1993 in American television
The following is a list of events affecting American television during 1993. Events listed include television series debuts, finales, cancellations, and channel initiations, closures and rebrandings, as well as information about controversies and disputes.
List of years in American television: |
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1992–93 United States network television schedule |
1993–94 United States network television schedule |
List of American television programs currently in production |
Events
Date | Event |
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January 3 | ABC and CBS simultaneously broadcast their own movies based on Amy Fisher's life, with Fisher played by Drew Barrymore (for ABC) and Alyssa Milano (for CBS); NBC had broadcast its own version of the Fisher saga six days earlier (December 28, 1992). |
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the fourth series in the Star Trek franchise, premieres in syndication. | |
January 4 | Nick Jr. celebrates its 5th anniversary. |
January 8 | ABC affiliate KOUS-TV (now Fox affiliate KHMT) in Billings, Montana, which had suffered reception problems for most of its history, signs off the air (it will return to the air as KHMT in August 1995). Later that day, KSVI signs-on the air, taking KOUS-TV's intellectual unit and ABC affiliation with it.[1][2] |
January 11 | Monday Night Raw airs its first episode, live from the Grand Ballroom at the Manhattan Center in New York City, on the USA Network. |
January 16 | On Saturday Night Live, Madonna parodies Marilyn Monroe's "Happy Birthday Mr. President, as “Happy Inauguration Mr. President”. On the same episode, she imitates Sinéad O’Connor’s actions from earlier in the season. |
January 19 | Fox expands its regular prime-time schedule to seven days a week; the network celebrates by premiering two dramas on this Tuesday: Class of '96 and Key West. |
January 20 | Warner Bros. Television Distribution launches the Prime Time Entertainment Network. |
January 31 | The Super Bowl, broadcast by NBC, has a solo halftime performer for the first time—Michael Jackson, who performed a medley of his most successful songs. |
February 10 | Oprah Winfrey interviews Michael Jackson during a live primetime special on ABC, hosted at Jackson's Neverland ranch (Jackson's first TV interview since 1979 with Barbara Walters for 20/20). |
Fox gets a full-time home in Grand Junction, Colorado when KFQX signs-on the air. | |
February 24 | Michael Jackson receives a Grammy Legend Award at the 35th Grammy Awards, presented by his younger sister, Janet. The ceremony is broadcast by CBS. |
February 26 | The Days of Our Lives nighttime special Night Sins is broadcast by NBC. |
March 4 | ESPN holds the first ever ESPY Awards. The highlight is Jim Valvano's speech while accepting the inaugural Arthur Ashe Courage and Humanitarian Award. He announced the creation of The V Foundation for Cancer Research, an organization dedicated to finding a cure for cancer.[3] Less than two months after his famous ESPY speech, Valvano died following a nearly yearlong battle with metastatic cancer. |
March 8 | Beavis and Butt-Head premieres on MTV. |
March 26 | CBS broadcasts the last new episode of Family Feud with host Ray Combs. The series would be broadcast as reruns until September 10. |
March 28 | Through a brokered deal with ESPN, ABC begins the first of a two year deal with the National Hockey League to televise six regional Sunday afternoon broadcasts (including the first three Sundays of the playoffs). This marked the first time that regular season National Hockey League games were broadcast on American network television[4] since 1974–75 (when NBC was the NHL's American broadcast television partner). |
March 31 | General Hospital uses Jacques Urbont's musical composition "Autumn Breeze" and the exterior shot of the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center for its opening and ending credits sequence for the final time. This particular sequence had been used since April 14, 1975 and was succeeded the following day by a new opening, "Faces of the Heart" by Dave Koz. |
April 18 | The Disney Channel celebrates its 10th anniversary. |
May 5 | Senior As the World Turns cast member Don Hastings hosts a memorial tribute to Douglas Marland. Marland, who died during March after an abdominal surgery procedure, had been the series' chief writer since 1985 and was responsible for several story lines on the CBS soap opera. |
May 13 | A cartoon version of Barry White appears on the fourth-season finale of the Fox cartoon-sitcom The Simpsons. |
Knots Landing airs a two-hour series finale on CBS. | |
May 14 | Jaimee Foxworth (Judy) and Telma Hopkins (Rachel) make their final regular appearances on the ABC sitcom Family Matters; though Hopkins later makes return guest appearances on the series as Rachel while Foxworth’s character Judy disappears without explanation. |
May 19 | The gang at West Beverly graduate from high school in the Season 3 finale of Beverly Hills, 90210. |
