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The 1947–48 United States network television schedule was nominally from September 1947 to March 1948, but scheduling ideas were still being worked out and did not follow modern standards. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the 1946–47 season .
May 7 – Kraft Television Theater on NBC, the first regularly scheduled drama series on a network (1947–1958) May 15 – King Cole's Birthday Party (1947–1949) May 21 – In the Kelvinator Kitchen (1947–1948) [1] June 16 – The Walter Compton News (1947–1948) July 8 – Major League Baseball on NBC (1947–2000)
This is a listing of American television network programs currently airing or have aired during evening. Evening news programming begins at 6:30pm, 5:30pm, or 3:30pm Eastern Time Zone/Pacific Time Zone, after network affiliates' late local news. On PBS, and cable television, news starts at 6:00 pm, earlier, or later ET/PT.
Now WDIV-TV, the WWJ-TV calls now reside at CBS' O&O in Detroit: June 27 Washington, D.C. WNBW: 4 NBC Now WRC-TV September 13 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: WFIL-TV: 6 DuMont Now ABC O&O station WPVI-TV October 3 Washington, D.C. WTVW (later WMAL-TV) 7 CBS: Now ABC affiliate WJLA-TV October 27 Baltimore, Maryland: WMAR-TV: 2 Independent
1947–48 United States network television schedule (daytime) U. 1946–47 United States network television schedule This page was last edited on 5 March 2020, at 11 ...
The 1946–47 United States network television schedule was nominally from September 1946 to March 1947, but scheduling ideas were still being worked out and did not follow modern standards. This was the first "network television season" in the United States, and only NBC and DuMont operated networks.
As its name indicated, its main source of news information was the International News Service. DuMont had aired The Walter Compton News, first as a local show on WTTG on June 16, 1947, then on the DuMont network from August 25, 1947, until January 1948, at which point DuMont replaced Compton's newscast with I.N.S. Telenews and Camera Headlines. [1]
The early days of television introduced hour-long anthology drama series, many of which received critical acclaim. [6] [7] Examples include Kraft Television Theatre (debuted May 7, 1947), The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre (debuted September 27, 1948), Television Playhouse (debuted December 4, 1947), The Philco Television Playhouse (debuted October 3, 1948), Westinghouse Studio One (debuted November 7 ...