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The following is a list of presidents of the entertainment division for the CBS television network. Frank Stanton, who served as the president of CBS between 1946 and 1971 and then as vice chairman until 1973, reorganized CBS into various divisions, including separate divisions for television and radio; the following executives served under him, CBS founder William S. Paley and later chairmen.
The following is the 1964–65 network television schedule for the three major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States. The schedule covers primetime hours from September 1964 through August 1965.
A Really Big Show: Ed Sullivan's 50th Anniversary: May 18, 1998 Sonny & Me: Cher Remembers: May 20, 1998 CBS: The First 50 Years: May 20, 1998 The Snowden, Raggedy Ann & Andy Holiday Show: November 27, 1998 The Year Without a Santa Claus: December 12, 1998 Surprise Surprise Surprise: May 14, 1999 Sports Illustrated 20th Century Awards: December ...
The Today Show; Top Cat reruns; The Underdog Show reruns (Moved from CBS) You Don't Say! New series: The Banana Splits Adventure Hour; Hidden Faces; It Takes Two; Storybook Squares; The Untamed World; You're Putting Me On; Not returning from 1967-68: The Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel Show; Let's Make a Deal (Moved to ABC) Samson & Goliath; Young Samson
The Dick Cavett Show: CBS Fall Lancer: The Red Skelton Hour (11/23.3) (Tied with Mission: Impossible and Bewitched) The Doris Day Show (30/20.4) CBS News Hour / 60 Minutes: Summer The Liberace Show: NBC Fall The Jerry Lewis Show: Julia (7/24.6) NBC Tuesday Night at the Movies: Summer Star Trek
If anyone is equipped to analyze the turmoil in the presidential race that was catalyzed by Thursday’s debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump, it’s CBS News anchor John Dickerson. Dickerson ...
JD Vance and Tim Walz go head-to-head in their first and only vice presidential debate, offering voters a crucial glimpse into their contrasting visions and leadership styles ahead of the election.
In April 1964, The Celebrity Game was added to CBS' primetime lineup. Empire on ABC consisted of reruns of the 1962-63 NBC TV series. Brenner on CBS consisted of ten new episodes — the first produced for the show since 1959 — followed by reruns of episodes first aired in 1959 and 1961.