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  2. Afternoon movie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afternoon_movie

    The afternoon movie was a popular practice of local television stations in North America from the 1950s through the 1970s. It consisted of the daily weekday showing of old films usually between 12:30 and 2:00 P.M; if the film ran two hours or more, it was split into two parts.

  3. The 4:30 Movie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_4:30_Movie

    The 4:30 Movie is a television program that aired weekday afternoons on WABC-TV (Channel 7) in New York from 1968 to 1981. The program was mainly known for individual theme weeks devoted to theatrical feature films or made-for-TV movies starring a certain actor or actress, or to a particular genre, or to films that spawned sequels.

  4. NBC Saturday Night at the Movies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NBC_Saturday_Night_at_the...

    Many of the made-for-television movies on NBC would become TV series in their own right during the late-1960s and early-1970s. One of the more famous examples was Fame Is the Name of the Game (1966), which ultimately served as the pilot episode for the 1968–71 series The Name of the Game .

  5. ABC Movie of the Week - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_Movie_of_the_Week

    During the 1970s, ABC's local owned-and-operated stations (in a few of the nation's biggest cities; at the time, they all broadcast on channel 7) featured The 4:30 Movie on weekday afternoons (the actual time varied by city, but generally after ABC's morning/midday game shows and soap operas); it featured mainly major Hollywood theatrical ...

  6. CBS Children's Film Festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBS_Children's_Film_Festival

    Geronimo Jones – American, 1970; Get Used to Me – American, 1976; Ghost of a Chance – British, 1968; The Giant Eel – Czech, 1971; Glamador – French, 1955; The Goalkeeper Also Lives on Our Street – Czech, 1957; The Golden Fish – French, 1959; Gosha the Bear – Soviet, 1971; Hand in Hand – British, 1960; Headline Hunters ...

  7. CBS Thursday Night Movie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBS_Thursday_Night_Movie

    CBS's new anthology was not to escape notoriety, as the network learned the evening of September 30. During its running of the Jack Lemmon-Kim Novak comedy, The Notorious Landlady, someone at the controls of the film's broadcast inadvertently got the reels mixed up, and it was with some chagrin that a network announcer issued an apology during a commercial break before a substantial portion of ...

  8. The Syncopated Clock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Syncopated_Clock

    The arrangement requires temple blocks to be used as the sound of the clock that is heard throughout, except for a brief section in the middle. The piece is in 4 4 time; the opening establishes a perfectly regular "tick-tock" accompaniment, beginning with a roll off the orchestra's staccato strike of an A chord, creating an expectation that it will continue.

  9. The CBS Late Movie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_CBS_Late_Movie

    First airing on February 14, 1972, The CBS Late Movie initially ran titles from a new package of MGM films that had not been previously televised. These included the Richard Chamberlain courtroom drama Twilight of Honor (1963), the original version of the sci-fi classic Village of the Damned (1960), Sidney Lumet's prisoner-of-war entry The Hill (1965), as well as two installments from the ...