2003 in American television
The following is a list of events affecting American television during 2003. Events listed include television series debuts, finales, cancellations, and new channel initiations.
List of years in American television: |
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2002–03 United States network television schedule |
2003–04 United States network television schedule |
List of American television programs currently in production |
Events
January
Date | Event |
---|---|
2 | ABC affiliate WBKP in Calumet, Michigan greatly improves its coverage area in the Upper Peninsula when it signs-on satellite station WBUP in Ishpeming. |
4 | Nick Jr. celebrates its 15th anniversary. |
19 | The WB series Charmed broadcasts its 100th episode. |
20 | KMAY-LP (now KAGS-LD) in Bryan, Texas signs-on as a satellite of Temple-based NBC affiliate KCEN-TV. |
26 | The 37th edition of the Super Bowl is broadcast on ABC, making the last ever Super Bowl to be scheduled on January. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers win their first championship, defeating the Oakland Raiders by score of 48-21. John Madden, who provided color commentary alongside Al Michaels, becomes the first person to announce Super Bowls on different networks in consecutive years, having called Super Bowl XXXVI on Fox. |
February
Date | Event |
---|---|
5 | The Price Is Right broadcasts its first Million Dollar Spectacular on CBS. |
8 | A new version of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, tittled Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 TV series), airs on the Fox Box |
16 | The 300th episode of the series The Simpsons is broadcast on Fox the same night as the Married... with Children reunion special. |
21 | Late Show host David Letterman begins a few weeks' leave from the CBS talk show due to a bout of shingles (during this time, guest hosts will include Bruce Willis, Regis Philbin, Will Ferrell and Elvis Costello). |
24 | CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather interviews Saddam Hussein on national television, shortly before the Iraq invasion began. |
The miniseries Giant Robot Week is broadcast by Cartoon Network, which includes 2 edited episodes of Neon Genesis Evangelion. This is the first attempt to broadcast the series by network TV. | |
26 | On CBS, The Young and the Restless celebrates its 30th anniversary. |
27 | Fred Rogers, host of the television series Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood dies of stomach cancer at the age of 74. |
March
Date | Event |
---|---|
21 | Farscape's series finale, "Bad Timing", airs on Sci Fi. |
April
Date | Event |
---|---|
1 | On ABC, General Hospital celebrates its 40th anniversary. |
5 | Everyday Italian debuts on Food Network hosted by Giada De Laurentiis. The show, which De Laurentiis focuses for her viewers on traditional Italian cuisine with an American flair, would result in becoming one of Food Network's most popular daytime cooking shows. |
7 | Dragon Ball Z broadcasts its final episode on Cartoon Network. The series was first broadcast by Toonami on August 31, 1998. The series will return in 2005 with the first 65 episodes re-dubbed and uncut. |
Global Grover debuts on Sesame Street. | |
The US dub of Tweenies and Miffy and Friends debut on Noggin. | |
Moose and Zee make their debut as Noggin's hosts. | |
12 | All Grown Up!, a spin-off of Rugrats, premieres on Nickelodeon. The series premiere becomes the highest-rated premiere in Nickelodeon history and held that record until 2010. |
18 | Disney Channel celebrates its 20th anniversary. |
22 | Bianca Montgomery (Eden Riegel) kisses Lena Kundera (Olga Sosnovska) on the ABC soap opera All My Children; this is the first lesbian kiss on American daytime television. |
27 | C-SPAN aired a press conference being held in the White House in which President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony Blair spoke about the 2003 Invasion of Iraq which had begun roughly one week prior. The event was one of the most-watched C-SPAN broadcasts of the year according to Nielsen ratings and was simultaneously broadcast on CNN and Fox News. A similar broadcast in April of the following year was similarly widely viewed.[1] |
