1991 in American television

In American television in 1991, notable events included television show debuts, finales, and cancellations; channel launches, closures, and re-brandings; stations changing or adding their network affiliations; information on controversies, business transactions, and carriage disputes; and deaths of those who made various contributions to the medium.

Events

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Date Event
January 3 The first television sets with built-in closed-caption display are introduced in the United States.
January 14 Wheel of Fortune returns to NBC (but would ultimately be canceled on September 20, after a 16½ year run on daytime network television).
January 16 All major television network schedules are pre-empted by Gulf War coverage right after the evening news broadcasts. The planned broadcasts included Seinfeld.
January 19 NBC breaks away[1][2] from their telecast of the NHL All-Star Game in the third period[3] to televise a briefing from The Pentagon involving the Gulf War. SportsChannel America[4][5] included the missing coverage in a replay of NBC's telecast (NBC owned 50%[6][7][8][9] of Rainbow Enterprises, the parent of SportsChannel America).[10]
January 25 Steve Urkel of Family Matters makes a guest appearance on Full House.
January 27 Whitney Houston delivers a rousing rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner" during the pre-game ceremonies for Super Bowl XXV. During halftime, ABC broadcast a special ABC News report anchored by Peter Jennings on the progress of the Gulf War. ABC eventually aired the halftime show, headlined by New Kids on the Block on tape delay following the game.
February 7 NBC broadcasts an episode of L.A. Law which features the first in a series of "lesbian kiss episodes", in which a lesbian or bisexual character (in this case, C.J. Lamb) kisses a female character identified as heterosexual (here, Abby Perkins).
February 9 Tim Meadows and Adam Sandler join the cast of NBC's Saturday Night Live. (Meadows stays with the show until 2000, while Sandler departs during 1995.)
February 22 Deborah Norville co-anchors NBC's The Today Show for the final time. Going on maternity leave, she is replaced by Katie Couric, who stays a Today anchor into the early 21st century.
March 3 In Los Angeles, California, African-American Rodney King is beaten severely by police officers after leading them on a high-speed chase and allegedly resisting arrest. A video is made by an observer, and portions of the tape are broadcast repeatedly, resulting in massive rioting in the Los Angeles area.
March 16 A. Whitney Brown makes his final appearance on the program Saturday Night Live.
March 21 An episode of L.A. Law features Diana Muldaur's character Rosalind Shays plummeting to her death through an open elevator shaft.
April 1 The premium movie channel Encore launches in the United States, primarily on TCI cable systems. The channel initially displayed movies from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, before eventually phasing in more recent movies by the 2000s (decade). Showtime Networks initiated Flix, a premium channel with a format identical to Encore less than a year-and-a-half later.
CBS begins broadcasting a late-night crime-investigation program block entitled Crimetime After Primetime.
HBO and Viacom agree to merge their respective comedy channels, Ha! and The Comedy Channel to create CTV: The Comedy Network, later known as Comedy Central come June 1991.
April 5 Katie Couric is designated as co-host of The Today Show on NBC after substituting as host since February 1991.
April 20 The Museum of Broadcasting, now known as The Paley Center for Media, relocates into its new 17-story building, located a block from its previous location in New York City.
An episode of Saturday Night Live guest hosted by actor Steven Seagal immediately becomes infamous due to Seagal being difficult and uncooperative to work with among the cast and crew. Seagal is soon banned from ever appearing on the series again and is branded by SNL creator and producer Lorne Michaels as the "worst host ever".
May 3 The final episode of Dallas is broadcast by CBS; the series is eventually revived in 2012 on TNT.
May 9 After being diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic cancer in April 1991, Michael Landon appears as a guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Landon would succumb to the disease seven weeks later at the age of 54.
May 13 Delta Burke makes her final appearance as Suzanne Sugarbaker on Designing Women.
May 22 Tulsa's television station KGCT-TV returns to the air as KTFO-TV.
May 23 WFXG in Augusta, Georgia signs-on as a Fox affiliate, taking that affiliation from W67BE (now NBC affiliate WAGT-CD) which becomes an independent station.
At an NBC network affiliate managers meeting at New York City's Carnegie Hall, Johnny Carson announces that he will be stepping down as host of The Tonight Show within May of the following year.
May 25 The syndicated sitcom Out of This World concludes its fourth and ultimately final season on an unresolved cliffhanger involving Evie's alien father Troy coming to visit Earth and her mother Donna accidentally taking his place on his home planet, Antares Prime.
June 1 After merging with Ha! and The Comedy Channel. CTV: The Comedy Network becomes Comedy Central. This is to avoid confusion with the Canadian broadcast network known as CTV.
June 2–12 NBC broadcasts the NBA Finals for the first time after the event aired on CBS for the previous 17 years. It was Michael Jordan's first NBA Finals appearance, Magic Johnson's last, and the last NBA Finals for the Los Angeles Lakers until 2000. This series would mark the end of the Lakers' Showtime era and the beginning of the Chicago Bulls' dynasty.
June 3 The Australian soap Neighbours makes its American debut, on KCOP-TV in Los Angeles, CA. Two weeks later, WWOR-TV debuts this for its New York, NY market.
Scripps-Howard Broadcasting finalizes the purchase on Baltimore's NBC affiliate WMAR-TV from Gillett Communications, which was about to be divested into SCI television.
July 9 The Major League Baseball All-Star Game airs on CBS for the second consecutive year. Emanating from Toronto, it is the second time that the All-Star Game is played outside of the United States, the first being the 1982 All-Star Game in Montreal, Quebec. CBS started their broadcast at the top of the hour with the customary pregame coverage. Because American President George H.W. Bush and Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney were throwing out the first ball, there was a slight delay from the 8:30 p.m. EDT start. The game eventually started about 15–20 minutes late.
July 28 NBC airs a pilot for a proposed series starring Adam West and written and produced by Conan O'Brien and Robert Smigel called Lookwell. While the pilot ultimately wouldn't be picked up as a series, it has since become a cult classic.
