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Non-Road Boards => Off-Topic => Topic started by: bandit957 on September 26, 2023, 12:29:40 AM

Title: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: bandit957 on September 26, 2023, 12:29:40 AM
I bet there was no other TV market as loaded with preemptions as Cincinnati. And they were often because of the show's content, not because the show they preempted it with was more popular.

One of the most ridiculous was the string of years in the late '80s/early '90s when Channel 12 preempted 'New Year's Rockin' Eve' because it was too much for Cincinnati to handle.

I remember Channel 5 preempting 'Diff'rent Strokes' for 'The Billy Graham Crusade'. It also once preempted 'The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air' for a department store infomercial.

Channel 19 constantly preempted 'The Simpsons' for college basketball games back when it was on Thursdays. I was so relieved when 'The Simpsons' moved to Sundays. But then there was a week when the team refused to play during the week because it was snowing outside (even though the game was indoors). So they moved the game to Sunday.

Channel 12 once preempted 'All My Children' to show an hour of whining from the team because they lost a game.

I know Channel 9 preempted some serious CBS news show once with a college basketball game. (It wasn't '60 Minutes'. I think it was a different show with Ed Bradley.)

Channel 5 once preempted 'American Dreams' to show an election rally by a candidate the station supported. The station never showed opponents' rallies.

Channel 19 once preempted 'Cops' with a 'Star Trek' rerun.

I remember many times having to break out the antenna to try to tune in Dayton stations to watch shows the Cincinnati stations preempted. So we had to settle for snowy reception much of the time. The most commonly repeated phrase in our household was "We have to watch it on Channel 45 again!"

When a station preempts a network show, other stations in town are allowed to pick up that show. But I don't remember this ever happening, even when we had one or two independents.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Big John on September 26, 2023, 02:53:05 AM
CBS Station preempted the Maude episode where there was an abortion.

NBC Station in the early 1980s preempted  Saturday Night Live. The independent station picked it up for a little while.

ABC station refused to air Fridays.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Scott5114 on September 26, 2023, 04:29:08 AM
One time I called KOLR in Springfield MO to complain about them preempting The Price Is Right with some local show I don't know anything about. It reminded me of like a redneck version of Antiques Roadshow, though. The guy on the phone claimed they did it because George W. Bush gave a speech. But he was done by the time The Price Is Right was on. So why didn't they preempt the Redneck Roadshow instead?
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: roadman65 on September 26, 2023, 04:51:58 AM
I remember once during the Fall line up of CBS. Two weeks into the start of a season in the nineties, they preempted the shows for sporting events. Soon as those events were over, they cancelled the shows preempted due to low ratings.

How can you get ratings if the shows weren't aired? Plus how can you assess the liking of a program from two airings unless the first episode totally bombed with maybe one in ten thousand TV sets nationwide turned on those two times.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Henry on September 29, 2023, 07:26:24 PM
Quote from: roadman65 on September 26, 2023, 04:51:58 AM
I remember once during the Fall line up of CBS. Two weeks into the start of a season in the nineties, they preempted the shows for sporting events. Soon as those events were over, they cancelled the shows preempted due to low ratings.
I have a sneaking suspicion that you're talking about the baseball playoffs and/or World Series. Remember, CBS had exclusive rights to them for the first four years of the decade (1990-93).
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Big John on September 29, 2023, 07:38:37 PM
^^ South of Sunset was heavily promoted during the 1993 World Series and was cancelled after 1 episode.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: LilianaUwU on September 29, 2023, 10:06:24 PM
Preempting still exists today, but mainly for sports events. Also, extremely rarely does it ever happen in Canada, as sports broadcasts are on cable TV. With that said, and with me not watching TV anymore, the last time I can recall seeing a preempting was in the early 2010s, with one of Wheel of Fortune's Saturday reruns on Detroit's NBC affiliate (WDIV-TV), which we had on cable on the Magdalen Islands for some reason.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Road Hog on September 30, 2023, 10:51:33 PM
I remember a large number of ABC affiliates pre-empted the first couple of seasons of NYPD Blue in 1993-94 because of its edgy (at the time) nudity and language.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: SectorZ on October 01, 2023, 07:38:01 AM
Anyone remember when Jay Leno gave up the Tonight Show and NBC gave him that nightly 10 PM show? WHDH, Channel in Boston, then the NBC affiliate, threatened to play news instead of the show. Inevitably they didn't, but somehow it previewed the massive failure the show became.

