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A spreadsheet that I started on last March listing the dates when each episode of Strange Paradise originally aired in the United States and in Canada. The dates listed in red are currently unconfirmed, but I hope to confirm them eventually in my research. Sources are included, as are notes.
This was actually more complicated to make than it may appear, because I had to do a lot of detective work comparing episode summaries from the Lincoln Journal Star to the events in each episode to determine the premiere dates for the U.S. markets that started broadcasting SP the week of September 15, 1969. (I found the summaries describing Episodes 130-132 and worked forward and backward from there.) Back during the lockdown, I signed up for a free trial of Newspapers.com and pulled an all-nighter matching the summaries from the Sunday papersā TV guides to individual episodes.
I should also note that this is not an exhaustive list of every single original airdate on every channel. On the Cleveland TV network WKBF, whose short broadcast of SP we have already examined in depth, the show vanished from the air after eleven weeks, only to return a month later only a week ahead of the Canadian broadcasts. I have a separate spreadsheet for WKBF airdates here. Likewise, many U.S. channels dropped the show early. So think of the dates on the first spreadsheet as rough guidelines of when the episodes aired in most markets.
Essay: The Broadcast History of Strange Paradise on WKBF-TV (Cleveland, OH)
WARNING: This essay contains spoilers for several episodes of Strange Paradise, the latest being Episode 94. If you do not wish to be spoiled, disable images and reload.
When Krantz Filmsā now-obscure Gothic soap Strange Paradise premiered in the United States in September 1969, the companyās president Steve Krantz expected it to be a hit much like the similar, wildly popular serial Dark Shadows. āYou thought every possible idea for a daytime drama had already been used?ā one copywriter wrote in a trade magazine.Ā āHow about Colin Fox playing the dual role of a millionaire industrialist and his 300-years-dead ancestor, in a show set in the Caribbean, involving voodoo? Donāt laugh. Wait until you see the ratings.ā Despite this initial optimism, Strange Paradiseās ratings failed to live up to anyoneās expectations, leading to an early cancellation in most American markets. The Cleveland, Ohio station WKBF-TV (Channel 61), an ultra-high frequency (UHF) channel owned by Kaiser Broadcasting, was no exception. The broadcast history of Strange Paradise in Cleveland provides a typical example of the quick decline and premature cancellation that the show saw on most networks that carried it in the United States.
In this essay, we will use the Cleveland newspaper The Plain Dealer to trace the short broadcast history of Strange Paradise on WKBF-TV from its beginnings in the 7 p.m. prime-time slot to its cancellation. After that, we will examine an anecdotal account of a second run of the showās first arc in 1971 and determine whether the series aired again in Cleveland during that year.
Strange Paradise in The Plain Dealer
Banner advertisements for Strange Paradise from the Friday, September 12, 1969 issue of The Plain Dealer (pp. 107, 110, and 118, respectively).[1]
In the lead-up to its premiere on Monday, September 15, 1969, Kaiser Broadcasting promoted Strange Paradise heavily in the Friday, September 12 issue of The Plain Dealer. Banners appeared at the bottom of the television scheduleās pages, referencing the showās voodoo theme and encouraging the newspaperās readers to āmeet Quito and Raxl,ā two of the showās major characters. The Selections section of The Plain Dealerās Friday TV guides ran episode summaries to entice viewers to tune in. The show aired in the 7 pm timeslot, pitting it against Gilliganās Island, Truth or Consequences, and other popular programs.
Excerpt from the TV schedule for Monday, September 15, 1969, from The Plain Dealer (September 12, 1969), p. 110. In this listing and all subsequent others, the listings for WKBF/Kaiser/Channel 61 appear in the far right column.
Summary of the pilot episode from the same issue, p. 117. The timeslot is listed inaccurately as 7:30 pm.
In theory, Strange Paradiseās original timeslot put it in a position to get good ratings. Bryan Gruszka writes that āinitially, the series enjoyed strong ratings,ā but this seems unlikely to be the case in Cleveland. As a UHF channel, many televisions (particularly older sets) did not pick up reception from Kaiser, leaving the viewership low for all of its programs compared to the very-high frequency (VHF) āBig Threeā networks of NBC (Channel 3/WKYC), ABC (Channel 5/WEWS), and CBS (Channel 8/WJW).[2] Every one of the Top 30 highest-rated programs of the 1969-1970 season aired on the Big Three television networks, further suggesting a low viewership for WKBF and other UHF channels. Disappointed by the showās ratings, Kaiser moved it to daytime and scheduled Star Trek reruns in its place, which attracted far more prime-time viewers.[3]
3 pm listings from the TV schedule for September 29, 1969, from The Plain Dealer (September 29, 1969), p. 39.
