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Shock Theater premiered on Saturday, January 1, 1972, and was a fixture on WKEF for thirteen years. The title was also spelled Shock Theatre and by 1977 that spelling remained. During that time, Dr. Creep co-hosted Clubhouse 22, a popular weekday afternoon kids show, adding to his local star power. 1972 TV Guide ad for Shock Theater
Since WKEF already had to compete in its own market with WDTN and CBS affiliate WHIO-TV—two of their networks' strongest performers—it found the going rather difficult. In 1984, the Springfield Television group (WKEF, WWLP, and KSTU in Salt Lake City) was sold to Adams Communications. That company broke up the group in the late 1980s ...
Hollywood Squares presents its 3,536th and final network telecast on NBC, ending a 14-year daytime run; it remains the second-longest-running daytime game show in the network's history, behind the original 1958–73 run of Concentration. Two other NBC game shows, High Rollers and Chain Reaction, end their runs on this date as well.
This table displays the top-rated primetime television series of the 1980–81 season as measured by Nielsen Media Research. [1] Rank Program Network Rating 1: Dallas ...
Television portal; United States portal; 1980s portal; Television series which originated in the United States in the decade 1980s. i.e. in the years 1980 to 1989.Television shows that originated in other countries and only later aired in the United States should be removed from this category and its sub-categories
Bruce Willis and Cybil Shepherd in ‘Moonlighting’. Cover Images/Instar Images Bruce Willis and Cybil Shepherd’s 1980s hit TV series Moonlighting has found a streaming home — finally. Hulu ...
The 1980–81 daytime network television schedule for the three major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the weekday and weekend daytime hours from September 1980 to August 1981.
Through most of the 1970s and 1980s, a localized version of this series also aired in Dayton, Ohio on WKEF, which was owned at the time by WWLP's original owner, William Putnam. The Dayton version featured several different hosts during its run, one of whom was future conservative talk show host Mike Gallagher.