1989 in American television
The year 1989 in television involved some significant events. This is a list of notable events in the United States.
List of years in American television: |
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|
1988–89 United States network television schedule |
1989–90 United States network television schedule |
List of American television programs currently in production |
Notable events
Date | Event |
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January 1 | A complicated, six-station network affiliation swap takes place in two South Florida markets. In Miami, WTVJ moves to NBC from CBS, WCIX (now WFOR-TV) moves to CBS from Fox, and WSVN moves to Fox from NBC. Meanwhile, in West Palm Beach, WPEC switches from ABC to CBS, WTVX leaves CBS to become an independent, and ABC station WPBF signs on this day. The swaps result from NBC's acquisition of WTVJ in 1987, and CBS's acquisition of WCIX in August 1988. The switches in West Palm Beach are accomplished due to WCIX's weak signal in Broward County.[1][2] |
NBC's station in Tampa, WXFL reclaims the WFLA-TV call letters. | |
The Karen Carpenter Story, a made-for-television biographical film about singer Karen Carpenter and the brother-and-sister pop music duo of which she was a part, The Carpenters is broadcast on CBS. The movie was very popular in the ratings; it was the highest-rated two-hour TV movie of the year and the third highest rated such program on any network during the 1980s. | |
January 3 | The Arsenio Hall Show premieres in first-run syndication. Brooke Shields, Luther Vandross, and Leslie Nielsen appear as guests. |
January 7 | The television version of Scarface premieres on ABC.[3] 32 minutes of violence, profanity and sex were edited out, and much of the dialogue was muted or replaced with less offensive alternatives.[4] |
January 8 | Universal Pictures releases a cut of the 1985 film Brazil for airing on their syndicated film package, the Debut Network. Running 93 minutes (as opposed to the 142 minute-long theatrical cut), it was a heavily modified version that remained true to Universal's then-COO Sid Sheinberg's preferred cut of the film (which modified the dark sci-fi satire into an uplifting romance, complete with a happy ending), and was subsequently given the nickname "The Love Conquers All Cut." How this version managed to get released remains a mystery; director Terry Gilliam said that Universal asked him to make an edited-for-television cut of the film and he refused. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Gilliam sarcastically complimented Sheinberg for "[getting] a chance to break into TV," but was angry that Universal didn't take his name off the TV cut and also criticized advertisements for the Debut Network premiere of Brazil which used the same critical praise that was given to his version.[5] In an interview with Jack Matthews in an updated version of his book The Battle of Brazil, Sheinberg claimed he had no idea how his cut leaked out, and said that he wasn't the one who ordered that cut to be released. |
January 9 | Pat Sajak quits the daytime version of the series Wheel of Fortune for a CBS late night talk show while remaining host of the nighttime version. His daytime hosting role will be assumed by Rolf Benirschke, then by Bob Goen when Wheel switches networks from NBC to CBS that July. |
January 15 | Fox airs an episode of Married...with Children called "Her Cups Runneth Over", which would soon become the main source of Terry Rakolta's moral boycott campaign against the show. |
January 22 | Super Bowl XXII from Miami's Joe Robbie Stadium is broadcast on NBC. This would be the last outdoor Super Bowl to start earlier than 6 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, as it started just after 5 p.m. The halftime show was titled "Be Bop Bamboozled in 3-D" and featured Elvis Presto, played by then-Solid Gold dancer Alex Cole, and hundreds of South Florida-area dancers and performers.[6] Ironically, not one actual Elvis Presley song was performed.[7] Several scenes included computer generated 3-D images. Prior to the game, Coca-Cola distributed 3-D glasses at retailers for viewers to use. At the onset of the halftime show, primary sponsor Diet Coke aired the first commercial in 3-D. Coca-Cola had originally planned to use the 3-D Diet Coke commercial as part of the Moonlighting season finale, which was also aired in 3-D, but withdrew plans due to the 1988 Writers Guild of America Strike. |
January 29 | Shining Time Station, a children's sitcom debuts on PBS. Starring Didi Conn, Brian O'Connor and Ringo Starr, the series introduces British children's television series Thomas & Friends to America. |
