• January 20 –
John F. Kennedy is the first
U.S. president to be inaugurated with a color telecast.
NBC covers the inauguration in color. • January 25 • John F. Kennedy holds the first live televised presidential press conference. •
Danger Man (United Kingdom) (1960–1961, 1964–1966) is cancelled due to lack of interest from Australian broadcasters. The series will be revived later. • February 19 –
CFTM-TV, future flagship station of Quebec's
TVA network, begins broadcasting in Montreal. • March 1 –
Venevision officially renamed from
Televisa of Venezuela. • April 11 – The
Eichmann trial is the first televised trial, shown on a one-day delay basis in the U.S. with videotape flown in daily from Jerusalem. • April 24 – The world's television cameras record the Swedish warship
Vasa break surface in
Stockholm harbor as she is raised from the seabed for the first time since she sank on her maiden voyage in 1628. • April 29 •
Westward Television, the first
ITV franchise for
South West England, begins broadcasting. •
Wide World of Sports debuts on the
American Broadcasting Company. • May 5 –
Alan B. Shepard is the first U.S. astronaut in space aboard the spacecraft
Freedom 7 in a 15-min.
suborbital flight. The launch is watched by 45 million U.S. viewers. • May 9 – In a speech on "
Television and the Public Interest" to the
National Association of Broadcasters in the United States,
Federal Communications Commission chairman
Newton N. Minow describes commercial television programming as a "vast wasteland" and tells the broadcasters that they could do a better job of serving the public. • May 29 –
Dave Garroway announces his decision to quit the
Today show on
NBC in the United States. • July 1 – The
soap opera series
The Brighter Day airs its first episode after taping locations are moved from
New York City to
Los Angeles. As a result, key character Babby Dennis and her love interest are written out of the series: the actors who played them didn't want to relocate. • July 21 – Dicon Television Canal 11, as predecessor for
Telefe, a major
television network in
Argentina, starts its first official regular broadcasting service from
Buenos Aires. • September 1 –
Border Television, the ITV franchise for the English-Scottish Border and
Isle of Man, begins broadcasting. • September 21 – In France, the
Organisation de l'armée secrète (OAS) slips an anti-
de Gaulle message into TV programming. • September 23 –
NBC begins its long-running
NBC Saturday Night at the Movies participating, with a broadcast of the 1953
Marilyn Monroe picture
How to Marry a Millionaire. • September 30 –
Grampian Television, the ITV franchise for
North East Scotland, begins broadcasting. • October 1 –
CTV Television Network (CTV) is launched in Canada, the first privately owned network in the country. • October 29 –
DZBB-TV Channel 7, the fourth television station in the
Philippines owned by
Republic Broadcasting System (modern-day
GMA Network) of American war correspondent Robert "Uncle Bob" Stewart, is launched after the success of radio station
DZBB. • November 4 –
Radiotelevisione italiana's second television channel, Rete 2 (later named
Rai 2), first broadcasts to 52% of the available households in
Italy. • November 19 –
Lucille Ball marries
Gary Morton in New York City. • December 15 –
Sam and Friends broadcasts its last episode in the United States. • December 31 •
Telefís Éireann (later known as RTÉ) starts television broadcasts, bringing television to
Ireland for the first time. •
KBS1, a major television station in
South Korea, starts its first regular broadcasting service from
Seoul. •
WBNB airs the first television broadcast in the
Virgin Islands. (The station would be destroyed by
Hurricane Hugo in 1989.) •
Prudencia Grifell (born 1879 in Spain) makes the first of many Mexican
telenovela appearances in
Niebla. ==Debuts==