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This category features disasters and people who have died or received fatal injuries while being filmed, videotaped, broadcast, or otherwise recorded. Subcategories This category has the following 10 subcategories, out of 10 total.
When news of the death of Britain’s King George VI reached New York in the early morning hours of Wednesday, February 6, 1952, the plan for that morning’s show was thrown out and the program instead covered the monarch’s death. News anchor Jim Fleming helped lead coverage that day, and live analysis was provided by NBC foreign ...
September 25 - The Danny Kaye Show on CBS (1963–1967) September 28 - The New Phil Silvers Show (1963–64) and Tennessee Tuxedo and His Tales on CBS (1963–66) September 29 – The Judy Garland Show (1963–64) and My Favorite Martian (1963–66), both on CBS; October 5 – Le Manège enchanté on la Première chaîne de la RTF (1963–1971 ...
The CBS Evening News becomes the first half-hour weeknight news broadcast in American network television when the show was lengthened from 15 to 30 minutes. NBC's evening news program, The Huntley-Brinkley Report, follows suit one week later. October 1 ABC News begins to rely on its own camera crews, after depending on outside sources for news ...
A woman who was brutally murdered in Queens more than three decades ago has finally been identified - through advanced DNA testing - as a mom who went missing soon after celebrating her daughter's ...
Irv responded to the Today broadcast in his column in the Chicago Sun-Times of February 9, 1992: The NBC Today Show on Friday [February 7] carried a list of people who died violently in 1963 shortly after the death of President John F. Kennedy and may have had some link to the assassination. The first name on the list was Karyn Kupcinet, my ...
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Television historians Harry Castleman and Walter Podrazik (1982) state, "Despite all the promises of programming reform made by television executives in May, 1961" (the month of Newton Minow's landmark speech "Television and the Public Interest"), "the 1962–63 schedule turned out to be business as usual".