Episode 11 summary from the same page.
Strange Paradise made the move to daytime television by Monday, September 29, when WKBF rescheduled it at 3 pm. In this new timeslot, it competed against two other soap operas, Another World (NBC) and General Hospital (ABC), which attracted 9.6 million and 8.5 million viewers, respectively, during the 1969-1970 season. Ratings for Strange Paradise do not appear on the list of soap opera ratings for this season, although it aired on the Big Three networks in some other markets. Because of this, it is impossible to know exactly how it fared against its competitors, but it most likely attracted few viewers.
During this period, episode summaries continued to run on the Selections pages of the weekly TV guides released on Fridays. Many of these are identical or nearly identical to the āLost Episodeā summaries from the Newport Daily News and The Fitchburg Sentinel documented on Curt Ladnierās blog Maljardin: Tales from the Desmond Family Crypt. These summaries described early drafts of the episodes before the showās producers mandated major rewrites, meaning that the events described in the listings did not correspond to the plots of the broadcasted episodes. Notable changes included the death of one character whom the summaries indicated originally remained alive, the omission of a flashback nightmare sequence about another characterās previous incarnation, and the focus of the main plotline shifting to the discovery of a mysterious black rabbit with a bloodied locket around its neck (which the summaries do not mention). The āLost Episodeā summaries continued through Episode 50, after which the published descriptions once again accurately reflected the episodesā contents.
Summary of the original Episode 36, from āMonday Selections,ā The Plain Dealer (October 31, 1969), p. 121. The description nearly matches thisĀ āLost Episodeā summary on Ladnierās blog.
The original Episode 37 ("Tuesday Selections,ā p. 125). The description is similar to the one discussed in this post, save that this version indicates that Holly is unaware of the Templeās purpose.
Episode 46 (āMonday Selections,ā The Plain Dealer (November 14, 1969), p. 84).
Episode 50 (āFriday Selections,ā The Plain Dealer (November 21,1969), p. 76).
In early December, the series disappeared from Channel 61ā²s schedule, most likely because it struggled to compete against General Hospital and Another World for viewers. The show is absent from the "Television Today" guides as early as Tuesday, December 2, although summaries for that week's episodes appeared in the weekly guide from the previous Friday's issue and the other schedules from the same week still listed it in its 3 p.m. timeslot. The paper for Tuesday, December 9 included a summary corresponding to the plot of Episode 62, despite Strange Paradiseās replacement with The Huckleberry Hound Show. By the release of the Friday, December 12 paper, the show no longer appeared in neither the TV schedules nor the selections, indicating its cancellation.
Episode 62 summary fromĀ āTuesdayās Selections,ā The Plain Dealer (December 9, 1969), p. 30.
The revised schedule for 3 pm, according to the schedule on the same page. Note āHuck Houndā in the far right column.
After a month of absence, Strange Paradise returned to the channel on Monday, December 29 in the new timeslot of 11 pm. Airing resumed with Episode 56, which may indicate that Episode 55 was the last to air the previous year. Over the course of the next two months, WKBF broadcast the conclusion of Maljardin, the seriesā first 65-episode arc, and began showing the second arc, the overtly Dark Shadows-inspired Desmond Hall.
However, the showās viewers would not get to watch Desmond Hall through to its conclusion. On February 10, 1970, television columnist William Hickey wrote, āāStrange Paradise,ā the strangely bubbling soaper, will disappear from Channel 61 tomorrow night at 11 and will be replaced by reruns ofĀ āAlfred Hitchcock Presents.āā[4] This cancellation coincided with the introduction of the character Agatha Pruitt and the beginning of a new subplot centered around her blackmail and attempted seduction of protagonist Jean Paul Desmond, leaving that plot unresolved, not to mention the second arcās overarching plot about the mysterious disappearance of Jean Paulās brother Philip.
Summary of Episode 87, the last episode confirmed to have aired on WKBF, fromĀ āTuesdayās Selections,ā The Plain Dealer (February 6, 1970), p. 95.