May
Date | Event |
---|---|
8 | Nancy Christy becomes the first woman to win $1,000,000 on the syndicated version of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. |
On a special episode of Primetime entitled Major Fraud (which originally aired as an episode of Tonight on ITV on April 21), segments of an unaired 2001 episode of the British version of Millionaire featuring Charles Ingram were broadcast. The program featured additional interviews with witnesses of the criminal trial that happened after Ingram was stripped of the £1,000,000 prize; Ingram had been found guilty of deception at Southwark Crown Court on April 7. | |
16 | The 30th Daytime Emmy Awards are given, in a ceremony telecast by ABC. |
Cartoon Cartoons Fridays airs its final episode on Cartoon Network. The following Friday, "Summer Fridays" takes its place. | |
19 | ABC broadcasts a four-hour 50th anniversary special. |
U.S./Canadian cable network Much USA is rebranded as Fuse. | |
20 | America's Next Top Model premieres on UPN. |
21 | On Fox, Ruben Studdard becomes the winner of American Idol – season two. His debut single "Flying Without Wings" reaches number two in the Billboard Hot 100 in June 2003. |
June
Date | Event |
---|---|
13 | Liz Cho co-anchors her last World News Now newscast on ABC before heading to the network's flagship station WABC-TV in New York City. She is replaced by Andrea Stassou. |
July
Date | Event |
---|---|
14 | David Muir is named the new co-anchor of ABC's World News Now, replacing Derek McGinty, who left for WUSA in Washington, D.C.. |
August
Date | Event |
---|---|
11 | The National Network is rebranded as Spike TV. |
September
Date | Event |
---|---|
1 | In Casper, Wyoming, Pax TV affiliate KCWY switches its affiliation to NBC, taking that affiliation from KTWO-TV which will join ABC in March 2004. In the interim, KTWO-TV becomes an independent station with select programming from Pax. |
10 | UPN's series Enterprise begins a season-long story sequence – the first time a full season of a Star Trek series has been devoted to one storyline. (Three episodes into the new season, the series title is changed to Star Trek: Enterprise.) |
11 | John Ritter dies from an undiagnosed aortic dissection at the age of 54 hours after falling ill on the set of his sitcom 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter. |
21 | The CBS comedy Everybody Loves Raymond wins its first Outstanding Comedy award and the NBC drama The West Wing wins its fourth straight Emmy for Outstanding Drama Series at the 55th Primetime Emmy Awards. The ceremonies are telecast by Fox. |
24 | Jun Song wins the American version of Big Brother 4 on CBS and wins the $500,000 prize. Runner-Up Allison Irwin wins $50,000. |
October
Date | Event |
---|---|
1 | James Marsters joins the cast of Angel on The WB, carrying his Buffy the Vampire Slayer character of Spike over from the former series. |
4 | Kenan Thompson makes his first appearance as a cast member on Saturday Night Live. Thompson would eventually become the longest serving cast member in SNL history. |
6 | Nicktoons TV is relaunched as Nicktoons. |
Young Sir is named the new host of BET's The Center, replacing Amerie, who left the show to continue working on her music. | |
20 | Rod Roddy makes his final appearance as announcer of The Price Is Right on CBS. Roddy would pass away from colon cancer exactly a week later, on October 27. |
25 | The Game 6 of the World Series airs on Fox. The Florida Marlins win their second world championship over the New York Yankees, making one of the biggest upsets in baseball history. |
November
Date | Event |
---|---|
2 | CBS at 75, the special celebrating the network's 75th anniversary, is broadcast by CBS. |
4 | NFL Network launches. |
10 | The 4,000th episode of Wheel of Fortune (since the 1982 pairing of host and hostess Pat Sajak and Vanna White) is broadcast in syndication, featuring a clip show of past Wheel moments memorable. The milestone 4,000th episode in syndication would air on January 23, 2004. |
