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Bob Crosby Show: 4:00 The Brighter Day. 4:15 The Secret Storm. On Your Account 5:00 Barker Bill's Cartoon Show (W/F) 5:15 local programming local programming NBC: The Today Show starring Dave Garroway: local programming Ding Dong School: 10:30 Parent's Time. 10:45 Hollywood Today with Sheila Graham The Home Show: The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show ...
DuMont's 1954–55 schedule would be the last year the failing television network planned a seven night program schedule, and even this schedule was full of holes. Heldenfels states that the 1954 DuMont schedule "was a checkerboard of programs and empty spaces for [local] stations to fill". [2]
These are the late night Monday-Friday schedules on all four networks for each calendar season beginning September 1954. All times are Eastern and Pacific. Two of the four networks began late-night schedules in 1954; DuMont aired its first and only show, The Ernie Kovacs Show , beginning in summer 1954, while NBC resumed late-night programming ...
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The Ernie Kovacs Show; Feather Your Nest; First Love; The Home Show; Howdy Doody; Modern Romances; Pinky Lee Show; The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show; The Today Show; The World of Mr. Sweeney; New Series. A Date With Life; Comedy Time; It Could Be You; Matinee Theater; NBC Bandstand; Tic-Tac-Dough; Queen for a Day; Not Returning From 1954-55. A Time ...
The 1953–54 daytime network television schedule for the three major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the weekday daytime hours from September 1953 to August 1954.
Thus, NBC and CBS continued to schedule many live programs, including two new 1953 fall NBC series The Dave Garroway Show and Bonino. According to Brooks and Marsh (2007), Garroway's show "was faced with overwhelming competition from Mama and Ozzie & Harriet , which were running opposite on CBS and ABC, and it only lasted a single season". [ 2 ]
This article lists the feast days of the General Roman Calendar as they were at the end of 1954. It is essentially the same calendar established by Pope Pius X (1903–1914) following his liturgical reforms, but it also incorporates changes that were made by Pope Pius XI (1922–1939), such as the institution of the Feast of Christ the King (assigned to the last Sunday in October), and the ...