". Biography. 2021-04-08. Retrieved 2024-02-23.