That station got its wish years later when it lost its affiliation and now plays news for about 10 hours per weekday.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: bing101 on October 01, 2023, 12:04:02 PM
Pre-empting Network shows is common for Breaking News reasons like storms and other major events in certain areas but today if you have a TV that connects to a Wifi then you can find the prempted episodes on TV apps like Hulu, Paramount+, Disney+ and Peacock.

I remember it used to be a big deal in the past but then again we are in a different era.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Ted$8roadFan on October 01, 2023, 12:11:47 PM
Boston is one of those markets that preempts network shows for breaking news. Of course, severe weather (blizzards, tornadoes, tropical storms) will do the trick, but also sports (as when Tom Brady announced his departure from the Patriots on St. Patrick's Day 2020).
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Stephane Dumas on October 01, 2023, 12:49:52 PM
I remember a time when NBC Today show was pre-empted by reruns of the Jetsons and some other cartoons on WPTZ NBC Plattsburgh around 1992-1994.

Quote from: LilianaUwU on September 29, 2023, 10:06:24 PM
Preempting still exists today, but mainly for sports events. Also, extremely rarely does it ever happen in Canada, as sports broadcasts are on cable TV. With that said, and with me not watching TV anymore, the last time I can recall seeing a preempting was in the early 2010s, with one of Wheel of Fortune's Saturday reruns on Detroit's NBC affiliate (WDIV-TV), which we had on cable on the Magdalen Islands for some reason.

It did once happen in Canada before sports channels like TSN and RDS became popular. In the early 1980s, teleromans (Quebec's version of soap-operas) like "Terre Humaine" or "Le Temps d'Une Paix" was pre-empted for the NHL playoff games.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: vdeane on October 01, 2023, 04:09:47 PM
Around here, News10 ABC preempted one of the 10 pm shows one week last year to air a special on winter weather (not anything that was happening at the time, more like explaining terminology and things like how nor'easters work).  IIRC, the preempted show aired on Fox23 (which is also owned/operated by Nextar and has shared news coverage), which makes me wonder why they didn't just put the special on Fox23 to begin with.  Or air it at 7 in place of Wheel and Jeopardy like they do most specials.

It's even still possible to watch it online.

https://www.news10.com/video/news10abc-winter-weather-guide/8179705/
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: zachary_amaryllis on October 06, 2023, 07:45:52 PM
When I was a kid, all you got here without the giant dish, was Channel 5, from Cheyenne. It was fuzzy but watchable.

Depending on the time of day, and really it seemed the mood of the station, it was all 3 networks. I bet bandit here WAS the guy running it.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: SectorZ on October 07, 2023, 06:53:45 AM
Quote from: vdeane on October 01, 2023, 04:09:47 PM
Around here, News10 ABC preempted one of the 10 pm shows one week last year to air a special on winter weather (not anything that was happening at the time, more like explaining terminology and things like how nor'easters work).  IIRC, the preempted show aired on Fox23 (which is also owned/operated by Nextar and has shared news coverage), which makes me wonder why they didn't just put the special on Fox23 to begin with.  Or air it at 7 in place of Wheel and Jeopardy like they do most specials.

It's even still possible to watch it online.

https://www.news10.com/video/news10abc-winter-weather-guide/8179705/

WBZ, the CBS affiliate here, does that same exact thing once or twice per year. Oddly enough they're owned and operated by CBS.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: 1995hoo on October 07, 2023, 08:11:23 AM
Until the writers' strike ended a week or two ago, ABC affiliates were airing Monday Night Football (which normally airs on ESPN) to fill the programming gap. At least here in the DC area, that meant they preempted Jeopardy. On the plus side, they did air Jeopardy late at night and in today's world, a DVR will pick up on the schedule change and record it so you can watch later. On the downside, at least once football ran long, so the shows after football were delayed and the DVR only recorded part of Jeopardy (the YouTube TV cloud-based DVR doesn't allow for padding the record time the way a hard-drive-based DVR does for technical reasons).

