A day for NBC game shows that could be described as anything but uneventful. In the morning, Dennis James' version of Name That Tune and the Bob Stewart/Bill Cullen series Winning Streak end their run. In the afternoon, the biggest prize in American daytime television game shows at the time is won on Jackpot, in which two contestants split a cash prize of $38,750. Finally, the original Jeopardy! also ends its run after 2,753 episodes. It would return in nationwide syndication in 1984.
Fred Silverman becomes the head of ABC Entertainment. Silverman's programming choices will prove fruitful for ABC, resulting in its late-decade ratings dominance (and initiating an era of what was disparagingly called "T&A" or "Jiggle television").
September 8
The CBS game show The Price is Right is expanded to the length of one hour, with six games and two Showcase Showdowns as a week-long experiment. The format, which marked the debut of "The Big Wheel", is made permanent two months later.
Sneak Previews (under the name Opening Soon at a Theater Near You), the first American film review show, premieres and launches of critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert. They will remain a team, and a staple among film critics, through various programs for the next twenty-four years.
December 1
CBS makes its first soap opera expansion when the top-rated As The World Turns airs its first hour-long episode.
Other notable events
In November, Sony Corporation introduces the Betamax video recorder in the United States, which comes in a teakwood console alongside a 19 inches (480 mm) color television set. It sold for $2,495.
NBC retires the Laramie Peacock logo, which was used at the start of every color program on the network. The network later retires the NBC snake logo, used for promos and network identifications, in December.
Programs
^[e] signifies that this show has a related event in the Events section above.
The Louisiana Educational Television Authority, established in 1971, approved the proposal to build and sign on the stations that would make up the network, starting with Baton Rouge-based WLPB-TV, the network's flagship.
^Schwartz, David; Ryan, Steve; Wostbrock, Fred (1999). The Encyclopedia of TV Shows (3rd ed.). New York: Facts on File. pp. 178–179. ISBN0-8160-3846-5.