Nevertheless, episode summaries of Strange Paradise continued to run in the highlights sections of the paperās TV guides over the next week. The last episode summary to appear in The Plain Dealer describes the plot of Episode 94 and is noticeably more detailed than most previous summaries:
Summary of Episode 94, originally scheduled to air on Thursday, February 19, 1970. From āThursdayās Selections,ā The Plain Dealer (February 13, 1970), p. 103.
Strange Paradiseās run on WKBF ended abruptly in the middle of the second arc, leaving all of its plots unresolved and many viewers uncertain of the fates of Jean Paul, Agatha, Raxl, and others. WKBF-TV would disappear from the airwaves in 1975, leaving Cleveland-area fans unable to watch the series again until its release on VHS in the 1990s. That is unless an anecdote about its first arc re-airing in the Cleveland area is true.
A Second Run?
After Strange Paradise finished its original run in May 1970, a handful of stations available in the United States, including Canadian and Mexican stations based near the borders, rebroadcast it in syndication. It is possible that WKBF may have also rebroadcast it, but we have only anecdotal evidence. In a 2007 post on the Strangeparadise2 Yahoo! Group, user Larry M. (larmic1) claimed to have watched syndicated re-runs of the seriesā first arc in 1971. He wrote,
I was living in Cleveland, Ohio [in 1971], and the "new" show came on about 7 or 7:30pm weeknights, so that leads me to believe it was syndicated. I believe that time is also when I used to watch Strange Paradise, so the station was obviously after that audience. It was just such a surprise when I finally came across the show after coming home from winter break from college, and totally pissed that I pretty much had missed the whole series! It was probably on for all of 3-4 months total. Seems like nobody else watched it either!
If the show did indeed air again in Cleveland in 1971, no evidence exists of its rebroadcast in The Plain Dealerās listings. Here is an excerpt from the evening schedule for Wednesday, January 6, 1971:
And here is another from Tuesday, December 28 of the same year:
Although the schedule writers abbreviated the names of most shows, one can still tell in most cases what shows they refer to: āJeannieā must be I Dream of Jeannie, āHoganā Hoganās Heroes, etc. (It helps that many of these shows are still well-known today, largely because of re-runs on various networks.) Given that neither Strange Paradise, any abbreviations of its title, nor anything to the effect ofĀ āIsland of Evilā appear in these listings, one can safely conclude that no Cleveland-based stations re-ran the show during that period.
Even so, evidence exists that residents of northeast Ohio could tune into broadcasts from the Windsor, Ontario-based Canadian station CKLW-TV in the early 1970s. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) records from the 1970s indicate that CKLW-TV, based near the Ontario-Michigan border, was available in the Cleveland-Lorain-Akron market on Channel 9 in 1972 and possibly earlier as well. Larry M. most likely would have viewed Strange Paradise on this Canadian channel in 1971. However, even this is doubtful, because, thus far, we have been unable to uncover any evidence of its re-airing in 1971 on CKLW or any other Ontario channels.
Conclusion
For five months from September 1969 to February 1970, the Gothic serial Strange Paradise aired on WKBF-TV (Channel 61) in the Cleveland area. Premiering at 7 p.m. on September 15 after heavy promotion, it changed time slots twice--first in the same daytime slot as two more popular soaps and then in the late night--before its cancellation on February 11. Part of the show was allegedly re-broadcast the following year, but thusfar no evidence exists of listings of Strange Paradise on any channels based in the Great Lakes region in 1971. Although it quickly fell into obscurity in northeast Ohio, Larry M.ās post is evidence that it had local fans and that, even long after its cancellation, it was not forgotten.
Notes
[1] All clippings from The Plain Dealer come from the NewsBank InfoWeb database Historical Cleveland Plain Dealer (1845-1991). They are all reproduced under fair use for the purpose of education.
[2] Many people alive in this era, the authorās parents (born 1964) included, insist that āthere were only three channelsā in Cleveland in the late 1960s and early 1970s. This attests to the obscurity of Channel 61.
[3] According to Wikipedia, āthe most popular and most profitable program on WKBF were syndicated reruns of the original Star Trek. It was well known that WKBF had rebroadcast the entire 79-episode original series in the exact order of play that had been originally shown on NBC when it aired on that network, and had also paid out of its own pocket for the special high-contrast black-and-white prints of the show in order to do so. In another bold move for the times, the show also ran in its original length, without additional editing for commercials.ā
[4] William Hickey, "Tony Winners Promise a CBS Drama Delight," The Plain Dealer (February 10, 1970), p. 20 (6-B).
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Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
ā Live Streamingā Interactive Chatā Private Showsā HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming