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Rank Program Network Rating 1: Laverne & Shirley: ABC: 31.6 2: Happy Days: 31.4 3: Three's Company: 28.3 4: 60 Minutes: CBS: 24.4 Charlie's Angels: ABC All in the Family
Lovers and Friends is an American soap opera that aired on NBC from January 3 to May 6, 1977. [1] When the show didn't catch on immediately, NBC put the show on hiatus for seven months, and then brought it back on December 6, 1977, as a retooled show with the title For Richer, For Poorer. The show continued on until it came to an end on ...
Episodes of Nashville 99 were directed by Lawrence Dobkin, Don McDougall, and George Sherman, and written by Ron Bishop and Jimmy Sangster. The series was produced by Frankel Productions in association with 20th Century Fox Television (with Ernie Frankel serving as Executive Producer), and featured a theme song performed and co-written by Reed.
I Love the '70s is a television nostalgia series produced by the BBC that examines the pop culture of the 1970s. It was broadcast in ten hour-long episodes, one dedicated to each year, with the first episode, I Love 1970, premiering on BBC Two on 22 July 2000, and the last, I Love 1979, premiering on 23 September 2000.
Love for Lydia is a British television serial made by London Weekend Television and broadcast from 9 September to 2 December 1977 on ITV. It is based on the novel by H. E. Bates, first published in 1952. The series was written by Julian Bond. This period serial stars Mel Martin in the title role of Lydia Aspen. The series has a total of 13 ...
Loves Me, Loves Me Not was Susan Dey's first weekly television series after The Partridge Family came to an end in 1974. It was rushed into production after CBS, deciding to produce a show about young adults to tap into the market for such shows that ABC had had so much mid-1970s success with in Happy Days and Laverne and Shirley, made a last-minute decision to buy six episodes for broadcast ...
The final show was recorded on 7 September 1977, but not broadcast until after Bolan's funeral on 20 September 1977, which was also attended by David Bowie and Rod Stewart, among others. An edited highlights compilation was released in the United Kingdom on DVD in 2005. It contained only the T. Rex performances from each of the six episodes.
The budget for the series was a reported $380,000 an episode. [2] NBC cancelled the show after six episodes, but the remaining seven episodes were later aired on BBC 2 in the UK, [3] and the entire series was shown in the UK on BBC1 from November 1977 to January 1978.