List of years in American television: |
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1981–82 United States network television schedule |
1982–83 United States network television schedule |
List of American television programs currently in production |
The year 1982 involved some significant events in television. Below is a list of television-related events in the United States.
Date | Event |
---|---|
January 1 | Cable News Network (CNN) initiates an associated channel, dubbed CNN2, that features a round-the-clock "news wheel" format. The channel would be renamed CNN Headline News a year later and is now known as HLN. |
The National Association of Broadcasters ends its long-standing Television Code in response to a Washington, D.C. circuit court ruling which declared parts of it unconstitutional. | |
January 2 | American Playhouse on PBS member station WNET/Newark, New Jersey presents John Cheever's teleplay The Shady Hill Kidnapping, featuring George Grizzard, Polly Holliday, Judith Ivey, E. Katherine Kerr and Celeste Holm as The Celebrity. |
January 4 | Bryant Gumbel begins his 15-year stint as co-anchor of NBC's Today Show . |
ABC broadcasts a TV adaptation of The Elephant Man , with Philip Anglim and Kevin Conway reprising the roles they originated for the Broadway version of the story. | |
In Panama City, Florida, NBC affiliate WMBB swaps affiliations with ABC affiliate WJHG-TV. | |
January 10 | CBS televises the NFC Championship Game between the San Francisco 49ers and Dallas Cowboys. In what would become one of the most iconic images in NFL history, San Francisco tight end Dwight Clark makes "The Catch" to enable the 49ers to defeat the Cowboys, 28–27, and go to their first ever Super Bowl. Vin Scully called the game alongside Hank Stram on television while Pat Summerall (who would do the play-by-play for Super Bowl XVI with John Madden two weeks later) called the game with Jack Buck for CBS Radio. |
January 23 | CBS Reports broadcasts The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception , a documentary alleging a manipulation of intelligence estimates before the Tet Offensive in Vietnam. Retired Gen. William Westmoreland, the commander of U.S. military operations at the time of the alleged estimates, would file a libel suit against CBS believing the report described him unfairly. |
January 30 | The Golden Globe Awards air for the second consecutive year on CBS. The ceremony would soon become embroiled into controversy when actress Pia Zadora won that year's Golden Globe Award as Best New Star of the Year amid charges that her husband Meshulam Riklis had purchased the award with a promotional campaign that included Zadora's image presented prominently on Sunset Boulevard billboards, [1] an appearance in Playboy magazine, and entertaining Golden Globe voters. [2] [3] After CBS decided to negate their broadcasting contract in light of the controversy, the Golden Globes would not be seen on broadcast network television again until 1996, when NBC picked them up. |
February 1 | Late Night with David Letterman debuts on NBC; Letterman's first guests are Bill Murray (who dances around to the song "Physical") and "Mr. Wizard" Don Herbert. |
Two months after new owners Pacific Media Corporation changed its call letters from KECC-TV, CBS affiliate KECY-TV in Yuma, Arizona leaves the network to join ABC. This will leave Yuma without a CBS affiliate for 3 years, until KECY-TV rejoins the network in 1985 (it is now a Fox affiliate). [4] [5] [6] | |
February 3 | Singer Jermaine Jackson guest-features, as Tootie (Kim Fields) gets to meet the person she admires on a very special episode of the NBC sitcom The Facts of Life . |
February 7 | As part of a two-night event, ABC airs the network television broadcast premiere of Superman: The Movie . |
March 4 | The crime drama spoof Police Squad! premieres on ABC; though it only lasts 6 episodes (the last being broadcast July 8); the comedy would serve as the origin of the Frank Drebin character and the inspiration for the Naked Gun movie series. |
March 8 | Night of 100 Stars, a benefit for the Actors' Fund taped at Radio City Music Hall, is broadcast by ABC. |
March 26 | The soap opera series Search for Tomorrow is broadcast for the final time by CBS. NBC immediately purchases it and begins broadcasting it the following Monday. |
April 2 | John Chancellor anchors the NBC Nightly News for the final time, replaced on April 5 by the team of Roger Mudd and Tom Brokaw, a partnership that lasts 17 months. |
April 21 | Norman Lear purchases Avco Embassy Pictures and rechristens his TAT Communications Company as Embassy Television. |
WGXA in Macon, Georgia signs-on the air, giving the Macon market its first full-time ABC affiliate. | |
WTTO in Birmingham, Alabama signs-on the air, giving the Birmingham market its first independent station. | |
May 2 | The Weather Channel is begun in the U.S. [7] |
May 15 | Danny DeVito hosts an episode of Saturday Night Live soon after Taxi is canceled after its fourth season. During the opening monologue, DeVito reads a letter supposedly from his mother asking God to forgive ABC for cancelling the show, adding that "but I'll understand if you don't." A filmed bit has him driving around New York looking morose until inspiration strikes, and he blows up the ABC building. In addition, the Taxi cast members are given an opportunity for closure, which up to that point had been denied for them due to the abrupt cancellation. The actors took their "final" bows during DeVito's opening monologue, only to have NBC (which aired SNL) pick up the show. |
May 22 | In Boston, Massachusetts, CBS affiliate WNAC-TV ceases operations due to improprieties by its parent company RKO General, having lost the license (as well as those of KHJ-TV and WOR-TV, both of which RKO temporarily retain on appeal) after General Tire admitted to a litany of corporate misconduct (including, among other things, committing financial fraud over illegal political contributions and bribes) as part of a settlement with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and RKO General withheld evidence from the FCC of General Tire's misconduct, and also failed to disclose evidence of accounting errors on its own part. Several hours later, New England Television begins operations of WNEV-TV (now independent station WHDH) on channel 7, retaining WNAC-TV's former CBS affiliation. [8] [9] |
May 24 | The Peanuts special A Charlie Brown Celebration premiered on CBS. Which it includes several stories with one or two-word titles, was later adapted for the Saturday morning series, The Charlie Brown and Snoopy Show , which premiered in 1983. |
May 27 | The series finale of Mork & Mindy entitled "The Mork Report" is broadcast on ABC. While it actually was not the final episode to be filmed, ABC still aired it last in hopes of giving the canceled series some proper closure. |
May 28 | At about 5:00 p.m., Joseph Billie Gwin, wanting to "prevent World War III", forces his way into the studios of Phoenix CBS affiliate KOOL-TV, fires a gunshot, takes 4 people hostage (holding one of them, cameraman Louis Villa, at close gunpoint), and demands national broadcasting time. Three hours later, Gwin releases 2 hostages, Jack Webb and Bob Cimino. At 9:30 p.m., with Gwin sitting next to him with a gun, KOOL anchor Bill Close reads a 20-minute statement; when finished, Close takes Gwin's gun and sets it on the table. [10] [11] [12] |
American film critic Leonard Maltin makes his first appearance on the television news magazine Entertainment Tonight . [13] [14] | |
June 6 | The CBS affiliate in Orlando, WDBO-TV, changes its name to WCPX-TV. |
July 11 | ABC broadcasts the FIFA World Cup Final between Italy and West Germany from Madrid. It's the first time that the World Cup's final match is aired live on American television. |
July 13 | ABC broadcasts the Major League Baseball All-Star Game from Olympic Stadium in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It's the first time that the Mid-Summer's Classic is played outside of the United States. |
July 21 | The only episode of the sitcom Cass Malloy airs on CBS. Although not picked up as a regular series, it serves as the pilot for the 1987–1989 syndicated sitcom She's the Sheriff . |