February 5 | On the NBC sitcom Day by Day, six cast members from The Brady Bunch (Robert Reed, Florence Henderson, Ann B. Davis, Maureen McCormick, Christopher Knight, and Mike Lookinland) reunite. |
The first part of the four part Western miniseries Lonesome Dove airs on CBS, drawing a huge viewing audience, earning numerous awards, and reviving both the television Western and the miniseries. | |
February 20 | Jane Wyman, an actress on the CBS drama series Falcon Crest, is rushed to the hospital, after suffering from diabetes and a liver ailment. |
Charlie O'Donnell returned to Wheel of Fortune as the announcer, following a nine-year absence. | |
February 26 | ABC broadcasts the made-for-television film Get Smart, Again!, which features Don Adams and Barbara Feldon reprising their characters of Maxwell Smart and Agent 99 from the 1965–1970 NBC/CBS sitcom Get Smart! The relative success of the film prompted the development of a short-lived (only seven episodes) 1995 weekly series on Fox, also titled Get Smart, with Adams and Feldon again reprising their characters. |
March 2 | Pepsi's controversial advertisement with Madonna and her song "Like a Prayer" airs during NBC's showing of The Cosby Show. The same ad was run on ITV in the UK, 12 minutes into The Bill. |
March 10 | The series finale of Webster has the eponymous character being transported to the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) from Star Trek: The Next Generation. Michael Dorn guest stars as Lt. Worf. |
March 13 | The weekday version of Yo! MTV Raps, hosted by Ed Lover and Doctor Dré debuts. |
March 19 | Return of the Jedi makes its network broadcast television premiere on NBC. |
The Motorcraft Quality Parts 500 is broadcast on ABC. The broadcast is notable because Dr. Jerry Punch, who was reporting from the pit stall of Richard Petty when a fire broke out, proceeded to treat on the spot, two injured crew members. Following the incident, in which several items of Punch's clothing were singed or melted, ESPN mandated that its pit reporters wear fire-retardant suits. Other networks have since adopted the practice.[8] | |
March 24 | For the first time since 1973, NBC reruns the 1960 telecast of Peter Pan, with Mary Martin in the title role. Earlier that day, two of the network's game shows, Sale of the Century and Super Password, aired their final episodes. The following Monday, NBC will return the noon time slot to its affiliates. |
March 25 | Elvis Costello appears as the musical guest on Saturday Night Live. It's the first time that Costello appeared on SNL in 12 years. Costello had been temporarily banned from appearing on SNL in 1977 after he had abruptly switched songs live against the wishes of his record company and SNL. In 1977, he had originally been scheduled to perform his debut single "Less Than Zero", instead of "Radio Radio", which criticized the commercialization of broadcasting. |
March 29 | The 61st Academy Awards ceremony is broadcast on ABC. Despite the best Nielsen ratings in five years, it proved to be a career disaster for producer Allan Carr, culminating in the infamous pairing of Snow White (played by Eileen Bowman) and Rob Lowe singing a parody of "Proud Mary." The telecast also included a production number featuring what was introduced as "The Stars of Tomorrow" doing a number entitled "I Wanna Be An Oscar Winner" with all the participants being actors and actresses ranging from the age group of late teens to mid-20s. Due largely to the show's opening number, and despite the shows stellar Nielsen ratings, the show became a laughing-stock and went down in history as one of the worst moments in awards show and television history. The telecast was also remembered for being the final public appearance of actress and comedian Lucille Ball, where she and co-presenter Bob Hope were given a standing ovation.[9] On April 26, almost a month after the ceremony, she died from a dissecting aortic aneurysm at age 77.[10] |
March 31 | The CBS game show Card Sharks airs its final episode. The following Monday, it is replaced by a revival of Now You See It. |
April 1 | Nickelodeon celebrates its 10th anniversary. |
April 8 | Mike Myers joins the cast of the NBC series Saturday Night Live. |
After a ten-month hiatus,[11] American Bandstand reemerges on the USA Network. David Hirsch took over hosting duties from Dick Clark (who remained on as executive producer) and Bandstand moved outdoors to Universal Studios Hollywood. After 26 weeks on USA, Bandstand signed off for good on October 7, 1989, with The Cover Girls as the final musical guests. | |
