Nice to see closing credits of these fantastic soaps! I thought I would never see them after all! Thank you very much. Again, Please don’t hesitate to share any more soap opera related content… That is if you have any more. - Edwyn Sanchez
Edwin around this time edge was running different groups of credits each day. One day they would run the writing credits thr next day the production credits the next day the cast credits on some days just the fashion credits and on some particularly long episode days none at all. In this instance from late summer 1971 they ran both the writing and production credits together. Very rarely would they run all of credits at this point.
I just love the original, OTA video quality of these, giving it the same pizzazz it had back then. As much a retro guy as I am , these were REALLY a pleasant surprise, and I can remember somewhat clearly my junior high school years back then. The squared -and- prepared world we expected and experienced back then is "180 out" from the latest of today's realities. Pie in the sky has gone bye bye.
Oh my gosh…”The Edge of Night!” I haven’t heard that theme since I was a child, but I still remember it all these years later (I’m 65)! My mom used to watch that one.
Love of Life, Search for Tomorrow, Love is a Many Splendored Thing (replaced by The Young and the Restless), As the World Turns, Guiding Light, The Secret Storm and The Edge of Night. I remember the lineup because my grandmother was a big fan of the CBS soaps back then.
And all of the soap operas shown in 1971 on cbs are off the air. Y&R wouldn’t premiere until 1973 and B&B wouldn’t premiere until 1987. Now daytime tv is ruled by talk shows and game shows
Wow, this brought back a very clear memory of mine when I saw the name "Diane Ladd" come up in "The Secret Storm" closing credits. (I was just 14 in the first part of 1971). Miss Ladd might well be one of the biggest and most recognized (and awarded) Hollywood stars to ever have appeared in a daytime soap opera, as a "regular" and ongoing character (1971-1972). I well recall watching her on "The Secret Storm," with my Grandmother and Aunt (after school in 1971). Diane Ladd is still with us, at age 87, in early 2023 and by all accounts is still active and going strong - bless her heart! Thank you for the very fun life-flashback! Cheers to all!!
@@tommyparkerparker Saw him in several episodes of Police Story, he played a police chief. The FBI he was an SAC or SRA. Clips was from the summer of 1971. The shows was from the 1971-1972.
Back in October Miss Ann Flood who played "Nancy Pollock Karr" passed away at the age of 89. She thusly joins Larkin Molloy, Forrest Compton, and Miss Dixie Carter of "Designing Women" renown among others in Soap Heaven.😔📺B.W.
Simple meaning all soaps in 1971 were 30 min. Soaps wouldn’t begin expanding to 60 min until 1975 beginning with NBCs Days of our lives and CBS As the world turns
1:59 - _"Be sure to watch_ The Secret Storm _every day, Monday thru Friday, and stay tuned for_ The Edge Of Night, _next over most of these CBS stations. This program was recorded."_
Over 50 years ago, I wasn’t born yet until 1973 during the summertime because I was in a baby during the time when CBS was airing these intros and closings of these various soap opera shoes because my mother used to always sit in front of the television just to watch every soap opera, which came to television back there.
I knew from the first few notes Eddie Layton wasn’t playing the Love Is a Many Splendored Thing theme in this episode. John Winters has a few albums of organ music, but I never heard his name before today. Do any soap/music aficionados know if Winters subbed on other daytime dramas? Tusen takk to Rick for sharing these remarkably rare soap closings.
I found out that Winters was the organist for a radio soap called "Young Widder Brown", which ended in 1956 on NBC. So he must have been that experienced. I wouldn't know, though, if he was a stand-in or a replacement for Layton. Even so, this arrangement of the "LMST" theme (both it and the show are loosely based on the 1955 movie of the same name) sounded very distinctive. The melody part had that bell-like sound, and there was some degree of improvisation, too. Interestingly, I'm sure you may remember that when "LMST" premiered in Sep 1967, replacing "Password" on CBS, it initially played recorded music cues before changing to the live organ about a year after.
@@byrd56 Winters was a temporary substitute for Eddie while he vacationed during the summers. Eddie remained the show’s primary organist through the end of the series in March 1973. Although the melody is the same, there are distinct differences between John’s and Eddie’s playing styles. You’re correct. LIAMST did premiere with recorded music, composed and conducted by Wladimir Selinsky. CBS dropped Selinsky following the American Federation of Musicians strike in October/November 1968. The network owned LIAMST and realized how much money they would save by hiring Layton to score and play music live.