July 29 | Professional wrestler Jerry Lawler slaps actor Andy Kaufman in the face on the NBC program Late Night with David Letterman ; Kaufman responds by throwing coffee and shouting profanities at Lawler. The incident was later revealed to have been staged. |
August 8 | In Columbia, Missouri, NBC affiliate and University of Missouri-owned KOMU-TV swaps affiliations with ABC affiliate KCBJ-TV. The swap would eventually be reversed in 1986. [15] |
August 30 | Field Communications begins its liquidation by selling off WFLD to Metromedia. |
September 6 | After Tom Wopat and John Schneider quit the CBS action series The Dukes of Hazzard as a result of a contract dispute, their characters, Bo and Luke Duke, are written out of the series as joining a NASCAR team and are replaced by cousins Coy and Vance (played respectively by Byron Cherry and Christopher Mayer). Bo and Luke—and Wopat and Schneider—would return to the series by season's end. |
September 11 | NBC resurrects Texaco Star Theater as a one-time special; however, instead of inviting Milton Berle, the man who hosted the original series during the 1950s, the special presents a salute to musicals. |
In Savannah, Georgia, NBC affiliate WSAV-TV swaps affiliations with ABC affiliate WJCL, citing ABC's stronger ratings. The swap would eventually be reversed in 1986. [16] | |
September 12 | KNLC, a religious independent station in St. Louis goes on the air. |
September 13 | Mary Hart joins Entertainment Tonight as reporter and later co-host; she would fill the latter role until 2011. |
September 20 | USA Network begins 24-hour operations, featuring the debut of the USA Cartoon Express , cable television's first structured animation block. |
September 25 | Saturday Night Live begins its 8th season on NBC, with host Chevy Chase and musical guest Queen. Among the new additions for this season include future Seinfeld actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who will stay for 3 years (1982–1985) as a featured player/regular cast member. |
September 30 | The pilot episode for Cheers airs on NBC. |
October 1 | Independent station KDOC-TV commences broadcasting in Los Angeles. |
October 2 | Mary Jo Catlett replaces Nedra Volz on the NBC sitcom Diff'rent Strokes , as the new housekeeper, Mrs. Pearl Gallagher. She will stay with the series until its conclusion in 1986. |
October 3 | During the National Football League players strike (on what would have been Week 5 of the season), CBS broadcasts four Division III football games using their regular NFL broadcast crews. |
October 4 | KMTR signs-on in Eugene, Oregon as an NBC affiliate. Due to NBC's persistent low ratings, the network's former affiliate KVAL-TV had been preempting NBC programming (with increasing regularity) in favor of programs from CBS (shared with ABC affiliate KEZI), forcing a frustrated NBC to seek a new station. With the move, KVAL-TV becomes a full-time CBS affiliate. |
October 4 | The CBS affiliate in Phoenix, KOOL-TV, changes its name to KTSP-TV. |
October 11 | WFBT, a religious television station in Minneapolis/St. Paul goes on the air. |
October 12 | Cindy Williams makes her final appearance as Shirley Finney on Laverne & Shirley . |
October 22 | Susan Stafford departs as co-host of the NBC game show Wheel of Fortune to do humanitarian work. Auditions occur for her replacement, with Vanna White formally replacing Stafford on December 13. As of 2022, White remains the co-host of Wheel. |
October 25 | The second season of Cagney & Lacey premieres on CBS with Sharon Gless now assuming the role of Det. Christine Cagney. Meg Foster portrayed Cagney in the first season. Foster was dismissed after the first six episodes because CBS deemed her too aggressive and too likely to be perceived as a lesbian by the viewers. [17] |
November 13 | CBS broadcasts a world championship boxing match between Ray Mancini and Kim Duk-koo that results in Kim's death five days after the bout. |
November 18 | After originating as a four-hour long programming block on a channel known as Escapade in January 1982, the channel as a whole is officially relaunched as The Playboy Channel. |
