The Needle Shop

The Needle Shop was an early United States television program which aired on the DuMont Television Network in a 15-minute timeslot at 2:30pm ET weekdays. The program aired on New York City television station WABD from 1948 to 1949.

The Needle Shop
StarringAlice Burrows
Country of origin United States
Production
Running time15 minutes
Release
Original networkDuMont Television Network
Original release1948 
1949

Broadcast history

This series is significant as representing part of WABD's daytime experiment. While not the first with daytime programming, the station was the first to introduce a schedule which began in the morning and continued through to the end of prime-time, at a time when daytime and afternoon broadcasting was heavy on test patterns.

The series was about sewing, and was hosted by Alice Burrows, who was age 62 when she started appearing on the series. She was described in a news article as "pretty, silvery-haired and bristling with energy".[1]

According to the book What Women Watched: Daytime Television in the 1950s (University of Texas Press, 2005) by Marsha Cassidy, the DuMont daytime schedule beginning in January 1949 was:

Preservation status

As with most DuMont series, no episodes are known to exist, as live local shows were very rarely kinescoped for many years. Additionally, 1940s daytime television series are poorly preserved as a whole, with only a few scattered kinescopes known to be held by television archives (one of which, an experimental one-off telecast of the Breakfast Club radio show, aired on WABD).

Reception

Billboard magazine felt a younger and more attractive host would have been a better choice, but also stated that Burrows "obviously knows her stuff" and that the series "might prove of value".[2]

gollark: Its virtual machine has 17 registers, because sticking to sensible numbers is for other people.
gollark: PotatOS not-really-machine-code™ 0.0.0.1 is here, and it has one instruction, which prints "hello world".
gollark: What are they saying, "can y"?
gollark: Oh, is ruby still a language which exists?
gollark: It's not in the excellent heavpoot style.

See also

References

  1. "Billboard". Books.google.com.au. 1948-11-13. p. 18. Retrieved 2016-07-27.

One Stop Shop

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