Looks like ABC is no longer airing Monday Night Football with the strike over, or at least they didn't this week.

I remember when I was a little kid I knew the Saturday morning cartoons would be preempted one weekend every summer for some sports event (it was Wimbledon, but as a kid I didn't know that, I just knew "no cartoons"). My brother is two years younger than I am and wasn't aware of it and used to get really mad about it, as if there was anything anyone else in the house could do about it.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Big John on October 07, 2023, 08:14:45 AM
^^ ABC will be airing Monday Night Football all season: https://abc7news.com/monday-night-football-schedule-2023-abc-espn/13796933/
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: wriddle082 on October 07, 2023, 09:26:31 AM
I vaguely remember this, but during much of the 80's, The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson was pre-empted on WSMV-4 who instead showed old sitcom reruns, but you could still watch it on WZTV-17 (independent at the time, and didn't become Fox till later on after that network was founded, but I digress).  When the syndicated Arsenio Hall Show started, WZTV started to carry it, and WSMV carried The Tonight Show once again.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: 1995hoo on October 07, 2023, 09:26:55 AM
Quote from: Big John on October 07, 2023, 08:14:45 AM
^^ ABC will be airing Monday Night Football all season: https://abc7news.com/monday-night-football-schedule-2023-abc-espn/13796933/

If you say so. Either it wasn't on our local ABC station this week or it was a 9:00 game, as Jeopardy aired at the normal time.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: bing101 on October 07, 2023, 02:43:29 PM
https://awfulannouncing.com/golf/eight-cbs-owned-cw-affiliates-several-others-will-not-air-liv-golf.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter (https://awfulannouncing.com/golf/eight-cbs-owned-cw-affiliates-several-others-will-not-air-liv-golf.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter)

Here is a recent one this was prior to Paramount ending its affiliation deal with Nexstar owned CW in August. In the case of Paramount it was tied to LIV Golf contract violating a contract that Paramount signed with the PGA tour for CBS. This is why the now former CW affiliates had to pre-empt LIV Golf from CW. Example KPYX San Francisco and KMAX Sacramento had to pre-empt CW sports programming due Paramounts CBS Sports contract reasons and in places like Sacramento and San Francisco KPYX and KMAX are extensions of the main CBS affiliates KPIX and KOVR in their respective cities. This is how KRON became the CW affiliate in San Francisco is because Nexstar owns CW and KRON. Also another factor Paramount the owners of CBS wanted to put more of their resources on Paramount+ app.

https://deadline.com/2023/05/cbs-stations-eight-drop-cw-go-independent-this-fall-1235357388/#comments (https://deadline.com/2023/05/cbs-stations-eight-drop-cw-go-independent-this-fall-1235357388/#comments)


https://deadline.com/2023/05/the-cws-liv-golf-deal-has-led-to-sports-rights-talks-with-everyone-and-potential-new-deals-as-early-as-this-fall-nexstar-ceo-perry-sook-says-1235370464/ (https://deadline.com/2023/05/the-cws-liv-golf-deal-has-led-to-sports-rights-talks-with-everyone-and-potential-new-deals-as-early-as-this-fall-nexstar-ceo-perry-sook-says-1235370464/)















In Sacramento the former CW affiliate KMAX is promoted as an extension of KOVR CBS Sacramento. In that case Hearst Television got the CW affiliation for KQCA.



Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: texaskdog on October 07, 2023, 04:09:32 PM
In Saint Paul they used to pull Mr Belvedere for a syndicated show "She's the Sherriff" that wasn't remotely funny.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: rickmastfan67 on October 07, 2023, 10:51:50 PM
Quote from: bing101 on October 07, 2023, 02:43:29 PM
https://awfulannouncing.com/golf/eight-cbs-owned-cw-affiliates-several-others-will-not-air-liv-golf.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter (https://awfulannouncing.com/golf/eight-cbs-owned-cw-affiliates-several-others-will-not-air-liv-golf.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter)