19 | The 2003 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show is broadcast on CBS. 9.4 million people tune in.[2][3][4][5][6] |
December
Date | Event |
---|---|
2 | Tamala Edwards is named the new co-anchor of ABC's World News Now, replacing Andrea Stassou. |
20 | During a National Football League game between the New England Patriots at New York Jets, former Jets quarterback Joe Namath in a sideline interview with ESPN's Suzy Kolber twice stated that he wanted to kiss her, and "couldn't care less about the team strugg-a-ling." Namath later apologized and blamed the incident on his obvious intoxication. Soon after, Namath entered an outpatient alcoholism treatment program. Namath chronicled the episode, including his battle with alcoholism in his book, Namath (ISBN 0-67003-329-4). |
Programs
Debuts
Returning this year
Show | Channel | Last aired | New title | New network | Returning |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Ren and Stimpy Show | Nickelodeon, MTV | 1996 | Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon" | Spike | June 26 |
The Powerpuff Girls | Cartoon Network | 2002 | Same | Same | August 22 |
Ending this year
Entering syndication this year
Show | Seasons | In Production | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Angel | 4 | Yes | |
Becker | 5 | No | [7] |
Futurama | 4 | Yes | |
The King of Queens | 5 | Yes | [8] |
Judging Amy | 4 | Yes | [9] |
The Parkers | 4 | Yes |
Changes of network affiliation
Made-for-TV movies
Title | Network | Date of airing |
---|---|---|
You Wish! | Disney Channel | January 10 |
Maniac Magee | Nickelodeon | February 23 |
Right on Track | Disney Channel | March 21 |
The Egg-pire Strikes Back | Nickelodeon | April 25 |
The Even Stevens Movie | Disney Channel | June 13 |
Abra-Catastrophe | Nickelodeon | July 12 |
The Cheetah Girls | Disney Channel | August 15 |
Red Water | TBS | August 17 |
Kim Possible: A Sitch in Time | Disney Channel | November 28 |
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation 2 | NBC | December 20 |
Births
Date | Name | Notability |
---|---|---|
January 4 | Jaeden Martell | Actor (Masters of Sex) |
January 9 | Megan Richie | Actress (Legendary Dudas, Jake and the Neverland Pirates) |
January 21 | Garren Stitt | Actor (Andi Mack, General Hospital) |
January 23 | Ivan Mallon | Actor (School of Rock) |
February 4 | Kyla Kenedy | Actress (The Walking Dead, Speechless) |
February 20 | Olivia Rodrigo | Actress (Bizaardvark, High School Musical: The Musical: The Series) |
March 3 | Thomas Barbusca | Actor (The Mick) |
March 8 | Montana Jordan | Actor (Young Sheldon) |
April 13 | Olivia Sanabia | Actress (Coop and Cami Ask the World) |
April 15 | Julia Antonelli | Actress (Every Witch Way, WITS Academy) |
Sam Ashe Arnold | Actor (Best.Worst.Weekend.Ever., Are You Afraid of the Dark?) | |
April 16 | Alina Foley | Actress (The League, Shimmer and Shine) |
April 18 | Benjamin Cole Royer | Actor (Best Friends Whenever) |
Matthew Lewis Royer | ||
April 19 | Caleel Harris | Voice actor (Blaze and the Monster Machines, The Loud House) |
May 1 | Lizzy Greene | Actress (Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn, A Million Little Things) |
May 18 | Lukas Rodriguez | Actor (Malcolm in the Middle) |
May 19 | JoJo Siwa | Actress (Dance Moms) and singer |
June 2 | Jeremy Ray Taylor | Actor (Are You Afraid of the Dark?) |
June 11 | Breanna Yde | Actress (The Haunted Hathaways, School of Rock, The Loud House) |
June 15 | Galilea La Salvia | Actress (Talia in the Kitchen) |
June 16 | Anna Cathcart | Canadian actress (Odd Squad) |
July 5 | Terrell Ransom Jr. | Actor (Days of Our Lives, The Amazing World of Gumball) |
July 11 | Meg Crosbie | Actress (WITS Academy) |
July 30 | Daniel DiMaggio | Actor (Clarence, American Housewife) |
August 11 | Rachel Gage | Actress (Walk the Prank) |
August 18 | Max Charles | Actor (The Neighbors, Harvey Beaks, The Mr. Peabody & Sherman Show, The Lion Guard, The Strain) |
August 20 | Christopher Paul Richards | Actor (The Kids Are Alright) |
August 28 | Quvenzhané Wallis | Actress |
September 3 | Jack Dylan Grazer | Actor (Me, Myself & I) |
September 8 | Carmen Blanchard | Actress |