November 20 | At the age of 7, Drew Barrymore becomes the youngest person to ever guest-host Saturday Night Live on NBC. As fate would have it, she ends up hosting the same episode that saw Andy Kaufman banned from ever performing on the show again. |
November 26 | Howard Cosell denounces professional boxing during the ABC broadcast of a WBC heavyweight championship bout between titleholder Larry Holmes and a clearly outmatched Randall "Tex" Cobb at the Astrodome in Houston, Texas. Cosell, horrified over the brutality of the one-sided fight, said that if the referee did not stop the fight he would never broadcast a professional fight again. |
December 5 | Southwest Championship Wrestling becomes the first weekly wrestling program on the USA Network, airing Sundays at 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time. However, because of a particularly bloody match between Tully Blanchard and "Bruiser" Bob Sweetan (which USA refused to air), the inability of the promotion to keep paying USA the $7,000 per week to keep the time slot, and a monetary offer made to the cable channel by WWF owner Vince McMahon to replace Southwest Championship Wrestling with his own programming, [18] USA will end up canceling the program in September (in spite of the high ratings the show was garnering for the network), replacing it with WWF All American Wrestling . |
December 11 | ESPN broadcasts its first live college football game, simulcasting the Independence Bowl match-up between Kansas State University and the University of Wisconsin. |
TBS in association with Sports Productions, Inc. broadcasts a heavily anticipated college basketball match-up between the Virginia Cavaliers (led by Ralph Sampson) and Georgetown Hoyas (led by Patrick Ewing). TBS paid approximately US$600,000 for the broadcasting rights to the game that was called by Skip Caray and Abe Lemons. | |
Eddie Murphy becomes the first and to date, only person to guest-host NBC's Saturday Night Live while still a cast member. Murphy's 48 Hours co-star Nick Nolte was originally supposed to host until he fell ill. | |
December 27 | SuperStation WTBS debuts one of the first video game-themed TV series, Starcade . |
December 29 | Nastassja Kinski makes a puzzling appearance on the NBC program Late Night with David Letterman , seeming somewhat oblivious to the jokes and everything else that was going on around her and appearing with an unusual hair style Letterman describes as "looking like there was an owl perched on top of her head." (Letterman's second guest, John Candy, comes out with his own hair moussed up in a pile as a spoof of Kinski's hair.) |
Surround Sound is introduced for home use by Dolby. | |
December 31 | Texas and The Doctors have their final episodes aired on NBC. |
Show | Last aired | Previous network | Return date |
---|---|---|---|
Tattletales | 1978 | CBS | January 18 |
Date | Show | Debut |
---|---|---|
January 8 | Behind the Screen | 1981 |
January 15 | Darkroom | |
January 29 | Late Night with Tom Snyder | 1973 |
March 1 | In Search of... (returned in 2002) | 1977 |
March 6 | Spider-Man | 1981 |
March 22 | Mr. Merlin | |
March 26 | Password Plus (returned in 1984) | 1979 |
April 7 | Shannon | 1981 |
April 17 | The Lawrence Welk Show | 1955 |
April 21 | WKRP in Cincinnati | 1978 |
April 23 | Blockbusters | 1980 |
Fridays | ||
May 12 | The Incredible Hulk | 1977 |
May 20 | Barney Miller | 1975 |
May 21 | Strike Force | 1981 |
May 27 | Mork & Mindy | 1978 |
Bosom Buddies | 1980 | |
June 11 | It's a Living (returned in 1985) | |
July 21 | Cass Malloy | 1982 |
July 30 | Lewis & Clark | 1981 |
August 24 | McClain's Law | |
September 4 | The Tom and Jerry Comedy Show | 1980 |
September 5 | Goldie Gold and Action Jack | 1981 |
September 10 | Match Game (returned in 1990) | 1962 |
September 11 | The Flintstone Comedy Show | 1980 |
The Kwicky Koala Show | 1981 | |
September 12 | Code Red | |
September 13 | Lou Grant | 1977 |
September 18 | Laverne & Shirley | 1981 |
October 1 | Sunrise Semester | 1957 |
December 18 | Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo | 1980 |
December 25 | The Devlin Connection | 1982 |
December 31 | Texas | 1980 |
The Doctors | 1963 |
Show | Moved from | Moved to |
---|---|---|
Search for Tomorrow | CBS | NBC |