Here is a recent one this was prior to Paramount ending its affiliation deal with Nexstar owned CW in August. In the case of Paramount it was tied to LIV Golf contract violating a contract that Paramount signed with the PGA tour for CBS. This is why the now former CW affiliates had to pre-empt LIV Golf from CW. Example KPYX San Francisco and KMAX Sacramento had to pre-empt CW sports programming due Paramounts CBS Sports contract reasons and in places like Sacramento and San Francisco KPYX and KMAX are extensions of the main CBS affiliates KPIX and KOVR in their respective cities. This is how KRON became the CW affiliate in San Francisco is because Nexstar owns CW and KRON. Also another factor Paramount the owners of CBS wanted to put more of this resources on Paramount+ app.

https://deadline.com/2023/05/cbs-stations-eight-drop-cw-go-independent-this-fall-1235357388/#comments (https://deadline.com/2023/05/cbs-stations-eight-drop-cw-go-independent-this-fall-1235357388/#comments)


https://deadline.com/2023/05/the-cws-liv-golf-deal-has-led-to-sports-rights-talks-with-everyone-and-potential-new-deals-as-early-as-this-fall-nexstar-ceo-perry-sook-says-1235370464/ (https://deadline.com/2023/05/the-cws-liv-golf-deal-has-led-to-sports-rights-talks-with-everyone-and-potential-new-deals-as-early-as-this-fall-nexstar-ceo-perry-sook-says-1235370464/)

Well, because of this, CW moved channels in Pittsburgh. Channel 19 is now 'KDKA+', and Channel 22 is now the CW.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: rickmastfan67 on October 07, 2023, 10:56:34 PM
I know awhile back when ABC had NASCAR in the early 2010's, WTAE-4 Pittsburgh would almost always preempt the pre-race coverage for local stuff, and only join in right before the race would really start (especially the night races).

I had to attempt to pick up WATM-TV ABC-23 (via 8.2) back when they had a higher power signal in the early days of digital that reached where I live in the Pittsburgh area to see it.  Now I can't even pull in Channel 8 sadly since they've lowered the power. :(
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: LilianaUwU on October 07, 2023, 11:49:00 PM
Quote from: Stephane Dumas on October 01, 2023, 12:49:52 PM
It did once happen in Canada before sports channels like TSN and RDS became popular. In the early 1980s, teleromans (Quebec's version of soap-operas) like "Terre Humaine" or "Le Temps d'Une Paix" was pre-empted for the NHL playoff games.
Not gonna lie, I would rather watch hockey than Le temps d'une paix by a LONG shot.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Route66Fan on October 08, 2023, 04:38:01 AM
Some examples that I've either seen or heard of:

KQTV-TV, Ch. 2 in St. Joseph, MO, would, in the mid 90's, tape delay ABC's Saturday Morning showing of the Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show (Which aired at 9-10AM CT Saturdays at that time.) for a hour long newscast. The show would air at 5:30-6:30AM on, I think, Sunday morning.

WDAF-TV, Ch. 4 in Kansas City, MO would, for several years in the 80's-early 90's, during it tenure with NBC, preempt NBC's Sunday night 6-7PM programming for Hee Haw.

KMBC-TV, Ch. 9 in Kansas City, MO, for close to a few decades, refused to clear ABC's World News Sunday opting to instead air reruns of Rescue 911 (Or other syndicated programming.) followed by a half hour newscast & later a full hour newscast from 5-6PM on Sundays. They wouldn't clear WNS until sometime in the mid 2010's when the Sunday 5PM hour long newscast was shortened to a half hour at 5-5:30PM.

There is a bunch of others that I can also think of that I may make a post about later.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: vdeane on October 08, 2023, 07:28:22 AM
Quote from: Route66Fan on October 08, 2023, 04:38:01 AM
KQTV-TV, Ch. 2 in St. Joseph, MO, would, in the mid 90's, tape delay ABC's Saturday Morning showing of the Bugs Bunny & Tweety Show (Which aired at 9-10AM CT Saturdays at that time.) for a hour long newscast. The show would air at 5:30-6:30AM on, I think, Sunday morning.
Speaking of that time block (mostly... I watched ABC on Saturday morning during the first two One Saturday Morning years, so it was 10:30-11:30 unless things were shifted around to accommodate sports), I didn't even know that Bugs Bunny was aired as part of ABC's Saturday morning cartoons because WHAM in Rochester put Bill Nye and Popular Mechanics in that timeslot instead.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: hbelkins on October 09, 2023, 12:57:58 PM
Back in the days before the SEC Network and the like, colleges and conferences developed their own networks of local affiliates. There was an official "University of Kentucky Sports Network" of local stations in markets like Lexington, Louisville, Cincinnati, Huntington/Charleston, etc., that would broadcast certain UK home games on a live or delayed basis. This crossed network lines, as the Lexington UK affiliate was a CBS station and the Huntington affiliate was an NBC station. When conference season started, there was a "TVS Network" that carried SEC "games of the week" on Wednesday nights and Saturday afternoons.

