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Beyond the Gates, an all-new CBS daytime drama that premieres on Feb. 24, will make history as the first Black soap opera in 35 years following Generations, which ran for 13 months and concluded ...
Beyond the Gates is the first American daytime soap opera to feature a primarily African-American cast since the 1989–1991 NBC soap Generations, which—aside from being Val Jean's first scriptwriting job—was the first serial to feature a Black family from its inception, and to focus primarily on a family of ethnic minorities. [19]
British soap operas for many years usually only aired two nights a week. The exception was the original Crossroads, which began as a week-daily soap opera in the 1960s but later had its number of weekly broadcasts reduced. In 1989, Coronation Street began airing three times a week. In 1996, it expanded to four episodes a week.
Originally involving simple text message exchanges, modern IM applications and services (also called "social messengers", "messaging apps", "chat apps" or "chat clients") tend to also feature the exchange of multimedia, emojis, file transfer, VoIP (voice calling), and video chat capabilities. Instant messaging systems facilitate connections ...
Took over the daytime programming in 1975 and ultimately removed The Edge of Night from CBS to make room to expand As the World Turns to a full hour, expanded Guiding Light to a full hour in 1977, and later The Young and the Restless. Jeane Renick: Vice President of Daytime Programming: 1980–1986: East Coast Director, 1978-80, Manager Daytime ...
The Gates will be the network’s first new soap opera since The Bold. George Rose/Getty Images For the first time in decades, daytime TV might be getting another soap opera. CBS Studios and the ...
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The Faye Emerson Show (October 24, 1949–June 22, 1951) – 15-minute chat show, began as an East Coast program before expanding to the full network, airing three nights a week, by March 1950; Emerson also concurrently hosted a show on NBC for several months in 1950. [2] The Merv Griffin Show (August 18, 1969–February 11, 1972)