Taxi | ABC |
Title | Network | Premiere date |
---|---|---|
Cry for the Strangers | CBS | February 11 |
The Elephant Man | ABC | January 4 |
A Woman Called Golda | CBS | April 26 |
Inside the Third Reich | ABC | May 9 |
Little Gloria... Happy at Last | NBC | October 24 |
Million Dollar Infield | CBS | February 2 |
The Blue and the Gray (miniseries) | CBS | November 14 |
The Executioner's Song | NBC | November 28, 29 |
Network | Type | Launch date | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
Daytime and Lifetime Medical Television | Cable television | March | ||
CNN2 | Cable television | January 1 | ||
California Music Channel | Cable television | March 1 | ||
The Weather Channel | Cable and satellite | May 2 | ||
Cable Health Network | Cable television | June | ||
Satellite News Channel | Cable television | June 21 | ||
Home Shopping Club | Cable television | September 20 | ||
Playboy TV | Cable television | November 18 | ||
Old network | New network | Type | Conversion date | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CNN2 | Headline News | Cable television | August 9 | ||
Network | Type | Closure date | Notes | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
CBS Cable | Cable television | December 17 |
Date | City of License/Market | Station | Channel | Old affiliation | New affiliation | Notes/Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 4 | Panama City, Florida | WJHG-TV | 7 | ABC | NBC | |
WMBB | 13 | NBC | ABC | |||
February 1 | Yuma, Arizona/El Centro, California | KECY-TV | 9 | CBS | ABC | |
March 22 | Waterbury/Hartford, Connecticut | WTXX | 20 | NBC | Independent | |
August 8 | Columbia, Missouri | KOMU | 8 | NBC | ABC | |
KCBJ-TV | 17 | ABC | NBC | |||
September 11 | Savannah, Georgia | WSAV-TV | 3 | NBC | ABC | |
WJCL | 22 | ABC | NBC | |||
October 4 | Eugene, Oregon | KVAL-TV | 13 | NBC | CBS | |
Date | City of license/Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation | Sign-on date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
May 22 | Boston, Massachusetts | WNAC-TV | 7 | CBS | June 21, 1948 | Replaced with WNEV-TV. [19] |
June 4 | Hanover, New Hampshire | WHED-TV | 15 | PBS | April 11, 1968 [20] |
Date | Name | Age | Notability |
---|---|---|---|
January 1 | Victor Buono | 43 | Actor (King Tut on Batman ) |
January 5 | Hans Conried | 64 | Actor ( Make Room for Daddy , The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show , Dr. Seuss special) |
January 10 | Paul Lynde | 55 | Actor ( Bewitched ), comedian ( Hollywood Squares ) |
January 18 | Trent Lehman | 20 | Child actor ( Nanny and the Professor ) |
March 5 | John Belushi | 33 | Comedian/Singer ( Saturday Night Live ) |
May 14 | Hugh Beaumont | 73 | Actor (Ward Cleaver on Leave It to Beaver ) |
July 21 | Dave Garroway | 69 | Journalist and host ( The Today Show ) |
July 23 | Vic Morrow | 53 | Actor (Sgt. "Chip" Saunders on Combat! ) killed by negligence of director John Landis on set of Twilight Zone: The Movie |
August 12 | Henry Fonda | 77 | Actor |
August 13 | Joe E. Ross | 68 | Actor (Gunther Toody on Car 54, Where Are You? ) |
October 18 | Bess Truman | 97 | First Lady of the United States and spouse of President Harry S. Truman |
November 1 | James Broderick | 55 | Actor ( Family ) and father of Matthew Broderick |
November 4 | Dominique Dunne | 22 | Actress ( Poltergeist ) murdered by abusive boyfriend, first victim of the "Poltergeist curse" |
December 7 | Will Lee | 74 | Actor (Mr. Hooper on Sesame Street ) |
December 22 | Jack Webb | 62 | Actor, producer (Sgt. Joe Friday on Dragnet ) |
The Golden Globe Awards are awards presented for excellence in both international film and television. It is an annual award ceremony held since 1944 to honor artists and professionals and their work. The ceremony is normally held every January, and has been a major part of the film industry's awards season, which culminates each year in the Academy Awards. The eligibility period for Golden Globes corresponds from January 1 through December 31. The Golden Globes were not televised in 1969–1972, 1979, and 2022. The 2008 ceremony was canceled due to the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike.