As the World Turns, Guiding Light, and Search For Tomorrow switched over to pre-recorded orchestral music in December 1973, not sure about Edge of Night.
The soaps were never the same after the organ music was retired,that was do disagreements with the musicians union. Organ music set the mood for mystery shows and the serials,kept you on the edge of your seats. And those rapid closeups when something was seen or heard. I also remember when the serials were done live. Wish we could go back.❤.
@@KentB3GL theme music switched from Organ to orchestra in 1974. With Y&R debuting in March ‘73 and it being the first CBS soap to have an orchestra theme “Nadia’s theme” prompted the other CBS soaps to switch from organ to orchestra theme music.
0:09 “Love is a many splendored thing” closing credits 0:53 “Guiding light” closing credits 1:45 “The Secret Storm” closing credits 2:25 “The Edge of Night” closing credits
I liked all these and also liked the inclusion at the end of NBC's HOLLYWOOD SQUARES from the early 1970s. I remember seeing Wally Cox & Charley Weaver on the show then before their respective deaths in 1973 & 1974.
4:22- KENNY WILLIAMS: "ONE of these stars is sitting in the 'Secret Square', and the contestant who picks it first could win a prize package worth over $5,000! *WHICH STAR IS IT?"*
I hoping to see a bit of the soap opera "Where The Heart Is". Mom used to watch that show all the time. She was upset when they took it off the air. I heard all of the shows were wiped and none of them exist anywhere
The organ-based CBS soap themes began sounding creaky by the early 1970's when compared to NBC's daytime themes for "Days Of Our Lives", "The Doctors" & Another World" which had lush orchestral arrangements and sounding far superior........
@@woohooboyNBC’s Days of our lives was probably the first soap opera to use orchestra instead of an organ for its theme music when the soap debuted in 1965 Love is a many splendored thing did experiment with orchestra theme and background music however in the mid 60s according to a 1967 episode on RUclips but switched back to organ
ATWT (1956-2010) and SFT (1951-1986) are missing. But I would like to see the closing credits of other network soap operas like ABC's General Hospital (the Kip Walton piano theme in blue background), and NBC's Days of Our Lives from 1971-72. I didn't know Jada Rowland was on The Secret Storm, she later replaced Carolee Campbell on The Doctors in 1976 on NBC.
@@Soapking1965 I know the late Joel Crothers was on The Secret Storm after he left ABC's Dark Shadows in 1969, he stayed on Secret Storm until 1971, the same year Dark Shadows went off the air.
Pete capravos, so did I and me and my little neighbor friend of mine used to scare 😱 😨 the tar out of each other in the style of Harry Kramer saying "THE EDGGGE.......... OF NIGHT!" and also at night when she'd spend the night over @ our house. Ohhh such funny 😁 and fun 🤣 memories...........
So weird to see Cincinnati being used as a backdrop of “The Edge of Night” opening and closing. I know it had something to do with the sponsor being Proctor and Gamble.
That Good and Fruity commercial I usually would see during the Flintstone's, Munsters, Pope4e, and Addams Family after school lineup, and in the Fall of '69. But never during the Edge Of Night! And not in '71. I clearly remember it, and enjoyed seeing it again, but can't say I ever really expected to. It's said to have been a minor showcase, little known for young Carly Simon, who was said to have sung the funky advertising jingle in that commercial.
Search for Tomorrow kept that announcement until it left CBS in 1982, and I suspect it would have continued to announce it had all of Alison Steele’s end credit voiceovers not been dropped by NBC.
Sometime in the '60s, Mike Gargiulo, a staff director with Goodson-Todman, wrote a letter to TV GUIDE in which he complained about the term "pre-recorded", saying that it was redundant: "How can a program be recorded before it's recorded?" Not long thereafter, Gargiulo took over directing the original (clean) Match Game; he persuaded Johnny Olson to say "The program was recorded." History?
3:53 - 🤔 Interesting that the Good n Fruity commercial would be accompanied by early 1960’s hootenanny folk music. I guess it worked because the tune was still in my head hours later.
Hard to believe Lily Tomlin is the only panelist from that week who's still alive as of August 2024. Peter Marshall sadly passed away yesterday, may he RIP.
Fred Silverman preferred scripted TV over game shows and that got Love Is a Many Splendored Thing on CBS. John Conboy produced this show before moving on to The Young & the Restless and later Capitol. Tried to give Guiding Light new life in the 2000's but could not do so.
