Chronology of Television

Copyright © 2008-2012 Ken Polsson
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URL: http://worldtimeline.info/television/


References are numbered in [brackets], which are listed here. A number after the dot gives the page in the source.

Last updated: 2012 January 26.


1980

January 10
  • Last broadcast of Rockford Files TV show on NBC. [1]
February 1
  • TV soap opera Love of Life ends a 28-year run. [1]
March 21
  • TV show Dallas ends its second season in a cliffhanger as character J.R. Ewing is shot. [1] [129]
March 24
  • ABC-TV's nightly Iran Hostage crisis program renamed Nightline with Ted Koppel. [1]
May 5
  • Brazil issues a postage stamp commemorating the 30th anniversary of Brazilian Television. [700.1076]
June 1
  • CNN (Cable News Network) debuts, as the world's first 24-hour television news network, from its headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, USA. [1] [129]


June 3
  • ESPN begins televising college world series games. [1]
September 25
  • Chevy Chase calls Cary Grant a homo on Tomorrow show (lawsuit follows). [1]
November 19
  • CBS TV bans Calvin Klein's jeans ad featuring Brooke Shields. [1]
November 21
  • 350 million people around the world tune in to television's primetime drama Dallas to find out who shot J.R. Ewing (Kristin Shepard, J.R.'s wife's sister and his former mistress). [1] [120]
December 8
  • "Bravo" network premieres on cable TV. [1]
December 20
  • NBC broadcasts New York Jets' 24-17 win over Miami Dolphins without audio. [1]
December 30
  • Wonderful World of Disney last airs on NBC-TV. [1]

1981

January 12
  • Dynasty, a prime time soap opera inspired by Dallas, starring Joan Collins, premieres on ABC-TV. [1]
January 14
  • US Federal Communications Commission frees stations to air as many commercials an hour as they wish. [1]
January 15
  • Hill Street Blues premieres on NBC-TV. [1]
February 6
  • Brady Brides debuts on NBC TV. [1]
March 6
  • After 19 years hosting the CBS Evening News, Walter Cronkite signs off for the last time. [1] [5] [119]
March 9
  • Dan Rather becomes primary anchorman of CBS-TV News. [1]
April 20
  • Final performance of TV show Soap airs. [1]
May 15
  • SCTV Network 90, sequel to Second City Television debuts on NBC. [1]
June 13
  • Tom Snyder interviews Charles Manson on Tomorrow TV show. [1]
August 1
  • MTV music video TV begins broadcasting in the United States and airs its first video, Video Killed The Radio Star by the Buggles. [1] [119]
August 18
  • Jerry Lewis appears on Donahue TV show to defend Telethons. [1]
September 7
  • Judge Wapner and the People's Court premier on TV. [1]
September 13
  • 33rd Emmy Awards (Hill Street Blues big winner). [1]
September 14
  • Entertainment Tonight premieres on TV. [1]
September 26
  • Disney's weekly TV show moves to CBS, making it the first prime-time series to have appeared on all three major networks. The show is renamed Walt Disney, airing on Saturdays from 8:00 to 9:00. [6]
November 10
  • Walt Disney Productions and Westinghouse Broadcasting announce an agreement to produce a family-oriented cable television service. [6]
November 16
  • Luke and Laura marry on the U.S. TV soap opera General Hospital; it is the highest-rated hour in daytime television history. [1] [119]
December 4
  • Falcon Crest TV show premieres on CBS-TV. [1]
December 31
  • CNN Headline News debuts. [1]

1982

January 1
  • ITV companies Central Independent Television, Television South and Television South West start broadcasting, replacing ATV, Southern Television and Westward Television respectively. [116]
January 4
  • Chris Wallace becomes co-anchor of the Today Show. [1]
  • Bryant Gumbel became co-host of NBC's Today Show. [1]
January 7
  • Fame TV show premieres on NBC TV. [1]
February 2
  • Late Night with David Letterman TV show premieres on NBC. [1]
February 25
  • Final episode of The Lawrence Welk Show airs. [1]
March 7
  • NCAA Tournament Selection televised live for first time. [1]
March 17
  • The CBS TV network debuts the series Herbie, the Love Bug. [6]
March 26
  • TV soap opera Capitol premieres. [1]
April 14
  • The CBS TV network airs the last episode of the TV series Herbie, the Love Bug. Only five episodes were produced. [6]
May 2
  • The Weather Channel (United States) airs on cable television for the first time. [116]
October 19
  • Jock Ewing character dies in an aircrash on TV show Dallas. [1]
November 2
  • Channel 4, the fourth terrestrial television channel, is launched in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland with the first program broadcast being the game show Countdown. [5] [116]
December 31
  • TV soap The Doctors ends 19-year run. [1]

