Classic TV Listings

No idea what that match could be. I’ll see if I can do a bit more digging. Probably put up as a spoiler to the VFA on Channel O. Speaking of which, Port Melbourne are in another Grand Final tomorrow.

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Today’s TV: 28.9.1974, Brisbane/South East Queensland (DDQ/SDQ and WBQ) and Northern Rivers/Gold Coast (RTN):

Source: TV Week

The 1974 VFL Grand Final is on BTQ7 in Brisbane, live from Melbourne. But no coverage on the regional channels except for ABC in Queensland screening a replay late on Sunday night. (ABC NSW had its replay late on Saturday night)

Victorian viewers were still denied being able to see the Grand Final live on TV. The VFL reportedly had a $50,000 price tag for live coverage of the Grand Final, to be split between ABC and HSV7. ABC only committed up to $12,500 and HSV7 would not go above $25,000.

The Victorian government were asked to make up the difference but they refused.

The ABC had paid $10,000 for the NSW Rugby League grand final the previous week.

Source: https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=KtFaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MpIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6362%2C5860827

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It would be 3 more years until Melbourne got the GF live, Seven reportedly paid $100000 for the game, then did the same for the replay the next week.

Why was the Grand Final never shown live until 77? and why the change? NSWRL always had the GF live if i’m right.

Protecting the gate. Was also much easier to get tickets and would often not officially sell out. Channel 7 would often buy the last remaining tickets in order to broadcast live.

Today’s TV: 6.10.1975, Melbourne.

Source: Listener In-TV

  • Tough night for Norman Gunston fans. The series return of The Norman Gunston Show on ABC at 8.00, while Gunston is also a special guest on The Paul Hogan Show on Seven at 7.30. Fans no doubt hopeful that Gunston’s appearance on Seven comes before 8.00!
  • Very familiar names among the newsreaders: Geoff Raymond (ABC), Brian Naylor and David Johnston (Seven), Peter Hitchener and Brian Henderson (Nine) and Bruce Mansfield (0)
  • Daryl Somers is among the guests on The Don Lane Show
  • Monday Conference, a 1970s Q&A, is on ABC at 9.05
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Seven still using their pre-color logo in their news promo.

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Today’s TV: 22.10.1980, Melbourne.

Source: TV Week.

  • There is a new channel (SBS) launching in a few days, but Paul Hogan is beating it to the punch with his own new channel: HOG1.
  • Seven’s summer of tennis is already in full swing
  • Channel 10 has daytime re-runs of '70s cop drama Matlock Police and children’s series The Lost Islands.
  • The Inventors on ABC will no doubt have had Diana Fisher asking prospective inventors, ‘but does it come in many colours’?
  • The season final to Dallas on Channel 10 sees JR cop a bullet… but Who Shot JR? We had to wait for the next season
  • Channel 10’s late late movie would have seen it not sign off for the night until 3.10am!

Eight-year-old me would have had to make a choice between CHiPs and Paul Hogan. I probably chose Paul Hogan

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Same reason why Channel 9 would only show the first 2 hours of ODIs in the host city and wouldn’t start broadcasting a day’s play of a test until the last session.

They of course made an exception if the matches were a sell out

Another one for today: 22.10.2004, Melbourne:

Source: TV Week

It’s a Friday and outside of football season so there’s not much to choose from. Movies at 8.30pm on all 3 commercials, cooking with Elizabeth Chong on SBS, and Strictly Dancing on ABC, followed later by The Glass House.
Nine seems to be battling Seven’s Wheel Of Fortune and Deal Or No Deal with one-hour editions of The Price Is Right.

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The Melbourne Indoor Tennis Championships from the Frankston indoor centre. That was a thing on TV!

That magical period (especially for certain users of Mediaspy) where Ten was playing 2 Simpsons repeats a day during the week! Also can’t remember Ten doing midday movies for long, must have been just after they canned Jerry Springer / Drama reruns and before they acquired Dr Phil.

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I think it’s the same tournament that became the Sydney Indoor, one of the Grand Prix events on the ATP Calendar.

Glorious times.

The midday movies lasted until early 2005 when Springer was brought back.

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A program on that 2004 TV guide which is probably in the “Not For Broadcast” section these days - Rolf Harris’ Animal Hospital at 6am on the ABC!

Meanwhile on Nine, I think that would’ve been the sixth last episode of Burkes Backyard. But of course, there were a few seasonal specials of the program a few years later.

SBS’ 3pm TV Ed program “Shuo Shuo Xiao Xiao” was produced by the NSW Department of Education - that series was replayed very frequently on the Sydney D44 Datacast Trial station “Channel NSW” (which from memory, was LCN-45) in the Late 2000s! :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

Later in the evening on the same station, that 10pm program “Love For Sale” sounds like something that probably wouldn’t be too out of place on a current ABC2 Friday night lineup!

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Brings back so many memories - I remember that TV Week layout, down to the very font, like it was yesterday.

Good old Ivan Hutchinson. This is what we referred to before RottenTomatoes, guys!

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Today’s TV: 1.11.1980, Melbourne (excluding SBS), regional Victoria, Mt Gambier, Riverland

Source: TV Week (“Country” edition)

Channel 10’s coverage of Derby Day from Flemington (preview from 9am and race day from 12.30pm) is relayed across Victoria, and the afternoon live coverage through SES8. Ten’s coverage of the four-day Melbourne Cup Carnival was billed as the largest coverage of an Australian racing carnival to date, with 17 cameras to an estimated 10 million viewers around Australia and New Zealand watching it live.

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Today’s TV: 4.11.1959, Melbourne:

Source: TV News-Times

  • HSV7 celebrates its 3rd birthday with an Anniversary Party, including variety performances, Geoff Raymond hosting a studio party, and Judd Laine’s classical dance based on the story of Hamlet.
  • Gwen Plumb hosts Woman’s World on ABV2. From what I gather, Woman’s World alternated between Melbourne and Sydney based shows. Given that there was no fixed link between Sydney and Melbourne for TV programs, I imagined the shows aired from interstate were on film or kinescope.
  • Autumn Affair, regarded as Australia’s first “soapie”, is broadcast on GTV9 in the afternoon. It was a production of ATN7 in Sydney, where it aired in a morning timeslot.
  • Channels 2, 7 and 9 all have competing children’s shows after 5.00pm, although HSV7 followed Young Seven with The Cool Cats Show, a “teenage after-school studio dance and hit-feast”!
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Interesting to see the ABC crediting their “presentation announcers” - presumably continuity announcers. I assume they were live - I wonder if they appeared in vision?

GTV9 used to have ‘presentation announcers’ listed as well for some time during the 1960s. I can only assume they appeared on-screen but nothing to confirm that.

Channel 0/28 used to have continuity presenters on screen when it first launched in 1980 and then they briefly revived the idea when the name changed to SBS as they expanded to daytime hours.

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