These all preempted network shows. Sometimes those shows would air on a delayed basis; other times you were SOL if you wanted to watch a network show.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Sctvhound on October 09, 2023, 06:13:11 PM
It was routine pretty much anywhere outside of the major, major cities as late as 2019.

The ACC was the last major conference to do syndication of games. In my area the My Network TV affiliate (which few watch) carried the basketball games, but football would usually air on our local CBS, preempting whatever they were showing.

In South Carolina you'd get ACC and SEC games on local channels. Some weeks you'd get 6-8 games OTA between the 2 leagues.

SM-G998U

Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: bandit957 on October 11, 2023, 05:48:12 PM
I remember one of the shows that was most commonly seen to replace preempted programming was 'Mutual Of Omaha's Wild Kingdom'.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: tmoore952 on October 11, 2023, 06:16:23 PM
Quote from: 1995hoo on October 07, 2023, 08:11:23 AM
Until the writers' strike ended a week or two ago, ABC affiliates were airing Monday Night Football (which normally airs on ESPN) to fill the programming gap. At least here in the DC area, that meant they preempted Jeopardy. On the plus side, they did air Jeopardy late at night and in today's world, a DVR will pick up on the schedule change and record it so you can watch later. On the downside, at least once football ran long, so the shows after football were delayed and the DVR only recorded part of Jeopardy (the YouTube TV cloud-based DVR doesn't allow for padding the record time the way a hard-drive-based DVR does for technical reasons).

I dislike preseason football for that reason. Jeopardy! on the DC ABC affiliate gets preempted for Baltimore Ravens preseason football. The NBC affiiate shows Washington Commanders preseason football. The worst is that one night, every year, when Baltimore plays Washington in preseason football. Both stations show the game, with each team's own announcers and perspective (take your pick).

The other time Jeopardy! gets preempted and pushed until late night is if there are bad storms with possible and/or sighted tornadoes. This occurred several times towards the end of James Holzhauer's long run on Jeopardy! a few years ago. This I understand, although it is difficult when the area that is under siege weather wise is 100 miles from you.

I seem to recall, when Jeopardy! was pushed into the wee hours, that it came on at either (something like) 2:07 AM or 3:07 AM (everything starts at :07 and :37 after the 11 PM late local news runs for 35 minutes).
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: ErmineNotyours on October 11, 2023, 09:53:38 PM
In high school in suburban Seattle, I had a teacher who recently moved in from Utah.  He said that he would be watching a tense action scene on TV, and then the screen would go black.  I figured he must be kidding; there wouldn't be this kind of censorship in the United States.  A few decades later I heard about KSL, which would have been a CBS affiliate back then.  They have preempted many shows as an NBC affiliate, such as Saturday Night Live.  Back in my high school days, and maybe today too, Mountain Time Zone stations started prime time at 7:00 and would all individually tape delay the shows themselves from the Eastern feed, and that gave them time to preview the shows and black out scenes they felt were inappropriate.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: bandit957 on October 11, 2023, 09:59:16 PM
Quote from: ErmineNotyours on October 11, 2023, 09:53:38 PM
In high school in suburban Seattle, I had a teacher who recently moved in from Utah.  He said that he would be watching a tense action scene on TV, and then the screen would go black.  I figured he must be kidding; there wouldn't be this kind of censorship in the United States.  A few decades later I heard about KSL, which would have been a CBS affiliate back then.  They have preempted many shows as an NBC affiliate, such as Saturday Night Live.  Back in my high school days, and maybe today too, Mountain Time Zone stations started prime time at 7:00 and would all individually tape delay the shows themselves from the Eastern feed, and that gave them time to preview the shows and black out scenes they felt were inappropriate.