Can you please post a full episode of Hollywood Squares if you have it. And please keep the tape on to Jeopardy and Who What or Where if you have them.
New DVD would run for three seasons and produce 72 episodes. Cannon was the big winner among the promos. Funny Face and Chicago Teddy Bears were big flops.
On this date: Monday July 26th, 1971 is only 8 Days after KPBS San Diego have conducted its successful Sunday Membership Pledge Night on Sunday July 18th, 1971 to raise more community support because its state budget was SLASHED by the California governor!! And it featured a broadcast of Evening at Pops featuring Julia Child narrating Tubby The Tuba with Arthur Fiedler conducting the Boston Pops and Masterpiece Theatre: The First Churchills!!
In addition to being a Cast Member of "The New Dick Van Dyke Show", the late great Miss Hope Lange picked up where the late great Miss Gene Tierney left off as the Female Lead of TV's version of "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir."😉👰👻📺B.W.
I remember one celebrity, I can’t recall during intro-, Keeny Williams laughed so hard he couldn’t barely announce the next intro to the next celebrity square and introduced Peter Marshall still laughing.
All these end themes sounded the same! Cheesy dramatic organ over a slightly unnerving score. I had TOTALLY forgotten the Good 'N' Fruity commercial jingle! I sang along with it! I don't think it's Carly Simon singing, although it sounds like her at the end of it.
A fun look back. I remember when "The" was dropped from the main title of "Guiding Light". All things change & daytime programming is now full of those mindless courtroom shows.
"Edge" deliberately set a very different tone to all other soaps that aired during this period. All other daytime dramas focused on the standard storylines of love affairs against a domestic backdrop "Edge" by contrast was always about crime, murder and intrigue. Hence why it was hugely popular with male viewers - more than any other daytime drama at the time. It was estimated at one pont, "Edge" has an audience that was roughly 50% male viewers. The fact that it aired later (first at 4:30pm and then at 3:30pm) also helped the show significantly.
Also, Here's an audivideo containing portions of "Love is a Many Splendored Thing" dated to July 26th (the airdate of the show’s partial closing credits seen at the start of this video): ruclips.net/video/AhlIa4XpJ9I/видео.html
Since all of the CBS promos are upcoming fall shows this set of soap opera closings were recorded during the summer of 1971 In 1971, there were 18 (all 30 min) soap operas on the air (7 of them on CBS). Now there are only 4 on the air (3 of them on tv, 1 on streaming service)
I hope the ABC shows of Password will be discovered. Most of the those shows are gone and had very good celebrities playing it (before it became Password All-Stars).
Nice to see closing credits of these fantastic soaps! I thought I would never see them after all! Thank you very much. Again, Please don’t hesitate to share any more soap opera related content… That is if you have any more.
- Edwyn Sanchez
working on it
Edwyn Sanchez please is unneeded it’s very annoying
Edwin around this time edge was running different groups of credits each day. One day they would run the writing credits thr next day the production credits the next day the cast credits on some days just the fashion credits and on some particularly long episode days none at all.
In this instance from late summer 1971 they ran both the writing and production credits together. Very rarely would they run all of credits at this point.
I just love the original, OTA video quality of these, giving it the same pizzazz it had back then. As much a retro guy as I am , these were REALLY a pleasant surprise, and I can remember somewhat clearly my junior high school years back then. The squared -and- prepared world we expected and experienced back then is "180 out" from the latest of today's realities. Pie in the sky has gone bye bye.
Oh my gosh…”The Edge of Night!” I haven’t heard that theme since I was a child, but I still remember it all these years later (I’m 65)! My mom used to watch that one.
"I don't know why they call them Soap Operas, 'cuz they filthy!" - Fred Sanford 😆
Fred Sanford sure loved watching Death Valley Hospital though.
Filthy! But genuinely arousing.
@@scottzilla1979 the Simpsons
Good ole Red Foxx.
HILARIOUS!😆🤣🧽🧼
It's astounding to realize that at one point in television history ,soap operas ruled the day .CBS alone aired 6/7 half hour soaps
Love of Life, Search for Tomorrow, Love is a Many Splendored Thing (replaced by The Young and the Restless), As the World Turns, Guiding Light, The Secret Storm and The Edge of Night. I remember the lineup because my grandmother was a big fan of the CBS soaps back then.