August 2 Deidre Hall returns on-screen to the NBC soap opera Days of Our Lives after a four-year absence in which her character, Marlena Evans is revealed to be mysteriously alive and kept hidden outside of Salem after being presumed dead in an accident nearly four years prior.
August 11 Nickelodeon introduces its series of Nicktoons, with Doug, Rugrats and The Ren & Stimpy Show the first three to air.[11]
WGMB-TV in Baton Rouge, Louisiana signs-on the air, giving the Baton Rouge area its first full-time Fox affiliate (NBC affiliate WVLA had previously aired Fox programming on a delayed basis).
August 13 The time slot for Full House was moved from Friday's TGIF lineup on ABC to Tuesday nights (remaining there until its finale in 1995).
September 1 KLSB-TV in Nacogdoches, Texas signs-on as a satellite of the Tyler market's NBC affiliate KETK-TV. KLSB-TV will eventually become the market's CBS affiliate in 2004 when the station is sold to Max Media.
September 6 KLNO (now MyNetworkTV affiliate KBVO) in Llano, Texas is signed-on by NBC affiliate KXAN-TV to improve coverage of that station in parts of the Texas Hill Country.
September 8 Minnie Pearl makes her final appearance on the program Hee Haw.
September 9–13 The 20th anniversary week of The Price Is Right is celebrated during this week on CBS.
September 9 After being fired from World Championship Wrestling following a contract dispute, Ric Flair makes his World Wrestling Federation debut on Prime Time Wrestling with the "Big Gold Belt".
September 19 Michael Jackson (credited as John Jay Smith) guest voices on The Simpsons.
September 23 Over a year after its cancelation from NBC, Baywatch is relaunched in first–run syndication, where it will run for ten seasons.
September 25 Leonardo DiCaprio joins the cast of Growing Pains for what would be its final season.
September 29 Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" video debuts on MTV's 120 Minutes.
October 6 On the Major League Baseball Game of the Week on CBS, the Atlanta Braves cap off their "worst to first" season by defeating the Houston Astros to clinch their first divisional title in nine years.
October 11 Redd Foxx suffers a fatal heart attack on the set of the CBS sitcom The Royal Family.[12][13] It was noted that initially cast mates on set thought Foxx was only fooling around after he clutched a chair and fell to the floor, since his character on Sanford and Son often faked heart attacks.[14]
October 13 Jennifer Lopez joins the cast as one of the Fly Girls on the Fox sketch comedy series In Living Color (she would leave the show after the next season). Other cast additions include future Academy Award winner Jamie Foxx and Steve Park (who left after the season ended). Shawn Wayans, the original DJ for the show, also becomes a regular cast member (and will remain in the cast until the end of the next season). Wayans' original DJ role is assumed by Twist.
October 19–27 The World Series between the Minnesota Twins and Atlanta Braves airs on CBS. With five of its games decided by a single run, four decided in the final at-bat, and three going into extra innings,[15] this World Series immediately became regarded as one of the greatest postseason series in baseball history. In 2003, ESPN selected this championship as the "Greatest of All Time" in their "World Series 100th Anniversary" countdown. The Series telecast drew an overall national Nielsen rating of 24.0 and a 39 share for CBS; Game 7 drew a 32.2 rating and 49 share.
October 20–22 ABC airs the four-hour miniseries Dynasty: The Reunion, which continues the story of 1981–1989 prime time soap opera Dynasty.
October 24 Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry dies at the age of 70. After his death, Star Trek: The Next Generation airs a two-part episode of season five, called "Unification", which features a dedication to Roddenberry.[16]
October 25 NBC's affiliate in Raleigh/Durham/Fayetteville, WPTF-TV, changes its name to WRDC-TV.
October 26 In front of a national television audience on CBS, play-by-play man Jack Buck famously says "And we'll see you tomorrow night!" while calling Minnesota Twins star Kirby Puckett's game-winning home run to send the World Series against the Atlanta Braves to a decisive seventh game.
October 29 Turner Broadcasting System and Apollo Investment Fund purchase the Hanna-Barbera library for $320 million.
October 31 KLSR-TV in Eugene, Oregon signs-on, giving Fox a full-power home in the Eugene market. Sister station K25AS (now MyNetworkTV affiliate KEVU-CD) becomes an independent station before joining UPN in 1995.
November 4–11 Leonard Nimoy guest stars as Spock in a two-part episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. The first of the two episodes earn a 15.4 household Nielsen rating,[17] drawing over 25 million viewers,[18] making it one of the most watched episodes in all seven seasons of The Next Generation's run.
November 6 The fourth installment of the Gambler film series is broadcast on NBC. The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw features Kenny Rogers' character Brady Hawkes running across a galaxy of old TV western characters played by the original actors. This includes Gene Barry as Bat Masterson, Hugh O'Brian as Wyatt Earp, Jack Kelly as Bart Maverick, Clint Walker as Cheyenne Bodie, David Carradine as Kung Fu's Caine, Chuck Connors and Johnny Crawford from The Rifleman, Brian Keith as The Westerner, James Drury and Doug McClure from The Virginian, Paul Brinegar from Rawhide, and Reba McEntire as Burgundy Jones.
November 7 In a nationally televised press conference, NBA superstar Magic Johnson announces that he is HIV-positive and is retiring from the Los Angeles Lakers, effective immediately. Johnson would appear as a guest on The Arsenio Hall Show the very next night.
November 9 Hurricane Saturday, a one-off programming block of a three-way, two-hour crossover event airs on NBC. It involves three television sitcoms created by Susan Harris: The Golden Girls, Empty Nest and Nurses. The event depicts a fictional hurricane storming into the storylines of the three series set in Miami, Florida.
November 14 The music video for "Black or White", the first single from Michael Jackson's forthcoming eighth album Dangerous, is first televised by Fox. Despite controversy over the video's ending, Fox, which simulcasts the video along with MTV, VH1, and BET, scores its highest Nielsen ratings to date.[19]
November 16 Ellen Cleghorne, Melanie Hutsell and Beth Cahill join the cast of Saturday Night Live.
KTMF in Missoula, Montana signs-on the air, giving the Missoula market its first full-time ABC affiliate.
November 23 An hour long television special commemorating the 19th anniversary of The Bob Newhart Show airs on CBS.
November 28 E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial makes its broadcast network television premiere on CBS.
December 1 Britney Spears appears on the program Star Search.
December 8 Tim Russert becomes moderator of the NBC discussion program Meet the Press, a job he possesses until his sudden death in 2008.
December 14 Steve Martin kicks off Saturday Night Live by singing "Not Gonna Phone It In Tonight!".

