From September 1972 through August 1973, NBC aired the science fiction television series Search at 10 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday nights. The programme was called Search. It aired for a total of 23 episodes, excluding the pilot feature that was formerly titled Probe and ran for two hours. Because of an already running series with the same name on PBS, the title had to be altered when the project was greenlit for series production. The series was shown in the United Kingdom on BBC 1 under the moniker Search Control. Leslie Stevens was the brains behind the show, and she was also responsible for its production together with Robert Justman, John Strong, and Tony Spinner. The high idea was defined as "science fiction in today's world," and the episodes incorporated a large number of high-tech features that are regarded standard in contemporary science fiction television series.
Read full
From September 1972 through August 1973, NBC aired the science fiction television series Search at 10 p.m. Eastern Time on Wednesday nights. The programme was called Search. It aired for a total of 23 episodes, excluding the pilot feature that was formerly titled Probe and ran for two hours. Because of an already running series with the same name on PBS, the title had to be altered when the project was greenlit for series production. The series was shown in the United Kingdom on BBC 1 under the moniker Search Control. Leslie Stevens was the brains behind the show, and she was also responsible for its production together with Robert Justman, John Strong, and Tony Spinner. The high idea was defined as "science fiction in today's world," and the episodes incorporated a large number of high-tech features that are regarded standard in contemporary science fiction television series.
Discussion