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The Red Buttons Show: CBS: 40.2 12: The Jack Benny Show: 39.0 13: Life with Luigi: 38.5 14: Pabst Blue Ribbon Bouts: 37.9 15: Goodyear TV Playhouse: NBC: 37.8 16: The Life of Riley: 37.4 17: Philco TV Playhouse: 37.3 18: Mama: CBS: 37.0 19: Your Show of Shows: NBC: 36.0 20: What's My Line? CBS: 35.3 Strike It Rich: 22: Our Miss Brooks: 35.0 The ...
This table displays the top-rated primetime television series of the 1951–52 season as measured by Nielsen ... Philco TV Playhouse: NBC: 40.4 13: Amos 'n' Andy: CBS ...
October 3 – Our Miss Brooks (1952-1956) on CBS; November 1 – Hockey Night in Canada on CBC (1952–present) November 6 – Biff Baker, U.S.A. on CBS (1952–1953) November 8 – My Hero on NBC (1952–1953) December 1 – The Abbott and Costello Show in syndication (1952–1954) December 15 – Flower Pot Men on BBC Television (1952)
This article presents the top-rated American primetime broadcast network television ... Philco TV Playhouse: 45.3 4: Your Show of Shows ... October 1952–April 1953.
June 20, 1952 November 11 The Power of Women: DuMont: July 1, 1952 November 13 The Frank Sinatra Show: CBS: October 7, 1950 November 24 Pentagon: DuMont: May 6, 1951 November 29 Battle of the Ages: CBS: January 1, 1952 (on DuMont) December 9 Quick on the Draw: DuMont: January 18, 1952 December 10 The Unexpected: DuMont March 5, 1952 December 22
These old TV shows set the stage for the small screen as we know it today. The post 20 Best Classic TV Shows of All Time appeared first on Reader's Digest.
CBS's success with filmed program I Love Lucy in fall 1951, however, had convinced NBC to add a few filmed series to its fall 1952 schedule. Among NBC's new filmed TV series were My Hero, I Married Joan, and Doc Corkle. The Red Skelton Show, previously airing live, also made the move to film. NBC also moved Skelton's program from its previous ...
The series "proved the strength and acceptability of TV sitcoms, giving [CBS] a strong weapon against NBC's flashy comedy-variety hours". [1] DuMont, too, avoided flashy comedy series when in February 1952, in desperation the network added Bishop Fulton Sheen's program, Life Is Worth Living, to its Tuesday night schedule