April 30 | CNBC, NBC's answer to the Financial News Network, launched (CNBC and FNN would merge two years later). |
Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman, the second made-for-television reunion film that featured Lee Majors as Steve Austin and Lindsay Wagner as Jaime Sommers is broadcast on NBC. It is also notably the first television appearance of actress Sandra Bullock and the first film which strongly featured her. | |
May 7 | The Trial of the Incredible Hulk, the second film to be based on the 1978–1982 television series, airs on NBC. As was the case with The Incredible Hulk Returns and Thor, this television movie also acted as a backdoor television pilot for a series, in this case, for Daredevil (which was also not produced).[12][13] |
May 8 | Top Gun makes its broadcast network television debut on NBC. |
After being out of production for over a year, Nickelodeon's You Can't Do that on Television resumes broadcasting new episodes, this time with an entirely new cast save for adult actors, Les Lye and Abby Hagyard. | |
May 11 | In the series finale of the ABC drama Dynasty, Blake Carrington, Alexis Colby, Dex Dexter, and Fallon Carrington Colby are stuck in mortal peril. |
NBC airs a pilot for a proposed spin-off of 227 centered on Jackée Harry's character Sandra Clark. The pilot however, was not picked up for a series and Jackée subsequently left 227. She would however, later guest star in seven of the final season's episodes. | |
May 14 | NBC broadcasts the series finale of Family Ties followed by the network television premiere of Ferris Bueller's Day Off. |
May 14–25 | SportsChannel America airs the first of four consecutive Stanley Cup Finals. |
May 18 | Donna Mills makes her final regular appearance as villainess Abby Cunningham on the CBS drama Knots Landing. |
May 20 | Original Saturday Night Live cast member, Gilda Radner succumbs to ovarian cancer at the age of 42. News of Radner's death broke as Steve Martin was rehearsing to act as the guest host for that night's season finale of SNL. Martin's planned opening monologue was scrapped; in its place a visibly upset Martin introduced a video clip of a 1978 sketch in which he and Radner had parodied Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse in a well-known dance routine from The Band Wagon (1953).[14] After the clip, Martin said it reminded him of "how great she was and of how young I looked. Gilda, we miss you." |
May 21 | The two-hour long series finale of Miami Vice airs on NBC. There would however be three "lost episodes" that would be broadcast on NBC over the course of June 1989. A fourth and final "lost episode" entitled "Too Much, Too Late" was instead first broadcast on the USA Network in January 1990, due to its graphic content and a plot vividly involving child molestation. |
June 3 | Vin Scully does the play-by-play for the NBC Game of the Week in St. Louis, where the Cardinals beat the Chicago Cubs in 10 innings. Meanwhile, the Los Angeles Dodgers are playing a series in Houston, where Scully flies to be on hand to call the Sunday game of the series. However, the Saturday night game between the teams is going into extra innings when Scully arrives in town, so he goes to the Astrodome instead of his hotel. He picks up the play-by-play, helping to relieve the other Dodger announcers, who are doing both television and radio, and broadcasts the final 13 innings (after already calling 10 innings in St. Louis), as the game went 22 innings. He broadcast 23 innings in one day in two different cities. |
June 5 | For the start of 1989 NBA Finals,[15] CBS completely revamps their opening montage for their NBA broadcasts. The computer-generated imagery (once again set in and around a virtual arena) was made to look more realistic (live-action footage was incorporated in the backdrops). Also, the familiar theme music (an uptempo series of four notes and three bars composed by Allyson Bellink since the 1983 NBA Finals) each was rearranged[16] to sound more intricate and to have a more emotional impact, along the lines of the network's later World Series coverage. Between the 1989 NBA Finals and the 1990 NBA Finals' intros, the theme music was slightly revised; the 1989 Finals intro incorporated more of a guitar riff, while the 1990 Finals intro featured a little more usage of trumpets. |
June 8 | After broadcasting Major League Baseball games on Monday nights since 1976, ABC launches eight weeks worth of games on Thursday nights, beginning with coverage of the New York Mets against the Chicago Cubs and the San Diego Padres against the Houston Astros. |
