• January 6 –
CKGN-TV begins broadcasting in
Brantford,
Ontario. • January 31 – CBS airs a multi-Emmy-winning adaptation of
Ernest J. Gaines' novel
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, which follows the 110-year life of a former slave from the Civil War to the
Civil Rights Movement.
Cicely Tyson portrays the title role. • February 1 – KITC (now
KIVI-TV) begins broadcasting in
Boise,
Idaho. • February 2 – The Filipino government television station
GTV 4 (now known as the
People's Television Network) begins operations, under the
National Media Production Center. • February 8 – After 20 years,
The Secret Storm airs its 5195th and final episode on
CBS Daytime. The show is replaced ten days later by
Tattletales, a game show hosted by
Bert Convy. • March 11 – The children's special
Free to Be... You and Me, produced by comedic actress
Marlo Thomas, airs on ABC. • March 13 –
The Execution of Private Slovik airs on NBC. A made-for-television film, it told the story of
Pvt. Eddie Slovik, the only
American soldier to be executed for desertion since the
American Civil War. • March 18 –
Lucille Ball ends her 23-year consecutive television reign when ''
Here's Lucy'' is cancelled. • April 5 – After 264 hour-long episodes,
The Dean Martin Show ends its run on
NBC, then spins off to 10 years of
The Dean Martin Celebrity Roast. • April 6 –
"Waterloo" wins the
Eurovision Song Contest for Sweden and launches
ABBA on their stellar global career. • May 4 – Steve Frame (
George Reinholt) marries Alice Matthews (
Jacqueline Courtney) for the second time on a special hour-long broadcast of
Another World, coinciding with the show's tenth anniversary. • June 8 –
Jon Pertwee makes his final regular appearance as the
Third Doctor in the concluding moments of Part Six of the
Doctor Who serial
Planet of the Spiders.
Tom Baker briefly appears as the
Fourth Doctor at the conclusion of this serial. • August 5 – For the first time on a pre-school children's programme, the
UK show
Inigo Pipkin covers the death of the main character, Inigo, as the actor who played him (
George Woodbridge) had died. The show is renamed
Pipkins. • August 8 – US President
Richard Nixon announces pending resignation (effective August 9) live on television. • September 10 – The controversial TV movie
Born Innocent, starring
Linda Blair, airs on
NBC. The film, which involved a fourteen-year-old being sent to what the television preview deemed a women's prison (when in reality it was a reform school), drew heavy criticism due to an all-female
rape scene, the first ever seen on American television. The scene was deleted in subsequent re-airings after a group of girls assaulted an eight-year-old with a pop bottle, influenced by the scene in the film. • October 6 – ''
Monty Python's Flying Circus'', the popular British sketch comedy which aired its final episode this year, is first shown in the U.S. on
KERA-TV in
Dallas, Texas, at 10pm. • December 28 –
Tom Baker makes his first full appearance as the
Fourth Doctor in the
Doctor Who serial
Robot. • On the American soap opera
Love of Life, Meg Dale (
Tudi Wiggins) calls her son Ben (
Christopher Reeve) a "bastard", the first time a profanity was spoken on American daytime television. ==Programmes==