May 20 | NBC airs the fourth season finale of Seinfeld, expanded to 60 minutes. The episode concludes a season-long story sequence involving a pilot show written by Jerry and George, with the pilot finally coming to fruition only to be refused by NBC executives. Immediately afterwards, 80.4 million people tune to NBC to watch the series finale of Cheers. |
May 22 | Saved by the Bell broadcasts its series finale on NBC, as the cast graduates. This leads to the debut of a spin-off, Saved by the Bell: The College Years, three months later. |
May 23 | One month after federal agents make an infamous raid on David Koresh's Waco, Texas, compound, NBC broadcasts a hastily produced television movie based on the incident, In the Line of Duty: Ambush in Waco; Tim Daly plays Koresh for the movie. |
May 28 | Major League Baseball's owners overwhelmingly approve[5] a six-year joint venture with ABC and NBC. The venture, eventually dubbed "The Baseball Network", displaces CBS as MLB's primary network television package holder. |
June 1 | Connie Chung begins co-anchoring CBS Evening News with Dan Rather. |
June 16 | While appearing as a guest on Yo! MTV Raps, Tupac Shakur confesses to physically assaulting film directors Albert Hughes and Allen Hughes in retaliation for his firing from the film Menace II Society. |
June 25 | David Letterman broadcasts his last late-night talk show with NBC. |
June 26 | The final episode of Soul Train with Don Cornelius as host airs. |
July 1 | Shining Time Station premieres in Hong Kong with the show airing on ATV on its English speaking television network ATV World as part of a children's block called Tube Time (which also airs various cartoons and shows such as The Flintstones, Captain Planet and the Planeteers, Allegra's Window, Doug and Space Cases). The series will also air on ATV World until July 29 1996 whereas the Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends segments will air on the channel as a stand alone beginning from October 17. |
July 2 | Don Drysdale makes what turns out to be his final broadcast for the Los Angeles Dodgers. He provided play-by-play on the first six innings for a game between the Dodgers and Montreal Expos on KTLA 5, before handing it off to Vin Scully. Drysdale later died of a heart attack in his hotel's room, in Montreal, in the early hours of the following night. |
July 5 | One of Nickelodeon's earliest Nicktoons The Ren & Stimpy Show begins on Network Ten in Australia, making it the very first Nicktoon to be shown in that country. |
August 3 | Gayle Gardner becomes the first woman to do televised play-by-play of a baseball game when she called the action of a game between the Colorado Rockies and the Cincinnati Reds.[6] |
August 18 | At Clash of the Champions XXIV, the professional wrestler known as the Shockmaster botches his debut appearance in World Championship Wrestling by tripping and falling face first to the ground after crashing through a wall on Ric Flair's interview segment "A Flair for the Gold". |
August 28 | Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, the first Power Rangers entry, debuted on Fox Kids. |
August 30 | Late Show with David Letterman premieres on CBS, with guests Bill Murray and musical guest Billy Joel. |
September 3 | Sally Jessy Raphael Show airs for the last time on WABC-TV and KCAL-TV in the New York and Los Angeles areas respectively. The following Tuesday, The Les Brown Show takes over the WABC spot. Sally would move to WNBC and KNBC in said areas. |
September 10 | PBS introduces new on-air graphics for its children's programs; the following year, PBS will repackage their existing children's programs as a new block called PTV. |
September 12 | Raymond Burr dies of liver cancer at his ranch home in California at the age of 76. (The last Perry Mason movie, Perry Mason: The Case of the Killer Kiss, airs on NBC on November 29, carrying a dedication to Burr with an in memoriam tribute at the end of the movie.) |
September 13 | Late Night with Conan O'Brien premieres on NBC, as O'Brien replaces David Letterman as host. |
Animaniacs makes its debut on Fox Kids. | |
September 16 | Marc Wilmore, Reggie McFadden, Jay Leggett, Carol Rosenthal and Anne-Marie Johnson join the cast of the Fox series In Living Color for its final season. None of the Wayans Family are involved at all during the season. |
September 17 | TNT and Cartoon Network both get their international channels launched in the UK for the first time. |
September 18 | Rocko's Modern Life makes its debut on Nickelodeon, becoming the network's fourth "Nicktoon" in the line-up. |
September 19 | The 45th Primetime Emmy Awards ceremony is broadcast on ABC. |
September 24 | Raven-Symoné, Nell Carter and Saundra Quarterman join the cast of the series Hangin' with Mr. Cooper on ABC. |
October 1 | ESPN's secondary channel, ESPN2 (known as The Deuce), debuts. |
October 15 | Jewelry TV debuts as American Collectable Network, a home shopping network. |