July 1 | In Rochester, New York, NBC affiliate WROC-TV and CBS affiliate WHEC-TV swap affiliations. NBC cites WROC-TV's struggling news ratings as the reason for the switch.[17] |
July 4 | CBS airs the pilot for a proposed adaptation of the 1988 film Coming to America as an installment for the Summer Showcase anthology series. |
July 5 | The pilot episode of Seinfeld airs on NBC. |
July 7 | CBS airs an unsold pilot for a proposed sitcom based on the 1987 film Adventures in Babysitting. |
July 11 | Former President of the United States Ronald Reagan joins NBC's Vin Scully on commentary for the 1st inning of the Major League Baseball All-Star Game. |
July 14 | Full House premieres on Seven Network in Australia. |
The CBS game show Now You See It, which had suffered from constant preemptions by network affiliates, airs its final episode. The following Monday, Wheel of Fortune, which had been cancelled by NBC on June 30, takes its place. | |
July 18 | My Sister Sam star Rebecca Schaeffer is shot and killed by Robert John Bardo, an obsessed fan who had been stalking her. |
August 14 | Cliff and Nina Warner marry one another for the fourth (and seemingly final) time on the ABC soap opera All My Children, a record that has not been matched for soap operas. |
August 23 | One year after acquiring the rights to broadcast the 1992 Winter Olympics from Albertville, France, CBS also wins the rights to broadcast the 1994 Winter Olympics from Lillehammer, Norway after bidding $300 million. |
August 24 | In a press conference that is carried live on CNN and ESPN, Major League Baseball commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti states that to preserve the integrity of the game of baseball, Pete Rose is banned from the game for life for gambling on baseball. One week after the announcement, Giamatti would die of a massive heart attack at the age of 51. |
August 27 | The television film L.A. Takedown airs on NBC. Originally filmed as an unsuccessful pilot for a television series, producer and screenwriter Michael Mann would later use L.A. Takedown as the basis for the 1995 film Heat. |
September 1 | WUTV in Buffalo officially dropped its Fox affiliation, and moved its Fox affiliation over to WNYB-TV. This was because it was disappointed with the network's weak prime time programming offerings.[18] |
September 4 | The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! by DIC Entertainment brought to life the popular video game series Super Mario Bros.. Featuring live action and animated sequences, the show starred Captain Lou Albano as Mario and Danny Wells as Luigi. |
The Family Channel debuts its children programming block Fun Town. | |
Wheel of Fortune introduced a new Bonus Round which contestants can choose from one of five envelopes (which spelled out WHEEL) that contained either $25,000 cash or other prizes. The format's final episode was on October 19, 2001. | |
September 8 | The Legend of Zelda animated series begins on television as part of The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! and is shown on Fridays. The series has been panned by many fans of the Zelda franchise including the story writing, over the top acting, repeated plots and Link's trademark catchphrase "Excuse me, Princess!". |
September 16 | A pilot for a proposed X-Men animated series is first broadcast in syndication. It would take another three years before an X-Men series would be fully realized. |
September 22 | ABC debuts TGIF from 8:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., a new programming block for Friday nights with four shows (Full House, Family Matters, Perfect Strangers, and Just the Ten of Us), it also includes interstitial hosts. This block would become a ratings hit throughout the 1990s, lasting until 2000. |
September 24 | NBC broadcasts Saturday Night Live's 15th anniversary special. |
September 30 | NBC broadcasts its final Major League Baseball Game of the Week (before the program is transferred to CBS). NBC had broadcast the Game of the Week since 1957 and exclusively since 1966. Bob Costas and Tony Kubek called the action from Toronto's SkyDome, as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Baltimore Orioles to clinch the American League Eastern Division title. |
October 1 | NBC affiliate KPOM-TV (now KFTA-TV) in Fort Smith, Arkansas signs-on full-time satellite KFAA-TV (now KNWA-TV) in Rogers to solve transmission problems resulting from its status as an UHF station in a mountainous area. (KFTA-TV will disaffiliate from NBC and join Fox in 2006.) |
Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom makes its network broadcast television debut on ABC. | |
October 6 | Jane Wyman's medical leave due to her diabetes and liver ailment is written into Falcon Crest, when her character, Angela Channing, is put in a coma. |
October 9 | The San Francisco Giants defeat the Chicago Cubs in Game 5 of the National League Championship Series to go to the World Series for the first time since 1962. This was also NBC's final Major League Baseball telecast (with Vin Scully and Tom Seaver on the call), having broadcast the sport in some shape or form since 1947. As previously mentioned, the primary network TV package was moving to CBS beginning in 1990. NBC wouldn't broadcast baseball again until the 1994 All-Star Game. |
October 17 | Four minutes into ABC's broadcast of Game 3 of the World Series, the Lome Prieta earthquake occurred, forcing a ten-day delay of the series. As a consequence of the Loma Prieta earthquake, ABC aired repeat episodes of Roseanne and The Wonder Years amid the initial uncertainty as to whether Game 3 would take place as scheduled; an extended ABC News Special Report – anchored by Ted Koppel from the news division's Washington, D.C. bureau, with Al Michaels (who served as the play-by-play commentator for ABC's World Series coverage that year alongside Jim Palmer and Tim McCarver) acting as a de facto reporter – on the earthquake's immediate aftermath followed those two programs. |
October 19–23 | Contestant Diane Landry won an accumulated $129,370 cash & prizes over three episodes of air in Wheel of Fortune, which at the time set an all-time winnings record for the show. At the time, the backdrop chyron displays in only five digits due to a game show winnings cap, and host Pat Sajak taped a "$1" cardboard next to the display to accommodate the new total. This scene has been featured in various clip shows videos. |
October 26 | WSNR-TV, an independent station launches on the air in Syracuse, New York. |
October 27 | Jane Pauley announces that she will be stepping down as co-anchor of NBC's Today (after 13 years on the air) at the end of the year (with Pauley's last day being on December 29). Today's news reader Deborah Norville is immediately announced as Pauley's successor. |
October 28 | The World Series finally concludes with the Oakland Athletics sweeping the San Francisco Giants in four games. This would be ABC's final baseball telecast, having covered the sport consecutively since 1976. Like NBC, ABC would lose their baseball package completely to CBS beginning in 1990. ABC would next broadcast Major League Baseball in 1994, when they formed a joint-venture with Major League Baseball and NBC called The Baseball Network. |
November 4 | The NBA on TNT debuts. |
November 7 | An episode of the ABC drama Thirtysomething generates a great deal of controversy because it depicts two men in bed together after having had sex. Even though the actors were forbidden to touch each other while in bed together, the controversy proves too much for a number of advertisers, who pull their commercials from the episode. ABC ultimately withdraws the episode from rotation for rebroadcast. |
November 9 | The National Basketball Association[19][20] and NBC[21] reaches an agreement on a four-year, US$600 million contract[22] (beginning in the 1990–1991 season), ending CBS' tenure with the NBA after 17 years. |
November 10 | Sesame Street celebrates its 20th anniversary. |
November 15 | The Comedy Channel debuts (it will become Comedy Central two years later). |
November 16 | Michael Jackson makes a surprise appearance on The Arsenio Hall Show during Hall's interview with Eddie Murphy. |
December 2 | Family Matters premieres in New Zealand on the new established television channel TV3 three months after its U.S. television debut. |
Disney purchases Los Angeles independent station KHJ-TV from RKO General, and renames it to KCAL-TV. | |
The 258th and final original episode of The Smurfs airs on NBC. | |
December 15 | Steve Urkel makes his first appearance on Family Matters. |
December 17 | Fox broadcasts the series premiere of The Simpsons, "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire", which also acts as a Christmas special. The new series is a spin-off of a series of animated sketches that had previously aired on The Tracey Ullman Show. The series proves to be an early hit for Fox, scoring the network's first Nielsen top 30 entry.[23] |
December 18 | A seldom-seen 1956 Christmas special episode of I Love Lucy is re-broadcast by CBS. |
Programs
Debuting this year
The following is a list of shows that premiered in 1989.
Resuming this year
Title | Final aired | Previous network | New title | Returning network | Date of return |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Mickey Mouse Club | 1979 | Syndication | The All-New Mickey Mouse Club | Disney Channel | April 24 |
Ending this year
Date | Title | Debut |
---|---|---|
January 7 | ALF: The Animated Series | 1987 |
January 13 | Ryan's Hope | 1975 |
January 14 | Snorks | 1984 |
January 19 | Knightwatch | 1988 |
January 21 | Dirty Dancing | |
Simon & Simon | 1981 | |
February 20 | Almost Grown | 1988 |
March 2 | A Fine Romance | 1989 |
March 9 | Webster | 1983 |
March 10 | Finders Keepers | 1987 |
March 11 | Dolphin Cove | 1989 |
March 18 | Good Morning, Miss Bliss | 1988 |
Murphy's Law | ||
March 24 | Sale of the Century | 1969 |
Super Password | 1984 | |
March 25 | TV 101 | 1988 |
March 31 | Card Sharks (returned in 2001) | 1978 |
April 1 | She's the Sheriff | 1987 |
April 8 | It's a Living | 1980 |
April 14 | Unsub | 1989 |
April 26 | Nightingales | |
May 5 | Brothers | 1984 |
May 7 | Duet | 1989 |
May 11 | Dynasty | 1981 |
May 13 | A Man Called Hawk | 1989 |
May 14 | Family Ties | 1982 |
Moonlighting | 1985 | |
May 19 | The Gong Show (returned in 2017) | 1976 |
May 20 | Small Wonder | 1985 |
May 21 | Miami Vice | 1984 |
May 22 | Kate & Allie | |
June 9 | Wipeout | 1988 |
Couch Potatoes | 1989 | |
June 16 | Hollywood Squares (returned in 1998) | 1966 |
June 21 | Hard Time on Planet Earth | 1989 |
June 23 | Relatively Speaking | 1988 |
June 25 | Day by Day | |
July 14 | Now You See It | 1974 |
July 27 | The Cavanaughs | 1986 |
July 30 | The Jim Henson Hour | 1989 |
August 4 | Highway to Heaven | 1984 |
August 24 | The Equalizer | 1985 |
September 2 | Police Academy | 1988 |
September 8 | The Dating Game (returned in 1996) | 1965 |
September 9 | West 57th | 1985 |
September 29 | ThunderCats | |
October 7 | American Bandstand | 1952 |
October 9 | Major League Baseball on NBC (returned in 1994) | 1947 |
October 16 | The People Next Door | 1989 |
October 25 | The Nutt House | |
October 28 | Major League Baseball on ABC (returned in 1994) | 1976 |
November 7 | Chicken Soup | 1989 |
November 15 | A Peaceable Kingdom | |
November 30 | The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! | |
Top of the Hill | ||
December 1 | The Legend of Zelda | |
December 2 | The Smurfs | 1981 |
December 9 | The California Raisin Show | 1989 |
December 16 | The Karate Kid | |
Rude Dog & the Dweebs | ||
December 17 | Homeroom | 1989 |
Entering syndication
Highway To Heaven 5 Seasons
Changing networks
Show | Moved from | Moved to |
---|---|---|
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers | The Disney Channel | Syndication |
Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids | Syndication | NBC |
The Mickey Mouse Club | The Disney Channel | |
American Bandstand | USA Network | |
The Hitchhiker | HBO | |
Mystery Science Theater 3000 | KTMA | The Comedy Channel |
Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears | NBC | ABC |
Wheel of Fortune | CBS | |
Remote Control | MTV | Syndication/MTV |
Made-for-TV movies and miniseries
Title | Network | Date of airing |
---|---|---|
The Karen Carpenter Story | CBS | January 1 |
The Brotherhood of the Rose | NBC | January 22 & 23 |
Mike Hammer: Murder Takes All | CBS | May 21 |
Television stations
Station launches