1983

January 23
  • A-Team with Mr T premieres on NBC. [1]
February 28
  • Final TV episode of MASH airs (CBS); record 125 million watch. [1]
March 7
  • TNN (The Nashville Network) begins on Cable TV. [1]
  • The CBS TV network debuts the Disney TV series Small and Frye. [6]
March 25
  • The Disney TV show Gun Shy debuts. (The show lasts only a month, with six episodes produced.) [6]
  • During the anniversary show Motown 25: Yesterday, Today, Forever Michael Jackson thrills the audience by dancing and singing while performing his hit song Billie Jean. The highlight of his act is his signature move: the moonwalk, which he performs in public for the first time. [115]
April 6
  • The Disney-produced TV show Zorro and Son first airs on CBS. [6]
April 18
  • The Disney Channel, a cable-TV network, begins broadcasting, at 7:00 AM, with a show called Good Morning, Mickey. The service runs for 18 hours per day. [6]
April 19
  • The last episode of the Disney TV show Gun Shy airs. [6]
April 25
  • Nightline TV show expands from half hour to a full hour. [1]
May 10
  • Laverne and Shirley last airs on ABC-TV. [1]
June 1
  • The CBS TV network airs the last episode of Zorro and Son. Only five episodes were aired. [6]
June 15
  • The CBS TV network airs the sixth and last episode of the TV series Small and Frye. [6]
July 29
  • Friday Night Videos premieres on NBC TV. [1]
September 5
  • Tom Brokaw becomes lead anchor for NBC Nightly News. [115]
September 24
  • The CBS TV network airs the Walt Disney TV show for the last time, entitled Walt Disney's Mickey and Donald. [6]
October 23
  • The game show GO! premieres on NBC. [115]
November 20
  • In the U.S., an estimated 100 million people watch the controversial made-for-television movie The Day After, depicting a nuclear war and its effects on the United States. [1] [5]
December 2
  • Michael Jackson's music video for "Thriller" is broadcast for the first time. [115]
December 25
  • The ABC TV network airs Walt Disney World's Very Merry Christmas Parade for the first time. [6]

1984

January 4
  • Night Court starring Harry Anderson premieres on NBC TV. [1]
January 9
  • TV's Bloopers and Practical Jokes premieres on NBC TV. [1]
January 17
  • US Supreme Court rules (5-4) private use of home VCRs to tape TV programs for later viewing does not violate federal copyright laws. [1]
January 22
  • Apple Computer runs its "1984" 60 second TV commercial during the NFL SuperBowl football game, introducing the Macintosh computer, without showing the computer, or listing features. Apple Computer runs the ad publicly only once, but dozens of news and talk shows replay it, making it one of the most memorable advertisements in TV history. [4]
January 27
  • Pop star Michael Jackson's scalp is seriously burned by pyrotechnics during filming of a Pepsi television commercial. [1] [114]
January 31
  • Edwin Newman retires from NBC News after 35 years with the network. [1]
March 19
  • Kate and Allie TV show premieres. [1]
April 15
  • British comedian/magician Tommy Cooper suffers a massive heart attack while live on TV, dying at age 61 (born 1921). [1] [114]
April 21
  • Nightline TV show reverts back from 1 hour to 1/2 hour. [1]
June 19
  • First live TV appearance by Chief Justice Warren Burger (Nightline). [1]
June 27
  • US Supreme Court ends NCAA monopoly on college football telecasts. [1]
July 30
  • Soap opera Santa Barbara premieres on NBC. [1]
September 6
  • US TV show Today Show begins live remote telecasts from Moscow, USSR. [1]
September 14
  • The first MTV Video Music Awards are held in Radio City Music Hall, New York City; Bette Midler and Dan Aykroyd host. [1] [114]
September 16
  • Miami Vice TV show premieres in USA. [1]
October 23
  • NBC airs BBC footage of Ethiopian famine. [1]
December 28
  • TV soap Edge of Night ends 28-year run. [1]

End of 1980-1984. Next: 1985.


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A list of references to all source material is available.

Other web pages of interest:

  • Chronology of Video Game Systems
  • Chronology of World History
  • Chronology of the Walt Disney Company
  • This Day in History
    Last updated: 2012 January 26.
    Copyright © 2008-2012 Ken Polsson (email: contact@worldtimeline.info).
    URL: http://worldtimeline.info/television/
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