Channel 19 in Cincinnati somehow did something similar with the 1997 'Simpsons' episode "Homer's Phobia", despite being in the Eastern Time Zone. Part of it was blacked out with a slide of the station logo.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: ErmineNotyours on October 11, 2023, 10:08:13 PM
Quote from: bandit957 on October 11, 2023, 09:59:16 PM
Quote from: ErmineNotyours on October 11, 2023, 09:53:38 PM
In high school in suburban Seattle, I had a teacher who recently moved in from Utah.  He said that he would be watching a tense action scene on TV, and then the screen would go black.  I figured he must be kidding; there wouldn't be this kind of censorship in the United States.  A few decades later I heard about KSL, which would have been a CBS affiliate back then.  They have preempted many shows as an NBC affiliate, such as Saturday Night Live.  Back in my high school days, and maybe today too, Mountain Time Zone stations started prime time at 7:00 and would all individually tape delay the shows themselves from the Eastern feed, and that gave them time to preview the shows and black out scenes they felt were inappropriate.

Channel 19 in Cincinnati somehow did something similar with the 1997 'Simpsons' episode "Homer's Phobia", despite being in the Eastern Time Zone. Part of it was blacked out with a slide of the station logo.

Fans have noted that The Simpsons used to run a few days early in Canada, with versions that differed from the final network version.  Maybe someone from the Cincinnati got ahold of an early version of the show for a preview.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Henry on October 12, 2023, 10:25:27 PM
Is it true that network O&O's are forbidden to preempt any of their programming for any reason other than news bulletins/severe weather reports? I've always believed that only stations owned by other companies (like Scripps, Hearst, Gray, Cox, etc.) had a right to do so, and usually it would be for local sports or reruns of old shows, like they did back in the day.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: SectorZ on October 13, 2023, 08:35:12 AM
Quote from: Henry on October 12, 2023, 10:25:27 PM
Is it true that network O&O's are forbidden to preempt any of their programming for any reason other than news bulletins/severe weather reports? I've always believed that only stations owned by other companies (like Scripps, Hearst, Gray, Cox, etc.) had a right to do so, and usually it would be for local sports or reruns of old shows, like they did back in the day.

Based on my earlier comment about WBZ, an O&O CBS affiliate running its own programming sometimes, I'm guessing they aren't forbidden on any blanket level. Maybe they're allotted x amount of hours to run their own stuff. WBZ plays Patriots pre-season football and does some stuff like local weather specials once or twice per year.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: jp the roadgeek on October 13, 2023, 09:11:13 AM
I remember in the late 80's when my CBS affiliate (WFSB) used to not carry the Bob Eubanks version of Card Sharks and other CBS programming usually seen during the 10:00 hour to show Hour Magazine.  WTIC, the FOX affiliate, would carry it.  However, I remember them overlaying their own station jingle over the closing theme music.  WFSB would also pre-empt the Black Friday college football game in favor of Oprah and local news.  The reason: Gayle King worked for the station at the time.  WTNH, the ABC affiliate, would usually pick it up.  Currently, the CW affiliate doesn't carry LIV golf tour coverage; the MyNetwork affiliate does because it is owned by Nexstar, who now owns the CW. 
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: triplemultiplex on October 13, 2023, 10:41:26 AM
Reminds me of this:
(https://frinkiac.com/video/S04E03/4pn6PXfwaOvU2a2DTjwxIZJo4Tw=.gif)
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: vdeane on October 18, 2023, 09:38:11 PM
Tonight WTEN preempted Celebrity Jeopardy for their 70th anniversary special.  Looks like Celebrity Jeopardy will air at 1:30 this morning.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Route66Fan on October 19, 2023, 06:39:12 AM
Quote from: bandit957 on October 11, 2023, 09:59:16 PM
Quote from: ErmineNotyours on October 11, 2023, 09:53:38 PM
In high school in suburban Seattle, I had a teacher who recently moved in from Utah.  He said that he would be watching a tense action scene on TV, and then the screen would go black.  I figured he must be kidding; there wouldn't be this kind of censorship in the United States.  A few decades later I heard about KSL, which would have been a CBS affiliate back then.  They have preempted many shows as an NBC affiliate, such as Saturday Night Live.  Back in my high school days, and maybe today too, Mountain Time Zone stations started prime time at 7:00 and would all individually tape delay the shows themselves from the Eastern feed, and that gave them time to preview the shows and black out scenes they felt were inappropriate.
Channel 19 in Cincinnati somehow did something similar with the 1997 'Simpsons' episode "Homer's Phobia", despite being in the Eastern Time Zone. Part of it was blacked out with a slide of the station logo.
I am thinking that the WXIX one was a technical difficulty & the KSL ones were intentional.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: bandit957 on October 19, 2023, 08:08:37 PM
Quote from: Route66Fan on October 19, 2023, 06:39:12 AM
I am thinking that the WXIX one was a technical difficulty & the KSL ones were intentional.

