Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q17069713> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 30 of
30
with 100 triples per page.
- Q17069713 subject Q7163599.
- Q17069713 subject Q8165944.
- Q17069713 subject Q8165946.
- Q17069713 subject Q8660982.
- Q17069713 subject Q8787756.
- Q17069713 subject Q9444004.
- Q17069713 abstract "Template:ForTemplate:ForMonitor was an NBC newsmagazine series which premiered on April 12, 1983. NBC News created this series as a platform to possibly challenge the success of CBS's 60 Minutes. After being initially broadcast on Saturdays at 10 P.M. Eastern time, the show was moved to Sundays at 7 P.M. Eastern time for its second season, going head-to-head with "60", and renamed First Camera.Production was based in Washington, DC, with offices in the Tenley Circle area immediately east of NBC's Nebraska Avenue studios. Lloyd Dobyns, the show's anchor, appeared on a stark white, modernistic set. In the absence of a theme composed especially for the show, producers opted to use the opening minute of "Piano Concerto No. 1 In D-Flat Major, Op. 10: I Allegro brioso" by Sergei Prokofiev, feeling that it added gravitas to the show—something they hoped would set them apart from ABC's lightweight 20/20. In test audiences (including one in which future NBC anchor Sarah James was a college student), the show did not test well, but producers refused to change the format. The first episode featured an extended story on Bobby Czyz, a light heavyweight boxer from New Jersey. The show placed last in its time period in national ratings in its debut and was one of the least-watched programs in all of prime time.Monitor failed to attract viewers. The Prokofiev score brought complaints and was compared to a funeral dirge.Despite attempts to add anchors to broaden its appeal, new theme music and changing the title to First Camera, the changes failed to draw in viewers, and its new time slot only damaged ratings further; seeing no hope of successfully competing against the powerhouse 60 Minutes, 7 percent of NBC affiliates declined to carry the revamped show, and it was further hurt by frequent pre-emptions due to football runovers. As a result, First Camera was removed from the NBC schedule several months after the makeover, its last episode airing April 1, 1984.".
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q1081491.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q13974.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q1408.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q1684600.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q197867.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q201676.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q247869.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q3246270.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q43380.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q49481.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q61.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q6662388.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q7163599.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q727228.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q7699926.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q8165944.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q8165946.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q847520.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q8660982.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q8787756.
- Q17069713 wikiPageWikiLink Q9444004.
- Q17069713 comment "Template:ForTemplate:ForMonitor was an NBC newsmagazine series which premiered on April 12, 1983. NBC News created this series as a platform to possibly challenge the success of CBS's 60 Minutes. After being initially broadcast on Saturdays at 10 P.M. Eastern time, the show was moved to Sundays at 7 P.M.".
- Q17069713 label "Monitor (U.S. TV series)".