Where The Heart Is was replaced by Y&R on March 23, 1973 however both LIAMST and Where The Heart Is, were cancelled on the same day March 20, 1973.
And all of the soap operas shown in 1971 on cbs are off the air. Y&R wouldn’t premiere until 1973 and B&B wouldn’t premiere until 1987.
Now daytime tv is ruled by talk shows and game shows
The '70's were the heyday of soaps.They dominated the daytime schedule of all three networks
Wow, this brought back a very clear memory of mine when I saw the name "Diane Ladd" come up in "The Secret Storm" closing credits. (I was just 14 in the first part of 1971). Miss Ladd might well be one of the biggest and most recognized (and awarded) Hollywood stars to ever have appeared in a daytime soap opera, as a "regular" and ongoing character (1971-1972). I well recall watching her on "The Secret Storm," with my Grandmother and Aunt (after school in 1971). Diane Ladd is still with us, at age 87, in early 2023 and by all accounts is still active and going strong - bless her heart! Thank you for the very fun life-flashback! Cheers to all!!
Thank you for sharing these! My mom used to watch all of these soaps (before I came along)!😆😆😆
This is CBS!!!Where the good times are!!😁😍📺
DY-NO-MITE!!
In addition to being EON's Mike Karr, Forrest Compton was also Colonel Grey on "Gomer Pyle". He is truly missed.
Even though I knew that the Gomer Pyle reruns were a network offering, it was still odd to hear them plugged during EON's closing.
Forrest Compton was a great actor. RIP!
@@tommyparkerparker Saw him in several episodes of Police Story, he played a police chief. The FBI he was an SAC or SRA.
Clips was from the summer of 1971. The shows was from the 1971-1972.
@@ericjonmagnuson2728 Back in the day. The networks would rerun sitcoms before releasing into syndication.
Back in October Miss Ann Flood who played "Nancy Pollock Karr" passed away at the age of 89. She thusly joins Larkin Molloy, Forrest Compton, and Miss Dixie Carter of "Designing Women" renown among others in Soap Heaven.😔📺B.W.
Love seeing these old soap operas!
This was back in the day when all things were more simple. The 70's were the golden years of television.
Simple meaning all soaps in 1971 were 30 min. Soaps wouldn’t begin expanding to 60 min until 1975 beginning with NBCs Days of our lives and CBS As the world turns
1:59 - _"Be sure to watch_ The Secret Storm _every day, Monday thru Friday, and stay tuned for_ The Edge Of Night, _next over most of these CBS stations. This program was recorded."_
Announcers said the phrase “This program was recorded” to remind viewers cbs soaps were not done live anymore
Over 50 years ago, I wasn’t born yet until 1973 during the summertime because I was in a baby during the time when CBS was airing these intros and closings of these various soap opera shoes because my mother used to always sit in front of the television just to watch every soap opera, which came to television back there.
I knew from the first few notes Eddie Layton wasn’t playing the Love Is a Many Splendored Thing theme in this episode. John Winters has a few albums of organ music, but I never heard his name before today. Do any soap/music aficionados know if Winters subbed on other daytime dramas? Tusen takk to Rick for sharing these remarkably rare soap closings.
I found out that Winters was the organist for a radio soap called "Young Widder Brown", which ended in 1956 on NBC. So he must have been that experienced. I wouldn't know, though, if he was a stand-in or a replacement for Layton.
Even so, this arrangement of the "LMST" theme (both it and the show are loosely based on the 1955 movie of the same name) sounded very distinctive. The melody part had that bell-like sound, and there was some degree of improvisation, too.
Interestingly, I'm sure you may remember that when "LMST" premiered in Sep 1967, replacing "Password" on CBS, it initially played recorded music cues before changing to the live organ about a year after.
@@byrd56 Winters was a temporary substitute for Eddie while he vacationed during the summers. Eddie remained the show’s primary organist through the end of the series in March 1973. Although the melody is the same, there are distinct differences between John’s and Eddie’s playing styles. You’re correct. LIAMST did premiere with recorded music, composed and conducted by Wladimir Selinsky. CBS dropped Selinsky following the American Federation of Musicians strike in October/November 1968. The network owned LIAMST and realized how much money they would save by hiring Layton to score and play music live.
I think after '72 most of the daytime soaps stopped using organ music. That was a throwback to the days of radio in the 1920's.
