• January 1 – The final
cigarette advertisements are televised in the United States, with the final one occurring during that evening's broadcast of
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson on
NBC. • January 3 –
BBC Open University broadcasts begin in the
UK. • January 12 –
CBS airs the first episode of
All in the Family, with a disclaimer at the beginning of the program warning viewers about potentially offensive content. Within a year, it became television's most popular program, and started a trend toward realism in
situation comedies. • January 27 –
Valerie Barlow is electrocuted by a faulty hairdryer, and then perishes in a house fire on
Coronation Street. • February 23 –
The Selling of the Pentagon documentary airs on
CBS. • March 2 – On an
All in the Family episode,
Archie and
Edith get brand new next-door neighbors—
Michael and
Gloria's best friend,
Lionel Jefferson (played by
Mike Evans) and his parents. The episode marks
Isabel Sanford's first appearance as
Louise Jefferson; George Jefferson would not be depicted on-screen until
1973 (by
Sherman Hemsley). • March 11 –
ABC cancels
The Lawrence Welk Show after sixteen years on the network. The show, however, returns to the airwaves in
syndication in September, where it would run for another eleven years. • March 16 -
CBS releases its schedule for the fall 1971 season, adding new shows with urban/suburban appeal and cancelling what
Pat Buttram would later call "every show that had a tree in it," among them Buttram's
Green Acres,
The Beverly Hillbillies, and
Mayberry R.F.D. Two other victims of CBS' "
rural purge,"
Lassie and
Hee Haw, would continue in first-run
syndication that fall. • April 3 –
RTÉ launches
Color television in Ireland with the
Eurovision Song Contest 1971, held in Dublin. • April 4 -
PBS airs
Peter Paul and Mary's "The Song is Love" movie documentary, directed by the most unlikely of people,
horror movie's
Tobe Hooper. • June 7 – The UK children's magazine show
Blue Peter buries a
time capsule in the grounds of
BBC Television Centre; it would be unearthed on the first episode of the year 2000. • August 1 - The much-acclaimed 6-hour BBC
miniseries The Six Wives of Henry VIII, starring
Keith Michell as
Henry, makes its U.S. premiere; CBS would air it over 6 consecutive Sundays through September 5. • September 13 – U.S. network prime time programming shrinks as the original
Prime Time Access Rule takes effect. NBC, unable to take advantage, immediately feels the pinch and fails to win any of the 1971–72 season's first thirteen weeks. • October 2 –
Soul Train debuts in syndication. • October 21 – One-off
drama Edna, the Inebriate Woman, starring
Patricia Hayes, is shown by
BBC One in its
Play for Today slot. • November – Top-rated
As the World Turns loses the #1 slot in the daytime
Nielsens for the first time since 1959. •
Michael Zaslow first appears as Roger Thorpe on
The Guiding Light. ==Programs==