Programs

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Debuts

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Date Show Network
January 4 Sons and Daughters CBS
January 6 Expose NBC
January 7 The Party Machine with Nia Peeples Syndication
Talk Soup E!
Under Cover ABC
January 10 Good Sports CBS
January 12 Roggin's Heroes Syndication
January 13 Harry and the Hendersons
Dark Shadows (reboot) NBC
January 27 Davis Rules ABC
February 1 Welcome Freshmen Nickelodeon
February 2 Fifteen
February 3 Sunday Best NBC
February 9 The Adventures of Pete & Pete Nickelodeon
February 25 The Pirates of Dark Water ABC
March 1 Clarissa Explains it All Nickelodeon
Toxic Crusaders USA Network
March 7 Yearbook Fox
March 8 Baby Talk ABC
March 11 Studs Syndication
March 12 Eddie Dodd ABC
March 18 Get the Picture Nickelodeon
March 26 The Antagonists CBS
March 29 True Detectives
March 31 The 100 Lives of Black Jack Savage NBC
Darkwing Duck Syndication and ABC
April 3 Scene of the Crime CBS
April 4 Fly by Night
April 5 Dark Justice
April 7 Top of the Heap Fox
April 24 My Life and Times ABC
April 26 Dinosaurs
April 28 The Sunday Comics Fox
April 30 The Statler Brothers Show The Nashville Network
May 1 The Littl' Bits Nickelodeon
May 2 American Detective ABC
May 11 Sisters NBC
June 4 C. Everett Koop, M.D. NBC
June 19 The Man in the Family ABC
June 24 Johnny B. On the Loose Syndication
July 4 Salute Your Shorts Nickelodeon
July 8 Shop 'til You Drop Lifetime
July 19 Hi Honey, I'm Home! ABC
August 11 Doug Nickelodeon
Rugrats
The Ren & Stimpy Show
August 17 Best of the Worst Fox
August 25 Roc
August 31 What Would You Do? Nickelodeon
September 1 Aeon Flux MTV
That's My Dog The Family Channel
E! News E!
September 2 Nickelodeon Launch Box Nickelodeon
September 3 The Legend of Prince Valiant The Family Channel
Little Dracula Fox Kids
September 7 Back to the Future: The Animated Series CBS
Little Shop Fox Kids
Taz-Mania Fox Kids
September 8 Herman's Head Fox
Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars Syndication
September 9 The Chuck Woolery Show
The Maury Povich Show
Now It Can Be Told
Realities with David Hartman
The Adventures of Mark & Brian NBC
September 14 Chip and Pepper
Nurses
Super Mario World
Wish Kid
Space Cats
Yo Yogi!
ProStars
Hammerman ABC
The Pirates of Dark Water
Mother Goose and Grimm CBS
Where's Wally?: The Animated Series
September 15 P.S. I Luv U
Eerie, Indiana NBC
Man of the People
Pacific Station
September 16 James Bond Jr. Syndication
The Jenny Jones Show
Walter & Emily NBC
September 17 Home Improvement ABC
Sibs
September 18 The Royal Family CBS
Teech
September 19 Drexell's Class Fox
Flesh 'n' Blood NBC
Reasonable Doubts
September 20 Brooklyn Bridge CBS
Step by Step ABC
September 21 The Torkelsons NBC
September 24 Homefront ABC
September 25 Good & Evil ABC
September 26 FBI: The Untold Stories
September 27 Investigative Reports A&E
Princesses CBS
September 28 The Commish ABC
September 29 Street Justice Syndication
September 30 The Jerry Springer Show Syndication, on Multimedia stations
The Montel Williams Show Syndication
Charlie Rose PBS
Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego PBS
October 4 Beyond Reality Syndication
October 7 I'll Fly Away NBC
October 17 Sightings Fox
October 18 Palace Guard CBS
November 4 NBC News Nightside NBC
November 7 Silk Stalkings CBS
November 24 Hot Country Nights NBC
November 30 Liquid Television MTV
December 17 A Bunch of Munsch Showtime
Unknown date Return to the Sea PBS

Returning this year

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Show Last aired Previous network New network Returning
The $100,000 Pyramid 1988 Syndication same January 7
