Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following is the 1966–67 network television schedule for the three major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States.The schedule covers primetime hours from September 1966 through August 1967.
According to the September 13, 1958, Utah-Idaho edition, there were 51 regional editions of TV Guide being printed in the United States. Unless otherwise noted, regional editions in the United States can be assumed to have ended with the October 9, 2005, issue, after which TV Guide began publishing national listings based on time zone.
National Educational Television (NET), the network predecessor to PBS, introduced its first live, in-pattern weekly series in November, 1967, PBL (an acronym for Public Broadcast Laboratory), which was cleared in a simultaneous 8:30pm ET/5:30pm PT Sunday time-slot on the majority of NET stations. In the first season the series offered usually ...
The 1966–67 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 1966 to August 1967.
September 6 – He & She (1967–68) and Dundee and the Culhane (Fall 1967 only) both on CBS; September 7 The Flying Nun (1967–70) on ABC; Cimarron Strip (1967–68) on CBS; September 8 – Hondo (ended December 29, 1967) on ABC; September 9 – Spider-Man (1967–70) and George of the Jungle (1967) on ABC; September 10 – The Mothers-in-Law ...
Note: On CBS, both Search for Tomorrow and Guiding Light expanded from 15 to 30 minutes on Monday September 9, 1968. They were the last two 15-minute soap operas airing on television, ending a 22-season era of 15 minute soap operas which had begun with the first ever soap opera on television, Faraway Hill, on the DuMont network in 1946.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The variously three to six larger commercial U.S. television networks each has its schedule. which is altered each year (and usually more frequently), and the introductions and relevant articles provide a comprehensive review for each year, from the 1946 season to the present.