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April 27, 1931: Debute of Lum and Abner on NBC

April 27, 1931:  Lum and Abner debuted on NBC. Lum and Abner was created by Chester Lauck and Norris Goff. The program was a American radio network comedy program  and was aired from 1931 to 1954. Lauck and Goff grew up in the small town of Waters, Arkansas. They made a fiction story base on their life experience since they were in their home town. The show attracted most of audience and became one of popular program at that time. Lauck and Goff had known one another since childhood and attended the University of Arkansas together where they both joined the Sigma Chi Fraternity. They performed locally and established a blackface act which led to an audition at radio station KTHS in Hot Springs, Arkansas. Before the audition, the two men decided to change their act and portray two hillbillies, due to the large number of blackface acts already in existence. After only a few show in Hot Springs, they were picked up nationally by NBC. Lum and Abner was sponsored by Qua...

April 25, 1955 Debut of X Minus One

April 24, 1955: On this day in 1955, the old time radio sci fi series,  X-Minus One , made its on-air debut. With adapted short stories by sci fi authors including  Philip K. Dick , Fritz Leiber, J.T. McIntosh,  Robert A. Heinlein , Frederik Pohl and Theodore Sturgeon,  X-Minus One   was arguably the best  sci-fi old time radio show  from the golden age of radio .

April 24, 1959: One Man's Family' airs for the last time

  April 24, 1959: The transmission of One Man's Family , a program that lasted for 27 years on NBC, came to an end.  The broadcast of One Man's Family  was the longest to date, spanning three decades of uninterrupted airtime. The show then moved to television, where it held a prime time spot.