Neha Patil (Editor)

The David Susskind Show

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4.7/10
TV

Country of origin
  
United States

Production company(s)
  
Pamandia

Final episode date
  
1986

Genre
  
Talk show

7.5/10
IMDb

Also known as
  
''Open End (1958-1967)

No. of seasons
  
29

First episode date
  
1958

Presented by
  
David Susskind

Language
  
English

The David Susskind Show httpsiytimgcomviG2frQvUCZ0hqdefaultjpg

Distributor
  
National Telefilm Associates (1961-1973) Metromedia Producers Corporation (1973-1986)

Original network
  
WNTA (1958-1961) Syndicated (1961-1986)

Similar
  
The Boris & Nicole Show, Live with Kelly, The Ricki Lake Show, Forgive or Forget, The Wendy Williams Show

The David Susskind Show was an American television talk show hosted by David Susskind. The program began its existence in 1958 as Open End, and was broadcast by WNTA-TV (now WNET) in New York City. The title referred to the fact that the program continued until Susskind or his guests were too tired to continue late on a Sunday night.

Contents

Sctv vol 1 disc 5 the david susskind show


Overview

Susskind's interview of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, which aired in October 1960, during the height of the Cold War, generated national attention. It is one of the very few talk show telecasts from that long ago that was preserved and can be viewed today.

In 1961, Open End was limited to two hours and went into national syndication. Susskind did a two-hour interview including commercials with Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1963, two months before the civil rights leader delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech. The New York Times reported what it considered the highlight of the interview on its front page: "The civil rights approach of the Kennedy Administration as compared with that of the Eisenhower Administration has merely substituted 'an inadequate approach for a miserable one,' the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. declared yesterday." Few people have seen the video, which belongs to Historic Films Archive, since 1963.

The title of Susskind's talk show was changed from Open End to The David Susskind Show for its telecast on Sunday night, October 2, 1966.

In May 1973, to acknowledge Digestive Disease Week, the show invited three gastroenterologists to discuss therapies for peptic ulcer. Viewer William Dufty had bet that "These three distinguished specialists could go on for the entire ninety minutes without ever mentioning the word sugar." Afterward he noted, "In ninety minutes, they were unable to come up with a single constructive suggestion for the average person to manage their diet in a way that might prevent ulcers."

A December 16, 1981 debate on chiropractic had as participants, among others, Stephen Barrett, a psychiatrist, consumer activist, medical writer and skeptic nowadays mostly known as the webmaster of Quackwatch, and Chester Wilk, a chiropractor who was the plaintiff in Wilk v. American Medical Ass'n.

The show continued until its New York outlet cancelled it in 1986, approximately six months before Susskind died.

References

The David Susskind Show Wikipedia