As the World Turns, Guiding Light, and Search For Tomorrow switched over to pre-recorded orchestral music in December 1973, not sure about Edge of Night.
@@KentB3 EDGE OF NIGHT stopped using organ music in 1973-74.
The soaps were never the same after the organ music was retired,that was do disagreements with the musicians union.
Organ music set the mood for mystery shows and the serials,kept you on the edge of your seats.
And those rapid closeups when something was seen or heard.
I also remember when the serials were done live.
Wish we could go back.❤.
@@KentB3GL theme music switched from Organ to orchestra in 1974.
With Y&R debuting in March ‘73 and it being the first CBS soap to have an orchestra theme “Nadia’s theme” prompted the other CBS soaps to switch from organ to orchestra theme music.
I like the Hollywood Squares intro added.
Me,too!
How old fashioned these soaps are it must have been a shock when the Younge & The Restless came along
Considering Y&R was the first CBS soap to not have organ music. All the other cbs soaps would switch to orchestra music because of that
Seeing the GL lighthouse made me feel 3 years old again. 😊
0:09 “Love is a many splendored thing” closing credits
0:53 “Guiding light” closing credits
1:45 “The Secret Storm” closing credits
2:25 “The Edge of Night” closing credits
Please! More soap related stuff!
Lava was volcanic soap
Please.bring those memories back with those real good soaps operas!
I liked all these and also liked the inclusion at the end of NBC's HOLLYWOOD SQUARES from the early 1970s. I remember seeing Wally Cox & Charley Weaver on the show then before their respective deaths in 1973 & 1974.
Non-diplexed audio like this was the way we heard it til '78
4:22- KENNY WILLIAMS: "ONE of these stars is sitting in the 'Secret Square', and the contestant who picks it first could win a prize package worth over $5,000! *WHICH STAR IS IT?"*
3:09 - _"Stay tuned for_ Gomer Pyle, _next on most of these CBS stations."_
How late at night was Edge of Night on ???
@@Laceykat66 At the time, as late as weekday afternoons @ 3:30 pm (Eastern).
@@AarHan3 That is what I would have thought, but was Gomer Pyle syndicated on CBS stations primarily at this time?
@@Laceykat66 CBS aired repeats on its daytime schedule until 1972.
@@AarHan3 Interesting. I thought all syndications were sold to the individual stations. Thank you for the information.
I hoping to see a bit of the soap opera "Where The Heart Is". Mom used to watch that show all the time. She was upset when they took it off the air. I heard all of the shows were wiped and none of them exist anywhere
I also want to see where the heart is the show Young and the Restless replace in 1973
I wish they would show some of the footage of those soap episodes. I would also have loved to seen The Edge of Night’s cast credits for that time.
I don't know when they decided to deep-six the soap opera organ playing, but that was a great day in daytime TV history.
The Procter & Gamble soaps ditched the organ music in December 1973; at least As the World Turns, Guiding Light, and Search For Tomorrow.
The organ-based CBS soap themes began sounding creaky by the early 1970's when compared to NBC's daytime themes for "Days Of Our Lives", "The Doctors" & Another World" which had lush orchestral arrangements and sounding far superior........
@@woohooboyNBC’s Days of our lives was probably the first soap opera to use orchestra instead of an organ for its theme music when the soap debuted in 1965
Love is a many splendored thing did experiment with orchestra theme and background music however in the mid 60s according to a 1967 episode on RUclips but switched back to organ
ATWT (1956-2010) and SFT (1951-1986) are missing. But I would like to see the closing credits of other network soap operas like ABC's General Hospital (the Kip Walton piano theme in blue background), and NBC's Days of Our Lives from 1971-72. I didn't know Jada Rowland was on The Secret Storm, she later replaced Carolee Campbell on The Doctors in 1976 on NBC.
Also missing is Where The Heart Is(1969-1973)
Jada Rowland played Amy Ames, with a few breaks, on STORM for the entire 20-year run (Feb. 1954-Feb. 1974).
@@Soapking1965 I know the late Joel Crothers was on The Secret Storm after he left ABC's Dark Shadows in 1969, he stayed on Secret Storm until 1971, the same year Dark Shadows went off the air.
@@chuckrawlings9518 I think that show was replaced by The Young And The Restless in March 1973.
Love of Life (1951-80) is also missing but I'm not complaining. This is wonderful, rare stuff!
