Player

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Top Ten #413:

1) Independence Day: We've been celebrating the bicentennial here on the site with a look back at TV Guide 50 years ago. What a glorious time it was in 1976, with many Americans coming together to celebrate the nation's history. 

And speaking of history:

2) Bicentennial Minutes: Love seeing any of these on YouTube! Here is all of them, or maybe all floating around at the moment.


3) Michael J. Fox/Roger Damon Price: Let's also give some love to Canada, which celebrated Canada Day last week. Also, these two were appointed to Order of Canada (The latter created You Can't Do That on Television).

4) This Is America, Charlie Brown: Apple TV added the 1988 miniseries this week. Ir's enjoyable, bur, man, it bugs me that the kids are running around  The Mayflower in bare feet.

5) Fantasy Island: Prime Video added the original and appears to be adding more Sony shows such as Hazel and Archie Bunker's Place.

Speaking of Sony shows, Roku is adding or re-adding a bunch, including That's My Mama, Hardcastle and McCormick, and The Famous Teddy Z.

6) Liberty Weekend: ABC was all over the Statue of Liberty centennial, and 40 years ago tonight, it continued its coverage with a special featuring Placido Domingo, the New York Philharmonic, and more.

7) National Ice Cream Month: And it's been pretty hot here, too.


8) The Twilight Zone: I love that the original gets marathons every July 4 weekend, but here's a spot from the 1980s version/



9) Wimbledon: The tennis tournament is well underway here in 2026; on this day in 1986, Martina Navratilova beat Hana Mandlikova in the final, and on this day in 1980, Bjorn Borg topped John McEnroe in their classic showdown in the men's final.


10) R.I.P. Penelope Keith:



Saturday, July 4, 2026

Inside the Guide: BICENTENNIAL FEVER! TV Guide 50 years ago today! (7/3/26 PART 2)

Today is the big day! 50 years ago today was the big bicentennial celebration, the culmination of a huge buildup, and TV Guide had everyone covered with this spread appearing before the day's actual listings:





NBC took out a full-pager:



How about a Bob Hope special? And check out the cool album you can buy!





I can't overstate how much TV was all about the bicentennial on this day. Among the shows, personalities, and specials with themed episodes on this day: Billy Graham, Firing Line, Lawrence Welk, and National Geographic. Local stations aired movies like Yankee Doodle Dandy.

Would there be a letdown when everyone went back to work Monday, July 5 and TV returned to normal? Come back tomorrow!

Friday, July 3, 2026

Inside the Guide: BICENTENNIAL FEVER! TV Guide 50 years ago today! (7/3/26 PART 1)

Yes, the nation had bicentennial fever in 1976, and we are here to revisit it with a look at the special issue of TV Guide (Los Angeles edition) dated July 3, 1976. We'll take a trip, Saturday through Friday, and the first few days are loaded with holiday coverage. Let's jump right into it!



Everyone was talking about the event, even Youth and the Issues:


Metromedia stations offer The Great American Celebration:




That's not to be confused with the Great American Music Celebration, which aired later in the evening and was hosted by Lorne Greene, Dionne Warwick, and Harve Presnell. 

Speaking of music, American Bandstand got in the act with a salute to the bicentennial featuring The Mugelsons, Paul Jabara, and comedia Kip Adotta. "Dick Clark is the host," the listing says. Well, i'm familiar with...Dick Clark.

A TV Movie adaptation of Huckleberry Finn was rerun on ABC tonight. In the cast: Ron Howard in the title role, Antonio Fargas as Jim, and Donny Most as Tom Sawyer!

Worried about the Fourth? CBS has you covered:




Don't feel the need to watch all day! "Drop in any time to see how it's going."

For you eggheads out there, NBC has a program about invention and discovery:



Thursday, July 2, 2026

Inside the Guide: TV Guide 50 years ago today! (6/26/76 Part 7)

Today there isn't much to see in the Friday, July 2, 1976 listings, but let's talk about some of the features in the issue.

There is this page, which gets into two topics of interest to BOTNS fans: The decision to break up Rhoda and Joe and also the pending debut of In Search Of!



Other stories include the cover story on Mary Tyler Moore in Moscow, a light piece about a writer trying video dating, and experiments with "two-way cable" and interactive TV. There's a profile of Rich Little, then starring in The Rich Little Show, but there is no review column.

One interesting item in the news section relates how NBC's revenues jumped as its ratings went down. The explanation is that the economy's revival boosted ad spending at a time when CBS and ABC had already sold most of its ad inventory. NBC, in effect, benefited from its plummeting ratings because it had plenty of sports to sell to advertisers looking to spend.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Inside the Guide: TV Guide 50 years ago today! (6/26/76 Part 6)

It's still fairly slow in prime time this week, with reruns dominating, but I do like this local station ad in the Thursday, July 1, 1976 listings:




Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Inside the Guide: TV Guide 50 years ago today! (6/26/76 Part 5)

There wasn't a lot going on Wednesday, June 30, 1976, on the tube, but NBC did have a patriotic special. It didn't bother taking out an ad for it, though.


I can also tell you that on Dinah Shore's show, Jim Nabors co-hosted, and guests included Lynda Carter, George Gobel, and Minnie Pearl!


Monday, June 29, 2026

Inside the Guide: TV Guide 50 years ago today! (6/26/76 Part 4)

There is a clear highlight in prime time 50 years ago on broadcast television. As America geared up for its bicentennial, NBC premiered the film 1776, itself an adaptation of the musical:



On Channel 8, right before the movie, viewers were treated to an animated Benji special (Other stations aired this syndicated program throughout the week):