As we all know, during the '70s, many syndicated shows were "bicycled" - meaning the station received the tape, aired it, then sent it on to the next station.
For the once-weekly "checkerboard" shows, which usually only produced somewhere between 26 and 39 episodes per season, it meant taping the whole season in the summer before the scheduled premiere date, then having all the tapes ready for bicycling so it could start everywhere in September.
This meant that episodes were aired at different times in different cities - some cities actually starting with episodes taped toward the end of the run based on what was sent to them.
My question - does anybody know how many "routes" there may have been, and how many copies of each episode were circulating at any given time? I guess a lot of it would depend on how many stations picked the show up. Some of those shows may have only been on 50 or 60 stations.
I've seen by old some old TVGuides that I can detect a pattern between a couple of different markets for a couple of the weekly shows, but I don't have nearly enough out-of-town issues from that time frame to understand how the whole thing worked.
I guess for Monday-Friday shows the station would probably get the whole week at once, then send that whole week off once they finished airing the five shows.
/I remember one episode of "Treasure Hunt" where Geoff Edwards told a contestant "in some of our cities you've already have your baby"
//There was one snowy winter week when the episode of "Break the Bank" scheduled for WKBW never made it to the station because of the weather, and an on-air announcement was made
///If there were multiple copies of all these episodes, you'd figure some of the "missing" shows may still be out there somewhere