I always liked Harry Kramer's way of saying "The Edgggee.....of night".
Pete capravos, so did I and me and my little neighbor friend of mine used to scare 😱 😨 the tar out of each other in the style of Harry Kramer saying "THE EDGGGE.......... OF NIGHT!" and also at night when she'd spend the night over @ our house. Ohhh such funny 😁 and fun 🤣 memories...........
The New Dick Van Dyke..
I'd totally forgotten that was a thing. I think it was the first time I saw Fannie Flagg. ( Sounds like a stripper name).
50 years ago this week Where the Heart is were replaced by Young and the Restless
Thank You, so Many Memories
That's Carly Simon singing the Good and Fruity song.
So weird to see Cincinnati being used as a backdrop of “The Edge of Night” opening and closing. I know it had something to do with the sponsor being Proctor and Gamble.
“The Edge Of Night” was on WCBS-TV (channel 2) before it moved to WABC-TV (channel 7) in the late 1970’s where it was followed by the “4:30 Movie”.
Love love love that Good and Fruity commercial! Carly Simon?!
That Good and Fruity commercial I usually would see during the Flintstone's, Munsters, Pope4e, and Addams Family after school lineup, and in the Fall of '69. But never during the Edge Of Night! And not in '71. I clearly remember it, and enjoyed seeing it again, but can't say I ever really expected to. It's said to have been a minor showcase, little known for young Carly Simon, who was said to have sung the funky advertising jingle in that commercial.
Dear Rick:
Greetings Again!!
Continue to look out for and post: CBS-TV “Where the Good Times are,” Fall 1971, Promo for Saturday Night!
👍
I remember when I was in JR-high school the edge of night came on abc at 3:00pm after I got out of school
Love Guiding Light!!
I hope there's a long credits of As The World Turns out there from this time period
Okay but how about the complete soap episodes?
once i find them i will post,
Wish you would show more of CBS daytime 1972
When did shows have to stop saying that they were pre-recorded?
ATWT still had a “This program was recorded” notice in the end credits when it went off the air in 2010.
Search for Tomorrow kept that announcement until it left CBS in 1982, and I suspect it would have continued to announce it had all of Alison Steele’s end credit voiceovers not been dropped by NBC.
Sometime in the '60s, Mike Gargiulo, a staff director with Goodson-Todman, wrote a letter to TV GUIDE in which he complained about the term "pre-recorded", saying that it was redundant: "How can a program be recorded before it's recorded?"
Not long thereafter, Gargiulo took over directing the original (clean) Match Game; he persuaded Johnny Olson to say "The program was recorded."
History?
Sponsorship Needed all Business is welcome.
All Donations Here www.paypal.com under my Account laslo452000@cox.net
3:53 - 🤔 Interesting that the Good n Fruity commercial would be accompanied by early 1960’s hootenanny folk music. I guess it worked because the tune was still in my head hours later.
I like to see if you have any tapes of Vintage tv game shows and rare tv exercise shows from the 60s and 70s
We are taking donations for 3 large collections
@@obsoletevideo6048 Where are the 3 large collections from?
@roy kassinger www.paypal.com under my account laslo452000@cox.net
Loman and Barkley? Wow, there are names I have not heard in 40 years.
During the LIAMST closing...the crew credit was shown twice at 00:13 and again at 00:18
From summer 1972. Canom started that Sept as the commercial states.
What a find
Hollywood Squares lineup appears to be from the week of 7/26/71.
@scottrngr It was NBC daytime. September 1971 was when the show went into syndication.
Hard to believe Lily Tomlin is the only panelist from that week who's still alive as of August 2024. Peter Marshall sadly passed away yesterday, may he RIP.
4:43 ….All in the “Hollywood Squares”. And here’s the master of the “Hollywood Squares”, Peter Marshall.
Funny…mom watched many of these shows
So want to see the Hollywood Squares.
Fred Silverman preferred scripted TV over game shows and that got Love Is a Many Splendored Thing on CBS. John Conboy produced this show before moving on to The Young & the Restless and later Capitol. Tried to give Guiding Light new life in the 2000's but could not do so.
What about As The World Turns, Love Of Life and Search For Tomorrow?
Good and plenty candy
Where are "As The World Turns" and "Search For Tomorrow" end credits from 1971?
Rabbit Ear Antenna? on the roof?
