Good Day! (TV series)
Good Day! | |
---|---|
Presented by |
John Willis Janet Langhart Mortisha Palmer Eileen Prose Tim White Dr. Tom Cottle |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 19 |
Production | |
Camera setup | Multi-camera |
Running time |
90 minutes (1973-1982) 60 minutes (1982-1991) |
Release | |
Original network |
WCVB/Boston syndication |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV |
Original release | September 24, 1973 – October 11, 1991 |
Chronology | |
Related shows | Good Morning America |
Good Day! (originally known as Good Morning!, and alternately known in later years as Good Day! Live) is an American TV series which aired from September 24, 1973 until October 11, 1991. Produced by WCVB-TV in Boston, Good Day! aired on that local ABC affiliate for its entire 18 years of production, airing in various timeslots (which changed throughout the years) between 9 and 11 a.m. on WCVB's morning schedule. The show was later syndicated to 71 American television markets, increasing its notoriety outside of its primary New England viewer base.
Good Day! is credited for being the prototype for ABC's Good Morning America, as its format, which combined news and information with talk and lifestyle features, was adopted by the subsequent ABC morning show, and eventually by its competitors on CBS, NBC, and on other networks.
The program has no relation to the current group of local morning shows produced by the Fox owned-and-operated television stations, all of which use the Good Day title.
Synopsis
Format and early years
Good Day!, which first premiered in 1973 as Good Morning!, was a morning variety program with light news features, but with an overall focus on interviews with celebrities and experts in particular fields, along with a regular amount of musical, dance and scripted theater performances. Interviews with politicians and other key newsmakers were also featured, often conducted right in WCVB's studios on the show's set, but sometimes done via satellite. The show would also conduct special segments, or entire broadcasts, outdoors at several different Boston-area events, with the hosts interacting with event participants--and the general public--as they staged their activities. The program's original hosts were John Willis, Janet Langhart and Mortisha Palmer. Eileen Prose, who eventually became a permanent co-host, was a program correspondent/contributor in the mid-to-late 1970s.
For much of its run, Good Day! was broadcast live from a set that merged both a large, sweeping living room area with a sizeable kitchen, the latter of which was used very often for cooking segments. In the mid-to-late 1980s, the in-studio set came to resemble more of a giant, elegant-looking open foyer, with a kitchen island moved into the center for the cooking segments. Good Day! also broke ground by taking its entire production on the road and broadcasting from locations outside of the Boston area and around the world--a feat of which was considered exceptional for a locally-produced show.
For a few years beginning in the summer of 1974, WCVB made Good Morning! the cornerstone of their regional New England Network, a six-station link-up between WCVB and a handful of broadcast channels (spanning Rhode Island, Maine and Vermont) which all agreed to air a select amount of WCVB's locally-produced shows. Good Morning! continued to build on its early ratings success as a part of this network, with its reach now extending into Canadian markets.[1]
In 1975, when ABC was looking to revamp its new morning talk and news program AM America, they sent network executives out to a few of the ABC affiliates to observe the production of their local morning programs. Good Morning! was among the few that were used as a case study for the AM America retooling, the other principal one being The Morning Exchange on WEWS-TV in Cleveland. ABC entertainment chief Fred Silverman ended up adopting features from both programs, and launched AM America's replacement, Good Morning America, in November 1975. Not long after the premiere of Good Morning America, WCVB station manager Bob Bennett confronted Silverman at an affiliate's convention and accused him of deliberately stealing the title of Good Morning!; the two similarly-titled programs were now running back-to-back on WCVB's morning lineup.[2] No legal cease and desist action was finalized against ABC in the matter, however. Finally, after months of possible confusion between the two programs, the Boston-based Good Morning! changed its name to Good Day! on Monday, August 2, 1976, the same day that the program began to be syndicated to TV markets beyond New England.[3]
Host changes
Janet Langhart left for New York in June 1978, and John Willis was left as primary host for a year, with Eileen Prose increasing her show duties. In August 1979, Prose was named permanent co-host. In 1980, after two years in New York, Langhart returned to the program as a third co-host, alongside Willis and Prose. Langhart left again a year later when she was hired to be a field correspondent on the 1981 syndicated weekday revival of You Asked for It; Willis and Prose held the reins together as Good Day! hosts for the next two years. Willis retired from the show in September 1983, and was succeeded by Tim White, who remained with the program for just over one year.
In 1985, Prose became the single year-round host of the program. Langhart, whose Boston TV exposure had most recently been on CBS affiliate WNEV-TV (present-day WHDH), and Dr. Tom Cottle, who had been a regular medical contributor to Good Day!, became rotating co-hosts; Langhart co-hosted six months out of the year, while Cottle appeared for the other six.[4] One of the rotating co-hosts remained as a contributor while the other was co-hosting. This format remained until June 1987, when Langhart left the program for the final time. During the years from 1985 through 1991, Prose would by joined by various celebrities as guest co-hosts, many of them stars of the ABC and syndicated programming seen on WCVB. Prose remained the single host of Good Day! until its cancellation in 1991.
Ted Reinstein, longtime co-host/correspondent of WCVB's nightly newsmagazine Chronicle, was a correspondent for Good Day! in its final years.
Cancellation
In September 1991, WCVB general manager S. James Coppersmith announced the cancellation of Good Day! after 18 years, due to New England's then-current economic downturn putting severe constraints on the local broadcast stations.[5] The demise of Good Day! followed a wave of other locally produced programs coming to an end in the Boston market within that same year, also due to a lack of financial viability in a struggling economy; among them were WBZ-TV's Evening Magazine, WHDH-TV's Ready to Go and Our Times, WGBH-TV's The Ten O'Clock News, and a host of others. The final episode of Good Day! aired on Friday, October 11, 1991. The following Monday, WCVB replaced it with ABC's The Home Show, which premiered in 1988 but had not been carried by WCVB up to that point.
References
- ↑ https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2209&dat=19740726&id=YaErAAAAIBAJ&sjid=e_wFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6873,4325358&hl=en
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J6WM-ToO9Jw
- ↑ https://secure.pqarchiver.com/boston/doc/662039677.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:AI&type=historic&date=Jul+31%2C+1976&author=McLean%2C+Robert&pub=Boston+Globe+%281960-1983%29&edition=&startpage=&desc=%27Good+Day%27+debuts+with+new+set%2C+theme+song
- ↑ https://secure.pqarchiver.com/boston/doc/294316001.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Mar+8%2C+1985&author=Siegel%2C+Ed&pub=Boston+Globe+%28pre-1997+Fulltext%29&edition=&startpage=&desc=%5B+Three+announcements+from+WCVB-TV%2C+Channel+5.+Janet...+%5D
- ↑ https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-7679658.html
http://www.wcvb.com/WCVB-s-Station-Timeline/11269326