October 23 | CBS's four-year broadcast relationship with Major League Baseball ends with Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Joe Carter's walk-off home run to win the World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies. (Bob Seger's song "The Famous Final Scene" plays during the broadcast's closing credits.) |
October 25 | The Rocky Horror Picture Show makes its TV debut on Fox; the movie is inter-cut with a live cast performance. |
October 27 | Paramount Pictures and Chris-Craft Industries announce the formation of the United Paramount Network. |
October 29 | The first Got Milk? commercial is broadcast on TV. Directed by Michael Bay, a guy obsessed by the history of the duel hears a voice on the radio asking a $10,000 question, "Who shot Alexander Hamilton in that famous duel?", while making and eating a peanut butter sandwich. The question was transferred to the telephone, answers the correct answer "Aaron Burr", but the person on the telephone can't hear it clearly with his mouth full of peanut butter sandwich before time ends, and he only has a few drops of milk left. |
November 2 | Warner Bros. Entertainment announces the formation of The WB Television Network. |
November 15 | Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, and Christina Aguilera join the cast of the Disney Channel series The New Mickey Mouse Club. |
November 21 | Bill Bixby dies of prostate cancer at the age of 59 (six days after his final directing job on NBC's Blossom). |
November 22 | TV Food Network makes its debut. |
November 26 | Cartoon Network's first original animated program, The Moxy Show, debuts. |
December 18 | CBS (which had been a broadcaster of National Football League games for 38 years) loses their rights to telecast National Football Conference games to Fox. Fox wins the rights to NFC games by offering a then-record $1.58 billion to the NFL over four years, significantly more than the $290 million per year CBS was willing to pay. |
December 22 | Shining Time Station premieres in Namibia with the show airing on NBC (not to be confused with the American television station of the same name). |
Programs
Debuts
Returning this year
Show | Last aired | Previous network | New title | New network | Returning |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scrabble | 1990 | NBC | Same | Same | January 18 |
Brains & Brawn | 1958 | July 10 | |||
The Atom Ant/Secret Squirrel Show | 1968 | Super Secret Secret Squirrel | TBS/Cartoon Network | September 5 | |
Captain Planet and the Planeteers | 1992 | TBS | The New Adventures of Captain Planet | September 12 |
Ending this year
Entering syndication this year
Show | Seasons | In Production | Source |
---|---|---|---|
1st & Ten | 6 | No | [7] |
Adventures in Wonderland | 1 | Yes | [8] |
Coach | 5 | Yes | [7] |
Cops | 5 | Yes | [7] |
Empty Nest | 5 | Yes | [7] |
Family Matters | 4 | Yes | [7] |
Garfield and Friends | 5 | Yes | [9] |
Rescue 911 | 4 | Yes | [7] |
The Ren & Stimpy Show | 2 | Yes |
Network changes
Made-for-TV movies and miniseries
Premiere date | Title | Channel |
---|---|---|
March 1 | Bloodlines: Murder in the Family | NBC |
April 4 | Diana: Her True Story | |
April 18-20 | The Fire Next Time | CBS |
May 3-4 | Murder in the Heartland | ABC |
May 9-10 | The Tommyknockers | |
May 23 | Torch Song | NBC |
May 24 | Triumph Over Disaster: The Hurricane Andrew Story | |
May 26 | Without Warning: Terror in the Towers | |
September 12 | seaQuest DSV | |
Sherlock Holmes Returns | CBS | |
September 20 | Danielle Steel's Star | NBC |
October 17-19 | Danielle Steel's Message from Nam | |
December 6 | Gypsy: A Musical Fable | CBS |
December 23 | A Cool Like That Christmas | Fox |
Television stations
Station launches
Station closures
Date | City of license/Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation | Sign-on date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
April 5 | Albuquerque, New Mexico | KGSA-TV | 14 | Independent | May 19, 1981 | |
Unknown date | Wenatchee, Washington | KCWT | 27 (UHF) | TBN | 1984 | |
Births
Deaths
References
- Johnson, John C. "Montana Radio and TV Photos". John in Arizona. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
- Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 1994 (PDF). 1994. p. C-41. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
- Nelson, John (March 5, 1993). "Valvano receives award, announces foundation plan". Free Lance-Star. (Fredericksburg, Virginia). Associated Press. p. A8.
- Jim Shea (May 7, 1993). "Select few watching NHL on ABC". Hartford Courant. p. E9.
- Smith, Claire (May 29, 1993). "BASEBALL; Baseball Flips Channel On TV Future". The New York Times.
- American Sportscasters Online Archived 2013-05-05 at WebCite, "Sportscasting Firsts - 1920-Present, by Lou Schwartz, Retrieved March 3, 2012.
- "New(est) For NATPE In A Nutshell" from Broadcasting & Cable
- Buena Vista Television ad (page 44) from Broadcasting & Cable
- The Program Exchange ad (page 50) from Broadcasting & Cable
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