The Ankler

The ABC Era: When Hollywood was Hollywood

As questions hang over the future of Disney’s network, photos tell the storied history of a risk-taking underdog

ABC’s road to success began with a Supreme Court lawsuit, NBC vs. the FCC. The court forced NBC to sell one of its radio networks, and in 1943, the NBC Blue Network became ABC, owned by Edward J.Noble, head of the Life Savers Corporation. By the early 1950s, Paramount invested in ABC and a TV player was born. That decade, ABC launched programming no one else was doing like The Walt Disney Anthology and Maverick, starring James Garner. In 1960, Edgar Scherick, first appointed as sports division head, hired a young exec named Roone Arledge, who was shopping a Playboy-style show called For Men Only (Scherick passed on the show, but not the man). Together the two created Monday Night Football and Wide World of Sports — and revolutionized sports. Later, “Arledge was given the news division because they wanted to bring some of the same pizazz and success,” says University of Maine professor and media historian Michael Socolow. (ABC Sports is also where a young Bob Iger landed one of his first jobs in 1976.) The impact of ABC on early popular culture is unmistakable: American Bandstand, Roots, Charlie’s Angels, General Hospital, Happy Days, The Brady Bunch… the list goes on and on. Of course, cable TV, then streaming, would follow, eroding legacy TV’s dominance. Now, in the wake of now-CEO Iger’s remarks in July that the TV business “may not be core” to the company and reports of talks to sell the network, ABC’s next act hangs in the balance.


Happy Days: Ron Howard (left), Henry Winkler, Marion Ross, c. 1975

Roots: Irene Cara (left) and Beah Richards, 1977

“It’d be pretty hard to argue that there’s a more important entertainment show in the history of American television than ‘Roots’. The only other thing that comes to mind is ‘All In The Family.’”

-Socolow

ABC News: Fidel Castro (left) and Lisa Howard, 1963

ABC Sports: Howard Cosell (left) and Muhammad Ali, c. 1970s

The Brady Bunch cast, c. 1973

Peter Jennings (from left), Murphy Martin & Howard Cosell, 1967

The Jackson 5, 1971

Ernest Debs (left), Betty White and Earl J. Hudson, 1957

Don Ho (left) and Tom Jones, 1970

Telly Savalas, 1975

American Bandstand: Bobby Rydell (center) and Dick Clark, 1958

Marcus Welby, M.D.: James Brolin (left) and Robert Young, 1971

Twiggy and Justin de Villeneuve (right), 1967

Charlie’s Angels: From left, Kate Jackson, Jaclyn Smith, Farrah Fawcett, 1977

Marlon Brando (left) and Dick Cavett, 1973

From left: Bill Wyman, Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Brian Jones and Charlie Watts, 1964

Barney Miller: Hal Linden (clockwise from front), Ron Glass, Jack Soo, Max Gail, Greg Sierra, 1974

Walt Disney, 1954

From left: Barbara Walters, Gerald Ford, Betty Ford, 1980

“Walters is the first million dollar network television journalist. That was a huge moment in American television history because, first of all, nobody on TV was getting paid that kind of [salary] on TV news. Second of all, she was the first woman to be an evening news anchor in 1976.”

-Socolow

From left: O.J. Simpson, Don Meredith, Frank Gifford, 1984

Bruce Lee, 1966

“It’s the biggest rumor out there that [Nextstar] is buying ABC for the local TV stations, for the news, for the political advertising next year so the stock price is getting super inflated. It all has to do with the election of 2024. I’m looking at it from the perspective totally of news, not entertainment or anything else. That’s frankly why it’s in play.”

– Socolow

ABC Presidential Election Board, 1948

Roone Alredge (left) and Robert Iger, 1995

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