Cincinnati stations were basically like KSL, so I think the WXIX one was intentional.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: golden eagle on November 06, 2023, 11:55:33 PM
Quote from: Road Hog on September 30, 2023, 10:51:33 PM
I remember a large number of ABC affiliates pre-empted the first couple of seasons of NYPD Blue in 1993-94 because of its edgy (at the time) nudity and language.

WLOX in Biloxi, MS was one. Their crosstown Fox affiliate, WXXV, aired it.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: golden eagle on November 06, 2023, 11:58:22 PM
Quote from: hbelkins on October 09, 2023, 12:57:58 PM
Back in the days before the SEC Network and the like, colleges and conferences developed their own networks of local affiliates. There was an official "University of Kentucky Sports Network" of local stations in markets like Lexington, Louisville, Cincinnati, Huntington/Charleston, etc., that would broadcast certain UK home games on a live or delayed basis. This crossed network lines, as the Lexington UK affiliate was a CBS station and the Huntington affiliate was an NBC station. When conference season started, there was a "TVS Network" that carried SEC "games of the week" on Wednesday nights and Saturday afternoons.

These all preempted network shows. Sometimes those shows would air on a delayed basis; other times you were SOL if you wanted to watch a network show.

I seem to recall some SEC basketball games being shown on a weeknight. If I'm not mistaken, it was Jefferson-Pilot (before it became Lincoln Financial) game of the week.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: Sctvhound on November 07, 2023, 01:23:38 PM
Usually Wednesday nights in the SEC. The UPN station would carry the games preempting their primetime, but it usually wasn't watched by a lot of folks here.

ACC though was all over the map. Regional TV had a lot more influence. Usually the schedule was scheduled around the 2 Duke-UNC games, 1 of which Raycom always got and blacked out ESPN in ACC territory.

Most leagues went Wednesday though. We would get the "regionally" syndicated Big 12, Big East or Big Ten games on our local Comcast RSN.

The network games CBS aired were frequently blocked out locally for ACC regional games. Usually two games on a Saturday and Sundays after the Super Bowl.

SM-G998U

Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: hbelkins on November 07, 2023, 02:02:06 PM
TVS Network became Jefferson-Pilot for the SEC games, and they were shown on Wednesday nights.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: vdeane on November 07, 2023, 09:13:08 PM
Quote from: Sctvhound on November 07, 2023, 01:23:38 PM
Usually Wednesday nights in the SEC. The UPN station would carry the games preempting their primetime, but it usually wasn't watched by a lot of folks here.
UPN was infamous for stuff like that.  It's a large part of why Star Trek: Enterprise was cancelled - especially since reruns didn't factor into the ratings at the time.
Title: Re: TV stations preempting network shows
Post by: triplemultiplex on November 08, 2023, 03:16:54 PM
Quote from: vdeane on November 07, 2023, 09:13:08 PM
Quote from: Sctvhound on November 07, 2023, 01:23:38 PM
Usually Wednesday nights in the SEC. The UPN station would carry the games preempting their primetime, but it usually wasn't watched by a lot of folks here.
UPN was infamous for stuff like that.  It's a large part of why Star Trek: Enterprise was cancelled - especially since reruns didn't factor into the ratings at the time.

Enterprise was cancelled because that dickhead Les Moonves hated scifi.