The Mutual Broadcasting System was an American commercial radio network in operation from 1934 to 1999. In the golden age of U.S. radio drama, Mutual was best known as the original network home of The Lone Ranger and The Adventures of Superman and as the long-time radio residence of The Shadow. For many years, it was a national broadcaster for Major League Baseball, the National Football League, and Notre Dame Fighting Irish football. From the 1930s until the network's dissolution in 1999, Mutual ran a respected news service along with a variety of lauded news and commentary programs. In the 1970s, Mutual pioneered the nationwide late night call-in talk radio program, introducing the country to Larry King and later, Jim Bohannon.
Pia Zadora is an American actress and singer. She debuted a child actress on Broadway, in regional theater, and in the film Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964). She came to national attention in 1981 when, following her starring role in the highly criticized Butterfly, she won a Golden Globe Award as New Star of the Year while simultaneously winning the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Actress and the Worst New Star for the same performance.
WHDH is an independent television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. It is owned by Sunbeam Television alongside Cambridge-licensed CW affiliate WLVI. WHDH and WLVI share studios at Bulfinch Place in downtown Boston; through a channel sharing agreement, the two stations transmit using WHDH's spectrum from the WHDH-TV tower in Newton, Massachusetts.
KCAL-TV is an independent television station in Los Angeles, California, United States. It is owned by the CBS News and Stations group alongside CBS West Coast flagship KCBS-TV. The two stations share studios at the Radford Studio Center on Radford Avenue in the Studio City section of Los Angeles; KCAL-TV's transmitter is located atop Mount Wilson.
RKO General Inc. was an American broadcasting company that, from 1952 through 1991, served as the main holding company for the noncore businesses of the General Tire and Rubber Company and later on GenCorp, Inc.. The concern was based around the consolidation of its parent company's broadcasting interests, which dated to 1943 and were brought together under the General Teleradio umbrella in 1952. The company was renamed RKO Teleradio Pictures following its 1955 purchase of the RKO Pictures film studio, and then RKO General in 1959 after dissolving the motion picture division. Headquartered in New York City, the company operated six television stations and more than a dozen major radio stations around North America between 1959 and 1991.
WRKO is a commercial news/talk radio station licensed to Boston, Massachusetts, serving Greater Boston and much of surrounding New England. Owned by iHeartMedia, WRKO is a Class B AM station that provides secondary coverage to portions of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire and Maine during the day, but is highly directional at night to protect a number of clear-channel stations on adjacent frequencies. WRKO serves as the Boston affiliate for ABC News Radio, Coast to Coast AM and This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal; syndicated personalities Joe Pags, John Batchelor and Bill Cunningham; the flagship station of The Howie Carr Show, and the home of radio personality Jeff Kuhner. The WRKO studios are located in the Boston suburb of Medford, while the station transmitter resides in nearby Burlington. Besides its main analog transmission, WRKO simulcasts over the HD2 subchannel of sister station WZLX, and streams online via iHeartRadio.
Butterfly is a 1982 American independent crime drama film co-written and directed by Matt Cimber, based on the 1947 novel The Butterfly by James M. Cain. The starring cast includes Stacy Keach, Pia Zadora, Lois Nettleton, Ed McMahon, James Franciscus, Edward Albert, and Orson Welles. The original music score was composed by Ennio Morricone. Financed by Zadora's husband, Israeli multimillionaire Meshulam Riklis, at an estimated cost of US$3.5 million, the plot follows a silver mine caretaker who is reunited with his estranged teenage daughter who wants to take silver from the mine.
KATV is a television station in Little Rock, Arkansas, United States, affiliated with ABC and owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group. The station's studios are located on Riverfront Drive in the Riverdale section northwest of downtown Little Rock, and its transmitter is located at the Shinall Mountain antenna farm in the Chenal Valley area.
