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  2. Good Day! (TV program) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Day!_(TV_program)

    Not long after the premiere of Good Morning America, WCVB station manager Bob Bennett confronted Silverman at an affiliate's convention and accused him of deliberately stealing the title of Good Morning!; the two similarly-titled programs were now running back-to-back on WCVB's morning lineup. [5]

  3. WCVB-TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WCVB-TV

    Good Day!, along with The Morning Exchange on Cleveland's WEWS-TV, served as a prototype for the format of ABC's Good Morning America. Good Day! lasted until 1991. During the 1970s, WCVB-TV was the first television station in southern New England to run a 24-hour program schedule.

  4. Good Morning America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Morning_America

    The launch of Good Morning America did result in the Boston morning show changing its name—to Good Day!. Currently, WCVB's morning news program is titled EyeOpener. ABC took an episode of The Morning Exchange and used it as a television pilot. The format replaced AM America on Monday, November 3, as Good Morning America.

  5. Good Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_Day

    Good Day Seattle, on KCPQ, Seattle, Washington "Good Day", a television-news music package, produced by Frank Gari, used by some Good Day programs; Good Day!, a morning show on WCVB-TV in Boston, Massachusetts that ran between 1973 and 1991; Good Day (formerly Good Day Sacramento), a local morning newscast on KMAX-TV, Sacramento, California

  6. Janet Langhart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Langhart

    She joined Boston's WCVB-TV for the first time in September 1973, [19] where she co-hosted the morning program Good Day! (originally titled Good Morning!). [20] She would leave and return several times between 1973 and 1987. By 1976, Good Day was being syndicated to 75 television stations across the United States. [21]

  7. Breakfast television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breakfast_television

    The Morning Exchange on WEWS-TV was Cleveland's entry into the franchise; with its light format, ABC (after a brief but failed effort to launch the Los Angeles version nationally as AM America) launched a national program based closely on the format of The Morning Exchange and Good Day! (From WCVB-TV in Boston) in November 1975 under the title ...

  8. Bonnie Hammer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonnie_Hammer

    Born to a Jewish family [2] [3] in 1950, [4] Bonnie Hammer was raised in Queens, New York, the youngest of three children. Hammer's mother was a full-time mom; her dad, a Russian immigrant, started his own pen company.

  9. Arthur R. Miller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_R._Miller

    He served for two decades as the on-air legal editor for ABC's Good Morning America. His weekly television program titled Miller's Court was aired on Boston's WCVB-TV from 1979 to 1988 and was the first American television show dedicated to the