Stations changing network affiliation
Market | Date | Station | Channel | Prior affiliation | New affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Houston, Texas | November | KTFH | 49 | Independent | Galavision |
Miami/Fort Lauderdale, Florida | January 1 | WTVJ | 4 | CBS | NBC (O&O) |
WCIX | 6 | Fox | CBS (O&O) | ||
WSVN | 7 | NBC | Fox | ||
Raleigh, North Carolina | December 10 | WKFT | 40 | Independent | CBS |
Rochester, New York | July 1 | WROC-TV | 8 | NBC | CBS |
WHEC-TV | 10 | CBS | NBC | ||
Buffalo, New York | September 1 | WUTV | 29 | Fox | Independent |
WNYB | 49 | Independent | Fox | ||
West Palm Beach, Florida | January 1 | WPEC | 12 | ABC | CBS |
WTVX | 34 | CBS | Independent | ||
Station closures
Date | Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation |
---|---|---|---|---|
March 31 | Concord, New Hampshire | WNHT | 21 | CBS |
June 30 | Lexington, Kentucky | WLKT-TV | 62 | Independent |
August 31 | Anderson, South Carolina | WAXA | 40 | Independent |
September 17 | Charlotte Amalie, U.S. Virgin Islands | WBNB-TV | 10 | CBS |
October 17 | Tucson, Arizona | KPOL | 40 | Independent |
Unknown date | Charlotte Amalie, U.S. Virgin Islands | WAIG | 43 | Independent |
Christiansted, U.S. Virgin Islands | WMEG | 15 | Religious Independent | |
WTFM-TV | 27 | Independent |
Births
Deaths
Date | Name | Age | Notability |
---|---|---|---|
February 5 | Joe Raposo | 51 | Composer (Sesame Street, The Electric Company, Three's Company theme song) |
February 11 | George O'Hanlon | 76 | Voice actor (voice of George Jetson on The Jetsons) |
April 26 | Lucille Ball | 77 | Actress, comedian (of the Lucy shows I Love Lucy, The Lucy Show, Here's Lucy) |
April 30 | Guy Williams | 65 | Actor (Zorro, Lost in Space) |
May 1 | Douglass Watson | 68 | Soap opera actor (Mac on Another World) |
May 20 | Gilda Radner | 42 | Actress, comedian (Saturday Night Live) |
June 15 | Victor French | 54 | Actor, director (Little House on the Prairie, Carter Country, Highway to Heaven) |
July 3 | Jim Backus | 76 | Actor (Thurston Howell III on Gilligan's Island and voice of Mr. Magoo) |
July 4 | Vic Perrin | 73 | Voice actor (original Control Voice on The Outer Limits, Hanna-Barbera cartoons) |
July 10 | Mel Blanc | 81 | Voice actor (as Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, and countless other characters) |
July 18 | Rebecca Schaeffer | 21 | Actress (My Sister Sam) |
August 16 | Amanda Blake | 60 | Actress (Miss Kitty Russell on Gunsmoke) |
September 17 | Jay Stewart | 71 | Announcer (Let's Make a Deal, Sale of the Century, Scrabble) |
October 6 | Bette Davis | 81 | Film and television actress |
November 27 | Bob Quigley | 77 | Game show producer (The Hollywood Squares, High Rollers, Gambit) |
December 6 | Frances Bavier | 86 | Actress (Aunt Bee on The Andy Griffith Show) |
Television Debuts
- William Baldwin – The Preppie Murder
- Tim Blake Nelson – The Unnaturals
- Michael Chiklis – Miami Vice
- Sandra Bullock – Bionic Showdown: The Six Million Dollar Man and the Bionic Woman
- Daniel Baldwin – Family Ties
- Lea Thompson – Nightbreaker
- Robert Patrick – The New Lassie
- Faizon Love – L.A. Friday
- Isabella Rossellini – The Tracey Ullman Show
- Stephen Root – Cross of Fire
- Tom Sizemore – Gideon Oliver
References
- NBC To Buy Miami's Channel 4, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, January 17, 1987.