Seinfeld 1990 NBC January 23
In Concert 1975 ABC Same June 7
You Asked for It 1959 The Family Channel September 1
Beetlejuice: The Animated Series 1990 Fox Kids September 9
Candid Camera 1988 CBS Syndication September 16
A Different World 1990 NBC Same September 19
Baywatch Syndication September 23

Entering syndication this year

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A list of programs (current or canceled) that have accumulated enough episodes (between 65 and 100) or seasons (3 or more) to be eligible for off-network syndication and/or basic cable runs.

Show Seasons
A Different World 4
Married With Children 4
Full House 4

Changes of network affiliation

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The following shows aired new episodes on a different network than previous first-run episodes:

Show Moved from Moved To
Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventures CBS Fox Kids
Beetlejuice ABC
Tom and Jerry Kids TBS
Baywatch NBC Syndication
Candid Camera CBS

Ending this year

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Date Show Debut
January 1 American Chronicles 1990
January 5 Haywire
January 19 Zazoo U
January 25 Attitudes 1985
Generations 1989
Piggsburg Pigs! 1990
February 3 Good Grief
February 11 About Face 1989
February 16 The Fanelli Boys 1990
February 22 Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears 1985
March 1 Sons and Daughters 1991
March 8 The Joker's Wild (returned in 2017) 1972
Going Places 1990
March 9 Lenny
Uncle Buck
March 16 Married People
March 17 Bordertown 1989
April 5 Against the Law 1990
April 12 Fun House 1988
April 26 Hunter 1984
April 27 21 Jump Street 1987
May 3 Dallas 1978
May 4 Yearbook 1991
May 8 The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd 1987
May 10 Paradise 1988
Midnight Caller
May 11 Swamp Thing 1990
May 18 The Flash 1990
May 19 Babes
May 25 The Munsters Today 1988
Out of This World 1987
May 28 Thirtysomething
June 1 DEA 1990
June 6 Gabriel's Fire
June 10 Twin Peaks
June 12 Over My Dead Body
June 22 American Dreamer
June 25 Head of the Class 1986
June 30 C. Everett Koop, M.D. 1991
July 6 Doctor Doctor 1989
July 12 Match Game (returned in 1998) 1962
July 14 Lifestories 1990
July 17 The Family Man
July 20 Carol & Company
The Hogan Family 1986
July 22 China Beach 1988
July 27 Amen 1986
August 8 TaleSpin 1990
August 11 Ferris Bueller
Parenthood
August 17 A Pup Named Scooby-Doo 1988
August 30 The Challengers 1990
Hey Dude 1989
August 31 Dink, The Little Dinosaur
Kid 'n Play 1990
September 6 Trump Card
September 10 Peter Pan and the Pirates 1991
September 15 The Party Machine with Nia Peeples
September 16 Adam-12 1990
September 20 Concentration 1958
Wheel of Fortune 1975
October 5 The Real Ghostbusters 1986
October 16 Teech 1991
October 25 Princesses
October 26 Captain N: The Game Master 1989
The New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh 1988
October 30 Good & Evil 1991
November 1 Palace Guard
November 2 Muppet Babies (returned in 2018) 1984
November 10 Eureeka's Castle 1989
November 15 Flesh 'n' Blood 1991
November 16 Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventures 1990
November 23 Attack of the Killer Tomatoes 1990
November 30 Little Shop 1991
December 1 Bucky O'Hare and the Toad Wars
December 2 Peter Pan and the Pirates 1990
December 6 Pyramid (returned in 2002) 1973
Beetlejuice 1989
Get the Picture 1991
December 7 Hammerman
Super Mario World
Wish Kid
Yo Yogi!
December 8 The Adventures of Don Coyote and Sancho Panda 1990
December 14 Where's Wally?: The Animated Series 1991
December 27 Chain Reaction (returned in 2006) 1980
December 29 Make the Grade 1989

