This is a list of American television-related events in 1974.
Events
| Date | Event | Ref. |
| January 31 | CBS broadcasts The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, a multi-Emmy-winning adaptation of Ernest J. Gaines’ novel of the same name which follows the 110-year life of a former slave from the American Civil War to the Civil Rights Movement. Cicely Tyson is tapped to play the title role. |
| February 1 | KIVI-TV signs-on the air, giving the Boise market its first full-time ABC affiliate. |
| February 8 | After 20 years and 5,195 episodes, The Secret Storm ends its run on CBS’s daytime schedule. Ten days later, the show is replaced by Tattletales, a Bert Convy-hosted game show that is devoted to celebrity gossip. |
| March 11 | The children's special Free to Be... You and Me, produced by comedic actress Marlo Thomas, airs on ABC. |
| March 13 | The Execution of Private Slovik, a made-for-TV film telling the story of Pvt. Eddie Slovik, the only American soldier to be executed for desertion after the American Civil War, airs on NBC. |
| March 18 | CBS's cancellation of Here's Lucy marks the end of the television reign of Lucille Ball, which lasted 23 consecutive years beginning with the 1951 premiere of I Love Lucy. |
| March | Chuck Scarbarough joins WNBC-TV and revamps its format as NewsCenter 4, signaling the debut of the NewsCenter format. | [1] |
| April 5 | The Dean Martin Show ends its run on NBC after 264 hour-long episodes. NBC will continue to air periodic editions of The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast over the next 10 years. |
| April 26 | KPVI signs-on the air, giving the Idaho Falls market its first full-time ABC affiliate. |
| July 15 | Christine Chubbuck, a television reporter for WXLT in Sarasota, Florida commits suicide via a gunshot from behind her right ear during a live newscast on Suncoast Digest. | [2][3][4] |
| August 8 | U.S. President Richard Nixon announces his pending resignation live on television, effective at 12 Noon EDT the next day, at which time Vice President Gerald Ford is sworn in as President. |
| WEVU (now WZVN-TV) signs-on the air, giving the Fort Myers market its first full-time ABC affiliate. |
| August 25 | Al Ham's music theme Part of Your Life made its debut on WBTV-TV in Charlotte. | [5] |
| September 10 | Born Innocent, a controversial film starring Linda Blair, airs on NBC. The film, which involved a fourteen-year-old being sent to what the television preview deemed a women's prison (when in reality it was a reform school), drew heavy criticism due to an all-female rape scene, the first ever seen on American television. The scene was deleted in subsequent re-airings after a group of girls assaulted an eight-year-old with a pop bottle, influenced by the scene in the film. |
| October 6 | Monty Python's Flying Circus, the British sketch comedy series that aired its final episode this year, is first shown on American television when PBS member station KERA-TV in Dallas, Texas airs it at 10 p.m. Central Daylight Time.[6][7] |
| November 28 | For the fourth time this year, ABC aligns with a new station as WOPC-TV in Altoona, Pennsylvania brings full-time ABC service to the Altoona-State College market. WOPC-TV struggles for viewers and goes dark in 1982; ABC would return to Altoona (and channel 23) in 1988 when Fox affiliate WWPC-TV (then a satellite of WWCP-TV in Johnstown) breaks from its simulcast with WWCP-TV. |
Other notable events
Television stations
Sign-ons
| Date | City of License/Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation | Notes/Ref. |
| February | South Bend/Elkhart, Indiana | WNIT | 34 | PBS | |
| February 1 | Nampa/Boise, Idaho | KITC | 6 | ABC | |
| March 31 | Orlando, Florida | WOFL | 35 | Independent | |
| April 26 | Pocatello, Idaho | KPVI | 6 | ABC | |
| May 5 | Los Angeles, California | KVST-TV | 68 | Non-commercial independent | |
| July 25 | South Bend, Indiana | WMSH-TV | 46 | Independent | |
| August 8 | Naples/Fort Myers, Florida | WEVU | 26 | ABC | |
| August 11 | Booneville, Mississippi | WMAE-TV | 12 | PBS | Part of MSETV |
| September 9 | Grand Forks, North Dakota | KGFE | 2 | PBS | Part of Prairie Public Television |
| September 29 | New York City | WBTB-TV | 68 | Independent | |
| October 5 | Hagerstown, Maryland | WWPB | 31 | PBS | Part of Maryland Public Television |
| Sacramento, California | KMUV-TV | 31 | Independent | now a CW owned-and-operated station |
| November 28 | Johnstown, Pennsylvania | WOPC | 38 | ABC | Now WATM-TV on channel 23 |
| December 1 | New Haven, Connecticut | WEDY | 65 | PBS | Part of the Connecticut Public Television network |
| December 15 | Waterloo/Cedar Rapids, Iowa | KRIN | 32 | PBS | Part of Iowa Public Television |
Network affiliation changes
Station closures
| Date | City of license/Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation | Sign-on date | Notes |
| March 28 | Lebanon, New Hampshire | WRLH | 31 | NBC | September 10, 1966; had been silent from 1968 to August 3, 1971 |
| April 30 | Roanoke, Virginia | WRFT-TV | 27 | ABC | March 4, 1966 | Returned to air September 7, 1974 – February 11, 1975, as WRLU |
| Unknown date | Chicago, Illinois | WXXW | 20 | PBS | September 20, 1965 | Would return to the air in February 1983 as WYCC |
Television shows
Debuting this year
Ending this year
Births
Deaths
See also
References
- ^ "New anchor at WNBC-TV." Broadcasting, March 18, 1974. p. 87. Archived issues available via americanradiohistory.com. Retrieved May 12, 2020.
- ^ Pelisek, Christine (February 10, 2016). "Journalist Christine Chubbuck Threw Herself a Going Away Party Before Killing Herself on Live TV, Colleague Says". People. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
- ^ Pelisek, Christine (February 10, 2016). "Colleagues Recall Shock and Horror After Journalist Committed Suicide on Live TV: 'I Didn't See the Gun'". People. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
- ^ Pelisek, Christine (February 11, 2016). "Brother of TV Journalist Christine Chubbuck Who Shot Herself on Air: 'She Never Felt Like She Was Good Enough'". People. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
- ^ "WBTV's Cussed, Discussed News Theme Gets Overhaul". The Charlotte Observer. 1974-08-07.
- ^ Young, Bill. "Monty Python: 1969-2014". Tellyspotting: Your Brit TV Pub. KERA. Retrieved February 27, 2015.
- ^ McCall, Douglas (2014). Monty Python: a chronology, 1969-2012 (Second ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 36. ISBN 0-7864-7811X
External links