The following events occurred in May 1982:
WNAC-TV, branded Fox Providence, is a television station in Providence, Rhode Island, United States, affiliated with Fox and The CW. It is owned by Mission Broadcasting, which maintains a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Nexstar Media Group, owner of dual CBS/MyNetworkTV affiliate WPRI-TV, for the provision of certain services. The two stations share studios on Catamore Boulevard in East Providence, Rhode Island; WNAC-TV's transmitter is located on Homestead Avenue in Rehoboth, Massachusetts.
The Lonely Lady is a 1983 American drama film directed by Peter Sasdy, adapted from Harold Robbins' 1976 novel of the same name, believed to have been based on Robbins' memories of Jacqueline Susann. The film stars Pia Zadora in the title role, Lloyd Bochner, Bibi Besch, Jared Martin and Ray Liotta in his film debut. The original music score was composed by Charlie Calello.
KBEH is a television station licensed to Garden Grove, California, United States, serving the Los Angeles area as an affiliate of Canal de la Fe, a Spanish-language religious network. Owned by Meruelo Broadcasting, the station maintains studios on West Pico Boulevard in the Mid-City section of Los Angeles. Through a channel sharing agreement with KSCN-TV, the two stations transmit using KSCN-TV's spectrum from an antenna atop Mount Wilson.
The Yankee Network was an American radio network, based in Boston, Massachusetts, with affiliate radio stations throughout New England. At the height of its influence, the Yankee Network had as many as twenty-four affiliated radio stations. The network was co-founded by John Shepard III and his brother Robert, in 1929–1930. The beginnings of what became the Yankee Network occurred in the mid-1920s, when John Shepard's Boston station WNAC linked by telephone land lines with Robert Shepard's station in Providence, Rhode Island, WEAN, so that the two stations could share or exchange programming. Those two stations became the first two Yankee Network stations. In 1930, they were joined by the first affiliated radio stations, including WLBZ in Bangor, Maine; WORC in Worcester, Massachusetts; WNBH in New Bedford, Massachusetts; and WICC in Bridgeport, Connecticut. During the 1930s, the network became known for developing its own local and regional news bureau, the Yankee News Service. The Yankee Network and the Yankee News Service operated until February 1967.
NHL on RKO General relates to a small, syndicated network of stations owned by RKO General which broadcast National Hockey League games.
WBZ-FM is a commercial sports radio station licensed to Boston, Massachusetts, serving Greater Boston and much of surrounding New England. Owned by the Beasley Broadcast Group, WBZ-FM is the Boston affiliate for Fox Sports Radio; the flagship station for the New England Patriots, Boston Bruins, Boston Celtics, and New England Revolution radio networks; and the radio home of Fred Toettcher, Scott Zolak, Mike Felger, Tony Massarotti, and Bob Socci. The WBZ-FM studios are located in Waltham, while the station transmitter resides in the Boston suburb of Newton. In addition to a standard analog transmission, WBZ-FM broadcasts over two HD Radio channels, and is available online.
Jonathan David Kaufer was an American film director, screenwriter, and occasional actor. Kaufer received his first job while in his late teens as a writer for the sitcom Mork & Mindy. Filmmaker Howard Zieff later hired Kaufer to do rewrites for his films, and his work on the 1979 film The Main Event led to a development deal enabling him to direct his first film, the romantic comedy Soup for One. At the time, he was the youngest director hired by a major studio.
WNAC-TV, channel 7, was a television station located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. The station was owned by RKO General. Originally established in 1948, WNAC-TV signed off for the final time at 1 a.m. on May 22, 1982, due to improprieties by its parent company; it was replaced that morning with WNEV-TV, which operates on a separate license. The station was Boston's original CBS television affiliate; except for a period from 1961 to 1972 during which it was an ABC affiliate, WNAC-TV would remain with CBS until its replacement with WNEV-TV.
The Sanremo Music Festival 1985, officially the 35th Italian Song Festival, was the 35th annual Sanremo Music Festival, held at the Teatro Ariston in Sanremo, Italy, between 7 and 9 February 1985 and broadcast on Rai 1. The show was hosted by Pippo Baudo, assisted by Patty Brard.
Tony Sheehan is an American producer and screenwriter.