- "THE MEDIA BUSINESS; CBS to Buy TV Station In Miami". The New York Times. August 9, 1988.
- "TV Listings for – January 7, 1989". TV Tango. January 7, 1989. Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
- "Scarface| Trailers from Hell". trailersfromhell.com. Archived from the original on September 19, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2014.
- "Lobotomized 'Brazil'?". Los Angeles Times. 1989-01-08. Archived from the original on 2020-11-27. Retrieved 2021-06-24.
- Rossen, Jake (February 4, 2018). "Oral History: The Strangest Super Bowl Halftime Show Ever". Mental Floss. Mental Floss. Retrieved February 6, 2020.
- Andrews, Travis (February 2, 2018). "From Elvis Presto to Michael Jackson: How the Super Bowl halftime show found its groove". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. Retrieved January 30, 2020.
- Hall, Andy (April 10, 2012). "Punch's near miss led to safety gear for ESPN's NASCAR pit reporters". ESPN Front Row. Retrieved November 8, 2016.
- "Coemdian Lucille Ball suffers a heart attack". The Spokesman-Review. April 19, 1989. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
- Flint, Peter B. (April 27, 1989). "Lucille Ball, Spirited Doyenne of TV Comedies, Dies at 77". The New York Times. Archived from the original on October 6, 2013. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
- "AB moves to USA network". TV.com. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- Harmetz, Aljean (1988-10-11). "Superheroes' Battleground: Prime Time". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-08-12.
- "F.O.O.M. (Flashbacks of Ol' Marvel) #16: "I'm Free Now – The Incredible Hulk (1988-1990)"". Comic Bulletin. Archived from the original on 2013-10-29. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- Martin, Steve; Radner, Gilda (1978). Saturday Night Live (Vimeo video ed.). Archived from the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2015.
- Introduction to Game 4 of the 1989 NBA Finals on YouTube
- Zemek, Matt (June 1, 2015). "NBA Finals, Music Division: NBC is great, but CBS is better". Crossover Chronicles.
- "In brief." Broadcasting, April 10, 1989, pg. 96.
- "FOX NETWORK, CH. 29 SPLIT; CH. 49 IS THE NEW SUITOR". The Buffalo News. Retrieved 2021-12-12.
- "November 9, 1989: The NBA signs a lucrative 4-year television deal with NBC". Sports Media Watch. November 29, 2011.
- "NBA Flips Channel, Decides to Play Ball With NBC in 1990". Los Angeles Times. 9 November 1989.
- "NBC acquires NBA broadcast rights". NBC Sports History Page.
- Steinbreder, John (November 20, 1989). "The Ball's In A New Court: NBC took the NBA away from CBS for a cool $600 million". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved November 29, 2011.
- "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire". Simpsons World.com. Retrieved September 19, 2011.
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