Nicolas Cantu | Voice actor (The Amazing World of Gumball, Sofia the First) | |
September 18 | Nina Lu | Actress (Bunk'd) |
Aidan Gallagher | Actor (Nicky, Ricky, Dicky, and Dawn) | |
October 7 | Kate Godfrey | Actress (All That) |
October 10 | Maggie Elizabeth Jones | Actress (Ben and Kate) |
October 24 | Hudson Yang | Actor (Fresh Off the Boat) |
October 27 | Gavin Lewis | Actor |
November 8 | Meyrick Murphy | Actress (Legendary Dudas, The Walking Dead) |
November 12 | Kamaia Fairburn | Actress (Star Falls) |
November 21 | Elijha Hammill | Canadian voice actor (Ryder on PAW Patrol) |
November 23 | Olivia Keville | Actress (Splitting Up Together) |
December 9 | Jackson A. Dunn | Actor (Legendary Dudas) |
December 12 | Lincoln Melcher | Actor (Nicky, Ricky, Dicky, and Dawn, Bunk'd) |
Deaths
Date | Name | Age | Notability |
---|---|---|---|
January 12 | Maurice Gibb | 53 | Musician/songwriter (Bee Gees) |
January 23 | Nell Carter | 54 | Actress, singer (Gimme a Break) |
February 21 | Julie Mitchum | 88 | Actress |
February 27 | Fred Rogers | 74 | Mister Rogers of (Mister Rogers' Neighborhood) |
March 12 | Lynne Thigpen | 54 | American television/film/stage actress (The District, Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?, Where in Time is Carmen Sandiego?)[10] |
March 30 | Michael Jeter | 50 | Voice actor/stage actor (Sesame Street, Evening Shade, and voice of Nate Horowitz (Eugene's Dad) on Hey Arnold!) |
April 30 | Lionel Wilson | 79 | Voice actor (The Aldrich Family, Tom Terrific, The Hector Heathcote Show and first voice of Eustace Bagge on Courage the Cowardly Dog) |
May 14 | Robert Stack | 84 | Actor (Eliot Ness on The Untouchables) |
May 15 | June Carter Cash | 73 | Singer and actress (The Johnny Cash Show) |
June 19 | Laura Sadler | 22 | English actress (Grange Hill, Holby City) |
July 6 | Buddy Ebsen | 95 | Actor (The Beverly Hillbillies, Barnaby Jones) |
July 27 | Bob Hope | 100 | Comedian, host and actor |
September 8 | Jaclyn Linetsky | 17 | Canadian voice actress (Mega Babies, What's with Andy?, Caillou) |
Vadim Schneider | 17 | French-Canadian actor | |
September 11 | John Ritter | 54 | Actor (Three's Company, 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter, and voice of Clifford the Big Red Dog) |
September 12 | Johnny Cash | 71 | Singer and actor (The Johnny Cash Show) |
October 17 | Janice Rule | 72 | Actress (The Fugitive) |
October 21 | Fred Berry | 52 | Actor (Freddie "Rerun" Stubbs on What's Happening!!) |
October 27 | Rod Roddy | 66 | Announcer (Press Your Luck, Soap, and most famously, The Price Is Right) |
November 9 | Art Carney | 85 | Actor (Ed Norton on The Honeymooners) |
November 12 | Jonathan Brandis | 27 | Actor (Lucas Wolenczak on seaQuest DSV) |
Penny Singleton | 95 | Voice actress (Jane Jetson on The Jetsons) | |
November 14 | Gene Anthony Ray | 41 | Actor (Leroy Johnson on Fame) |
December 14 | Jeanne Crain | 78 | Actress |
December 28 | Helen Kleeb | 96 | Actress (Miss Mamie Baldwin on The Waltons) |
December 29 | Earl Hindman | 61 | Actor (Wilson J. Wilson Jr. on Home Improvement) |
References
- https://www.c-span.org/video/?174863-1/us-britain-relations
- Hanson, Holly (October 30, 2003). "Victoria's Secret Likes Somerset – Local Store Is First To Get New Model Makeup Kit". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
- Hoffmann, Bill (November 14, 2003). "Playing Our Thong – Victoria's Celebs Lead Undie Fun Day". New York Post. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
- "The Victoria's Secret Fashion Show (2003)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
- Kahn, Robert (November 17, 2003). "Victoria's Latex Secret Now on Show". Newsday. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
- Radsken, Jill (November 19, 2003). "Fashion – Peek experience – Behind the scenes at the Victoria's Secret fashion show". Boston Herald. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
- from Broadcasting & Cable
- from Broadcasting & Cable
- from Broadcasting & Cable
- "Lynne Thigpen, Actress in CBS's 'District,' Dies at 54". New York Times. Nytimes.com. 2003-03-14. Retrieved 2014-02-04.
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