[quote name=\'Jimmy Owen\' date=\'Mar 8 2005, 12:06 AM\'][quote name=\'uncamark\' date=\'Mar 7 2005, 05:52 PM\']
However, the music credits instead list "The New Donahue Theme," which was written by Mike Post when the show moved to New York in the 80s, even though that is definitely *not* the music heard in the clip. Strange, considering that Universal, the studio that released the film, owns "Donahue." All I can guess is that the records may've gotten lost in transferring from Multimedia to Universal to Studios USA back to Universal.
Meanwhile, the guy in Cincinnati who wrote that music won't see a penny of royalties for its 5-second use in the film while Mike Post gots more money he doesn't really need. LIfe ain't fair sometimes...
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Didn't "The Phil Donahue Show" use the Herb Alpert tune "A Banda" during the AVCO station years, or were my ears deceiving me? If so, I believe Universal controls the A&M catalog..
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"A Banda" was the original theme music for Donahue as a local Dayton show, on the Avco WLW stations and the beginning of syndication. A year or so after they started national syndication, they switched to a soundalike of "A Banda" (presumably Alpert wanted more money). When they moved to Chicago, they went to the original theme from the guy in Cincinnati, Multimedia's TV headquarters. And went they went to New York, Mike Post wrote their final theme.
Sorta ObGameShow: Donahue had an audience because the station had already booked audiences for the show he replaced, hosted by some guy named Johnny Gilbert, and didn't want to cancel them. The Dayton Women's Club groups filing into WLW-D that first morning in 1968 were probably expecting a few songs and a few innocuous little games and prizes, not Madelyn Murray O'Hair discussing being an atheist.