American Journal

American Journal
Genre Television news magazine
Presented by Nancy Glass (1993–1997)
Michele Dabney-Perez (1997–1998)
Charles Perez (1997–1998)
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
Production
Executive producer(s) Charles King
Henry Winkler
Location(s) The Prospect Studios, Hollywood Center, Burbank (1993-1994)
Hollywood Center Studios, Hollywood Center, New York City (1994-1998)
Running time 2224 minutes
Production company(s)
Release
Original network Syndication
Original release September 6, 1993 – 1998 (1998)

American Journal (alternately titled American Journal: Coast to Coast for its final season; also known as AJ) is a syndicated television newsmagazine program that ran from 1993 to 1998. The series was distributed by King World Productions. It was hosted by Nancy Glass from its fall 1993 launch until 1997, when siblings Michele Dabney-Perez and former newscaster-turned-talk show host Charles Perez took over for the show's final season on air. The show's tagline was "Stories Worth Watching".

History

The show was launched in 1993. In early 1996, as an attempt to grow in the 18-34 demographic, the show tried then aborted plans to add an "Off the Hook" segment; King World would try again with "Team A.J." coverage strands in the fourth season helmed by Karen Duffy and Steve Santagati.[2] By 1996, it was cleared on 124 stations serving 86 percent of the United States.[2]

The theme song throughout the show's run was an arrangement of the Shaker tune "Simple Gifts."

In the fall of 1997, 11 of the stations owned by Belo Corporation picked up the syndicated Hollywood Squares for 1998; many displaced American Journal, moving it to late nights.[3] It ran from the fall of 1993 to the end of the 1997-1998 television season. At the time of its cancellation, it had a 4.1 rating and 11 share (in February 1998).[4] The low ratings were chalked up to a glut of similar programs, such as Inside Edition (which was also distributed by King World and is currently distributed by CBS Television Distribution), and the since-cancelled A Current Affair, and Hard Copy. While King World already had commitments from stations serving 62 percent of the country to carry AJ in 1998, low ratings led to the show's cancellation.

On-air staff

Anchors

Correspondents

This film, television or video-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it with reliably sourced additions.

Les Trent, New York; Stacey Gualandi, Los Angeles; Rhonda Guess, Los Angeles; Kit Hoover, New York; Jonathan Karsh, Los Angeles.

References

  1. "KING WORLD'S 'AMERICAN JOURNAL' GETS A 'FIRM GO' AND RACKS UP ADDITIONAL MARKET CLEARANCE" (Press release). King World Productions. PRNewswire. October 16, 1992. Retrieved May 21, 2015 via The Free Library.
  2. 1 2 Spring, Greg. "King World's 'AJ' gets hip to young viewers." Electronic Media 15 July 1996: 4-5.
  3. Spring, Greg. "Strong 'Squares' to block 'American Journal'." Electronic Media 20 October 1997: 2.
  4. "Briefly noted." Electronic Media 23 March 1998: 22.

External links

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