Made-for-TV movies and miniseries

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Title Channel Premiere
Sarah, Plain and Tall CBS February 3
The Josephine Baker Story HBO March 16
Separate but Equal ABC April 7
Switched at Birth NBC April 28
Knight Rider 2000 May 19
C. Everett Koop, M.D. June 4
A Woman Named Jackie October 13

Networks and services

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Launches

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Network Type Launch date Notes Source
The California Channel Cable and satellite television February 4
ValueVision Cable and satellite television March 12
Encore Cable television April 1
TV Japan Cable television April 1
CNN Airport Cable and satellite television June 3
Foxnet Cable and satellite television June 6
Court TV Cable television July 1
HBO 2 Cable television August 1
HBO 3 Cable television August 1

Conversions and rebrandings

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Old network name New network name Type Conversion Date Notes Source
The Comedy Channel
Ha!
Comedy Central Cable television April 1
SuperStation TBS TBS Cable television Unknown

Closures

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Network Type Closure date Notes Source
Star Television Network Broadcast television January 14
Financial News Network Cable television May 21
Mizlou Television Network Syndicated programming block Unknown
Universal Pictures Debut Network Syndicated programming block Unknown

Television stations

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Station launches

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Date City of License/Market Station Channel Affiliation Notes/Ref.
January 11 Palm Beach, Florida W16AR 16 Independent
February 4 Evansville, Indiana W52AZ 52
March 2 Hammond, Indiana
(Chicago, Illinois)
WJYS 62
March 8 Boise, Idaho KTMW 9 HSN
March 15 Atlanta, Georgia WHSG-TV 63 HSN
May 3 Tampa, Florida WBSV-TV 50 Independent
May 23 Augusta, Georgia WFXG 54 Fox
May 29 Jacksonville, Florida WJEB-TV 59 TBN
June 15 Eagle Pass, Texas KVAW 24 Telemundo
June 22 El Paso, Texas KJLF-TV 65 Independent
July 19 New York City W51BV 51 The Box
August Auburn, Indiana W07CL 7 Main Street TV
Bayamón, Puerto Rico WDWL 36 Religious independent
August 11 Baton Rouge, Louisiana WGMB 44 Fox
August 31 San Francisco, California KMTP-TV 32 Non-commercial independent
September 1 Nacogdoches, Texas KYTX 19 NBC Satellite/translator of KETK-TV/Tyler, Texas
Lufkin, Texas K53IQ 53 NBC
September 6 Llano/Austin, Texas KLNO 14 NBC
September 15 Holly Springs, Mississippi
(Memphis, Tennessee)
WBUY-TV 40 HSN
October 7 Washington, D.C. NewsChannel 8 8 (cable-only) Independent
October 31 Eugene, Oregon KEVU 34 Fox
November 16 Missoula, Montana KTMF 23 ABC
November 29 Evansville, Indiana W56DN 56 Telemundo
December 1 Yauco, Puerto Rico WIRS 42 Independent Satellite of WJPX-TV/San Juan
December 16 Davenport, Iowa KQCT 36 PBS Part of the Iowa Public Television network
December 24 Indiana, Pennsylvania W49BT 49 America One
Unknown date Columbia, Missouri K38II 38 unknown
Huron, South Dakota KTTM 12 Fox Satellite of KTTW/Sioux Falls
Natchez, Mississippi WNTZ-TV 33 Fox Returned to the air after a three-year hiatus
St. Louis, Missouri K18BT 18 TBN
K58DH 58 The Box

Network affiliation changes

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Date City of License/Market Station Channel Old affiliation New affiliation Notes/Ref.
January 5 Homewood, Alabama
(Birmingham/Tuscaloosa/Anniston)
WTTO 21 Independent Fox
May 23 Augusta, Georgia W67BE 67 Fox Independent

Station closures

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Date City of license/Market Station Channel Affiliation Sign-on date Notes
December Pago Pago, American Samoa KVZK-5 5 NBC October 5, 1964

Births

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Date Name Notability
January 4 Charles Melton Actor (Riverdale) and model
Olivia Tennet New Zealand actress (Power Rangers RPM)
January 14 Ryan Coleman Actor (All That)
January 17 Willa Fitzgerald Actress (Alpha House, Scream, Dare Me)
January 18 Britt McKillip Canadian voice actress (Baby Looney Tunes, Sabrina's Secret Life, Coconut Fred's Fruit Salad Island)
January 19 Erin Sanders Actress (Zoey 101, The Young and the Restless, Big Time Rush)
January 20 Ciara Hanna Actress (Power Rangers Megaforce)
January 28 Calum Worthy Canadian actor (Austin & Ally)
February 3 Glenn McCuen Actor (Bucket & Skinner's Epic Adventures)
February 7 Gabbie Hanna Actress
February 10 Emma Roberts Actress (Unfabulous, Scream Queens) and daughter of Eric Roberts
February 12 Tanaya Beatty Actress (The Night Shift)
February 16 Micah Stephen Williams Actor (Good Luck Charlie)
February 17 Ed Sheeran English singer
Jeremy Allen White Actor (Shameless, The Bear)
February 18 Malese Jow Actress (Unfabulous, The Vampire Diaries), singer
February 25 Tony Oller Actor (As the Bell Rings, Gigantic)
March 5 Hanna Mangan-Lawrence Australian actress (Bed of Roses)
March 8 Devon Werkheiser Actor (Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide)
March 16 Wolfgang Van Halen Musician (Van Halen)
March 19 Garrett Clayton Actor, singer and dancer
March 25 Seychelle Gabriel Actress (Falling Skies, The Legend of Korra)
March 27 Gilbert Leal Voice actor (Rocket Power)
March 28 Amy Bruckner Actress (Phil of the Future, American Dragon: Jake Long)
March 29 Hayley McFarland Actress (Lie to Me, Sons of Anarchy)
April 3 Hayley Kiyoko Actress (CSI: Cyber) and singer
April 4 Jamie Lynn Spears Actress (All That, Zoey 101) and sister of Britney Spears
April 5 Hunter March Actor
April 8 Cameron Deane Stewart Actor
April 10 AJ Michalka Actress (The Guardian, The Goldbergs, Steven Universe, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power), singer and guitarist
Conor Leslie Actress
April 21 Frank Dillane English actor (Fear the Walking Dead)
April 23 Caleb Johnson Singer (American Idol)[20]
April 28 Aleisha Allen Actress (Blue's Clues, Out of the Box)
Cheslie Kryst Presenter
May 1 Creagen Dow Actor (Zoey 101)
May 10 Jordan Francis Canadian voice actor (Custard on The Save-Ums!)
May 12 Jennifer Damiano Actress and singer
May 13 Jake Borelli Actor
May 14 C.J. Manigo Actor (Dude, What Would Happen)
May 17 Daniel Curtis Lee Actor (Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide, Zeke and Luther) and rapper
Jill Duggar Dillard Actress (19 Kids and Counting, Counting On) and television personality
May 24 Sarah Ramos Actress (American Dreams, Runaway, Parenthood)
May 26 Julianna Rose Mauriello Actress (Stephanie on LazyTown (2004–08))
May 29 Kristen Alderson Actress (One Life to Live, General Hospital)
June 4 Quincy Actor (Star)
Jordan Danger Actress (Eureka)
June 7 Poppy Drayton English actress (The Shannara Chronicles)
India Oxenberg Actress
June 12 Louisa Gummer American model and daughter of Meryl Streep and Don Gummer
June 18 Willa Holland Actress (The O.C., Gossip Girl, Arrow)
June 24 Max Ehrich Actor (The Young and the Restless, Under the Dome, 100 Things to Do Before High School)
June 27 Madylin Sweeten Actress (Ally on Everybody Loves Raymond)
June 28 Daniel Zovatto Actor
June 29 Tajja Isen Canadian voice actress (The Save-Ums!, JoJo's Circus, Atomic Betty, Time Warp Trio, Super Why!)
Addison Timlin Actress
July 3 Grant Rosenmeyer Actor (Oliver Beene)
July 5 Jason Dolley Actor (Complete Savages, Cory in the House, Good Luck Charlie) and musician
July 9 Mitchel Musso Actor (Hannah Montana, Pair of Kings), voice actor (Phineas and Ferb, Milo Murphy's Law)
July 11 Kelsey Impicciche YouTube personality, actress and singer
July 12 Erik Per Sullivan Actor (Malcolm in the Middle)
July 15 Emily Roeske Actress (Halloweentown)
July 16 Alexandra Shipp Actress (House of Anubis)
July 24 Emily Bett Rickards Actress (Arrow)
July 27 Adam Page Pro wrestler[21]
July 29 Maestro Harrell Actor (Guys Like Us, The Wire, Suburgatory)
Miki Ishikawa Actress (Zoey 101)
August 2 Skyler Day Actress (Gigantic, Parenthood) and singer
August 5 John Reynolds Actor
August 9 Alexa Bliss Pro wrestler (WWE, Total Divas)[22]
August 12 Lakeith Stanfield Actor (Atlanta)
August 17 Austin Butler Actor (Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide, Zoey 101, Ruby & The Rockits, Life Unexpected, Switched at Birth, The Carrie Diaries, The Shannara Chronicles)
August 18 Richard Harmon Canadian actor (The 100)
August 21 Christian Navarro Actor (13 Reasons Why)
August 26 Dylan O'Brien Actor (Teen Wolf)
August 27 Kasha Kropinski Actress
August 28 Jonathan Whitesell Canadian actor (The 100, Beyond)
Kyle Massey Actor (That's So Raven, Cory in the House, Fish Hooks, Mighty Magiswords) and rapper
Samuel Larsen Actor (Glee)
August 30 Gaia Weiss French-American actress (Vikings)
September 3 Samantha Marie Ware Actress
September 4 Carter Jenkins Actor (Famous in Love)
September 7 Jennifer Veal English actress (Descendants: Wicked World)
September 9 Kelsey Chow Actress (One Tree Hill, Pair of Kings, Teen Wolf)
September 15 Mike Perry Martial artist[23]
September 20 Spencer Locke Actress
September 22 Chelsea Tavares Actress (Unfabulous, Just Jordan)
October 5 Jackson Rogow Actor (Dude, What Would Happen)
October 6 Roshon Fegan Actor (Shake It Up) and singer
October 18 Tyler Posey Actor (Doc, Brothers & Sisters, Teen Wolf, Elena of Avalor, Jane the Virgin, Scream)
October 23 Hunter Clowdus Actor (All American)
October 27 Bryan Craig Actor (Bucket & Skinner's Epic Adventures, General Hospital, Valor)
November 1 Anthony Ramos Actor
November 6 Pierson Fodé Actor (The Bold and the Beautiful)
November 8 Riker Lynch Actor (Glee) and singer (R5)
November 11 Emma Blackery Actress, singer and YouTube personality
Christa B. Allen Actress (Cake, Revenge)
November 13 Devon Bostick Canadian actor (The 100)
Matt Bennett Actor (Victorious)
November 14 Graham Patrick Martin Actor
November 15 Shailene Woodley Actress (The Secret Life of the American Teenager)
November 18 Rory Thost Voice actor (Kip on Higglytown Heroes)
December 1 Olivia Grace Applegate Actress
December 2 Charlie Puth Singer and actor
December 12 Wallis Currie-Wood Actress (Madam Secretary)
December 15 Eunice Cho Actress (Little Bill)
December 19 Keiynan Lonsdale Australian actor (The Flash)
Libe Barer American actress
December 20 Hunter Gomez Actor (National Treasure)
Jillian Rose Reed Actress (Awkward, Elena of Avalor)
December 24 Louis Tomlinson English actor (One Direction) and singer
December 26 Eden Sher Actress (The Middle, Star vs. the Forces of Evil)
December 27 Chloe Bridges Actress (Freddie, The Carrie Diaries)

Deaths

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Date Name Age Notability
January 8 Steve Clark 31 English musician (Def Leppard)
January 12 Keye Luke 86 Character actor (Kung Fu)
February 1 Jimmy MacDonald 84 Voice actor (Mickey Mouse)
February 3 Harry Ackerman 78 Producer (Bewitched)
Nancy Kulp 69 Actress (Miss Jane Hathaway on The Beverly Hillbillies)
February 6 Danny Thomas 79 Actor and comedian (Danny Williams on Make Room for Daddy)
February 24 John Charles Daly 77 News journalist and game show host (What's My Line?)
George Gobel 71 Comedian (The George Gobel Show)
March 3 Vance Colvig 72 Actor (Bozo the Clown on KTLA in Los Angeles)
April 10 Kevin Peter Hall 35 Actor (Misfits of Science, 227, Harry and the Hendersons)
Natalie Schafer 90 Actress (Lovey Howell on Gilligan's Island)
April 23 William Dozier 83 Producer (Batman)
April 28 Ken Curtis 74 Singer and actor (Festus Haggin on Gunsmoke)
June 9 Joe Hamilton 62 Producer (The Carol Burnett Show, Mama's Family), former husband of Carol Burnett
July 1 Michael Landon 54 Actor and producer (Bonanza, Little House on the Prairie, Highway to Heaven)
July 15 Bert Convy 57 Game show host (Super Password and Win, Lose Or Draw)
July 21 Theodore Wilson 47 Character actor (Good Times, That's My Mama)
August 6 Harry Reasoner 68 News anchor/reporter (60 Minutes)
August 22 Colleen Dewhurst 67 Actress (Murphy Brown, Avonlea)
September 4 Tom Tryon 65 Actor (Texas John Slaughter)
September 7 Ben Piazza 57 Actor (Dallas)
September 15 John Hoyt 85 Actor (Gimme a Break!)
October 9 Thalmus Rasulala 51 Actor (Roots, What's Happening!!)
October 11 Redd Foxx 68 Comedian and actor (Fred Sanford on Sanford and Son)
October 24 Gene Roddenberry 70 Creator of (Star Trek)
November 2 Irwin Allen 75 Producer (Lost in Space)
November 5 Fred MacMurray 83 Actor (Steve Douglas on My Three Sons)
November 24 Eric Carr 41 Drummer (Kiss)
Freddie Mercury 45 British singer (Queen)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Steve Berkowitz (January 20, 1991). "Bush Endorses Playing of NFL Championship Games". The Washington Post.
  2. ^ Herb Gould (January 20, 1991). "Hawks'all-stars all stars Roenick, Larmer, Chelios on target". Chicago Sun-Times. Sun-Times Media Group. p. 1.
  3. ^ 1991 NHL All-Star Game, Chicago Stadium (second intermission, third period) on YouTube
  4. ^ Helene Elliot (February 17, 1989). "INSIDE THE NHL U.S. Coach Has Mellowed". Newsday. Cablevision Systems Corporation. p. 163.
  5. ^ Rudy Martzke (March 16, 1989). "NBC to replace baseball with a few NHL games". USA Today. Gannett Company. p. 3C.
  6. ^ Rudy Martzke (January 31, 1989). "NBC plans innovative ways to fill baseball void". USA Today. Gannett Company. p. 3C.
  7. ^ Robert Fachet (March 14, 1989). "NOTEBOOK; Best of the West Enter Media Twilight Zone". The Washington Post. p. C08.
  8. ^ Larry Jackson (April 7, 1989). "IS RISING SON SET FOR A TV FALL?". The Palm Beach Post. p. 2C.
  9. ^ Steve Nidetz (April 18, 1989). "NHL providing SportsChannel with a Cupful of riches". Chicago Tribune. Tribune Publishing. p. 3.
  10. ^ Jack Craig (February 12, 1989). "WILL THE NHL PINCH HIT? WITH SHIFT OF BASEBALL TO CBS, NBC NEEDS TO FILL HOLE IN ITS LINEUP". Boston Globe. p. 58.
  11. ^ Charity, Justin (2021-08-12). "What's in a Nicktoon? How Nickelodeon Developed Its Eclectic Animation". The Ringer. Retrieved 2021-10-05.
  12. ^ "Fames Comedian Redd Foxx Is Celebrated In New Book, 'The Life and Times of Redd Foxx'". Jet. 96 (7). Johnson Publishing Company. 19 July 1999. ISSN 0021-5996.
  13. ^ Staff report (28 October 1991). Foxx felled by a heart attack taping TV show; calls for wife and dies. Jet
  14. ^ Rich, Joshua (9 October 1998). Exit Laughing. Entertainment Weekly
  15. ^ "The World Series 100th Anniversary – #1 1991 Minnesota Twins 4, Atlanta Braves 3". Page 2. ESPN. 2003.
  16. ^ DeCandido, Keith (June 27, 2012). "Star Trek: The Next Generation Rewatch: 'Unification, Part I'". Tor.com. Archived from the original on April 9, 2015. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  17. ^ Star Track: The Next Generation episode ratings
  18. ^ "Star Struck". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on January 7, 2008. Retrieved July 10, 2007.
  19. ^ Pareles, Jon (November 16, 1991). "Review/Rock, New Video Opens the Jackson Blitz". The New York Times. Retrieved March 4, 2018.
  20. ^ Bronson, Fred (2014-03-20). "'American Idol' Season 13: Caleb Johnson Outlines His Rock 'n' Roll Childhood Education". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2024-02-19.
  21. ^ "Adam Page". TheSportster. 2024-08-07. Retrieved 2024-11-05.
  22. ^ "WWE Profile - Alexa Bliss". ESPN.com. 2022-11-03. Retrieved 2024-01-11.
  23. ^ "Mike Perry Biography". ESPN. Retrieved 2024-08-23.
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