CLOSE OF CLARK’S DAILY SHOW TO MARK END OF ERA . . . JUNE 22, 1963

Motor City Radio Flashbacks logo (MCRFB)From the MCRFB news archive: 1963

ABC Moves ‘Bandstand’ to Saturdays

 

 

 

 

 

 

PHILADELPHIA — An era draws to a close on August 30 when Dick Clark’s “American Bandstand,” which has been the focal point for record promotion and artists for more than a decade, goes off a weekday schedule. The show will be aired from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Saturdays only on the ABC-TV net.

DICK CLARK 1963. (Getty Images) Click on image for largest view.
DICK CLARK 1963. (Getty Images) Click on image for largest view.

Two years ago the 90-minute “Bandstand” was whittled down to 50 minutes and in the fall of 1962 cut back further to 30 minutes with a public service show, “Discovery,” capturing the time slot.

Although there have been numerous official pronouncements to the contrary about government influence on programming, a case in point may be the Clark show.

Clark emerged from the House committee hearing on payola practices in the industry untainted, of course, but the far-reaching results of the over-all investigation, apart from Clark, more than likely provided the impetus for the web’s decision to up its public service programming by airing “Discovery’ in the afternoons.

Once a major hole had been punched in “American Bandstand,” the local station (at a time when daytime TV was beginning to enjoy increasing importance) took advantage of the non-option time to schedule their own programs and delay-broadcast the Clark stanza on Saturdays, thus keeping the revenue from the net and their own local shows, too.

After the local stations began to encroach on this time, it was impossible for ABC to regain sufficient station clearance to again expand the show. It has also been reported that ABC has a firm commitment to rerun “Wagon Train” during the daytime, the coup de gras for the weekday “American Bandstand.”

Clark, the only TV deejay ever to make it real big on a national scale, started on the local WFIL-TV Bandstand in July 1956 succeeding Bob Horn, host of the show since its inception on the Philadelphia outlet in October of 1952.

ABC moguls invited Clark to come up and see them sometime after viewing a kinescope of the local show on WFIL-TV, the ABC affiliate in the Quaker City. The meet resulted in the show going on a 64-station net in August of 1957.

Little more than a year later the stations carrying the “Bandstand” show numbered 130 and the Dick Clark disarming poise coupled with the effervescent teen-age studio dancers soon gave the show the highest ratings of any daytime program on television.

“The show today still enjoys the highest ratings and is the most lucrative on ABC television,” Clark said.

“Last week, going into the tight summer months there were only two availabilities on the show and most of the time it’s standing room only for sponsor,” Clark also commented.

Clark, whose financial arrangement with the network will give him the same income for the one-hour Saturday stanza as for five shows a week, has obtained release from the net to pursue other enterprises and appearances on rival webs.

ABC intends to place most of the advertising carried on the weekday show into the Saturday program. During its heyday, $10 million was brought into the net through “American Bandstand.”

Just about every current pop record artist and group, save Elvis Presley and Rick Nelson, made appearances on the 1,000 or more Clark “Bandstand” shows. Many, such as Connie Francis, Bobby Rydell, Fabian, Frankie Avalon and Bobby Darin, to name a few, got their first national exposure on “Bandstand” and was instrumental in launching them on lucrative show business careers. END

DICK CLARK with Philadelphia Bandstand proteges Fabian, Bobby Rydell, Frankie Avalon circa 1963
DICK CLARK with Philadelphia Bandstand proteges Fabian, Bobby Rydell, Frankie Avalon circa 1963 (click on image for larger view).

(Information and news source: Billboard; June 22, 1963)

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MCRFB.COM TOP 10 COUNTDOWN * July 1965 * A Henry Krueger Production

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