Guiding light was the oldest soap opera
What happened to the closing of As The World Turns? I guess this is the closest I’m ever going to get to ‘70s episodes of CBS soaps. 😔😔
There are opens of ATWT from 1960-1972 on RUclips with the organ music
Can you please post a full episode of Hollywood Squares if you have it. And please keep the tape on to Jeopardy and Who What or Where if you have them.
New DVD would run for three seasons and produce 72 episodes. Cannon was the big winner among the promos. Funny Face and Chicago Teddy Bears were big flops.
FUNNY FACE was actually renewed for a second and final season as THE SANDY DUNCAN SHOW.
Why didn't they show Love Of Life going off?
Can you please post full episodes of all the soaps on this videotape. Do it for the babyboomers and my friend Edwyn Sanchez.
Can you find ABC's The Best of Everything Soap Opera full episode w/commercials, please?
If any kind soul, has video on Miss Joan Crawford, subbing for her daughter on, "The Secret Storm" (October 1968), please post it.
On this date: Monday July 26th, 1971 is only 8 Days after KPBS San Diego have conducted its successful Sunday Membership Pledge Night on Sunday July 18th, 1971 to raise more community support because its state budget was SLASHED by the California governor!!
And it featured a broadcast of Evening at Pops featuring Julia Child narrating Tubby The Tuba with Arthur Fiedler conducting the Boston Pops and Masterpiece Theatre: The First Churchills!!
In addition to being a Cast Member of "The New Dick Van Dyke Show", the late great Miss Hope Lange picked up where the late great Miss Gene Tierney left off as the Female Lead of TV's version of "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir."😉👰👻📺B.W.
2:22 the CBS ID in the thumbnail
I like when the celebrities make Kenny Williams crack up(4:37).
I remember one celebrity, I can’t recall during intro-, Keeny Williams laughed so hard he couldn’t barely announce the next intro to the next celebrity square and introduced Peter Marshall still laughing.
obsolete video services?
the forecast every weekday afternoon : Partly cloudy with a good chance of D R A M A !!
All these end themes sounded the same! Cheesy dramatic organ over a slightly unnerving score.
I had TOTALLY forgotten the Good 'N' Fruity commercial jingle! I sang along with it! I don't think it's Carly Simon singing, although it sounds like her at the end of it.
You need to have you ears checked. They don’t sound the same at all.
A fun look back. I remember when "The" was dropped from the main title of "Guiding Light". All things change & daytime programming is now full of those mindless courtroom shows.
,,,and mindless talk shows like THE TALK, Frank Springer, THE REAL, Wendy O. Williams, Raven Ray, and Kelly and Ricky.
"The" was officially dropped from Guiding Light's title on November 3, 1975.
"This program was recorded. And the tape was reused cause even though Procter and Gamble makes millions from those serials, they're cheap."
This must be from August, 1971.
On most of these CBS stations
Someone switched from CBS to NBC at the end. Lol
Where's "As The World Turns?"
That Edge Of Night intro reminds me of Twilight Zone.
"Edge" deliberately set a very different tone to all other soaps that aired during this period.
All other daytime dramas focused on the standard storylines of love affairs against a domestic backdrop
"Edge" by contrast was always about crime, murder and intrigue. Hence why it was hugely popular with male viewers - more than any other daytime drama at the time.
It was estimated at one pont, "Edge" has an audience that was roughly 50% male viewers. The fact that it aired later (first at 4:30pm and then at 3:30pm) also helped the show significantly.
Also, Here's an audivideo containing portions of "Love is a Many Splendored Thing" dated to July 26th (the airdate of the show’s partial closing credits seen at the start of this video): ruclips.net/video/AhlIa4XpJ9I/видео.html
Since all of the CBS promos are upcoming fall shows this set of soap opera closings were recorded during the summer of 1971
In 1971, there were 18 (all 30 min) soap operas on the air (7 of them on CBS). Now there are only 4 on the air (3 of them on tv, 1 on streaming service)
I hope the ABC shows of Password will be discovered. Most of the those shows are gone and had very good celebrities playing it (before it became Password All-Stars).
It's odd that Goodson-Todman saved many episodes of "Password"'s original run but not the ABC run.
Shut up Fred Sanford they're love stories
1:46 secret storm en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diane_Ladd
0:27 - _"Stay tuned for_ The Guiding Light, _next on most of these CBS stations."_
1:07 - _"Stay tuned for_ The Secret Storm, _next on most of these CBS stations."_