San Francisco International Airport (TV series)

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San Francisco International Airport
Format Drama
Starring Lloyd Bridges
Country of origin Flag of the United States United States
No. of episodes 7, including the pilot movie
Production
Running time 60 min.
Broadcast
Original channel NBC
Original run TV-movie pilot: September 29, 1970
Regular series: October 28, 1970December 2, 1970
External links
IMDb profile

San Francisco International Airport was a television drama aired in the United States by NBC as a part of its 1970-71 wheel series Four in One.

The series starred Lloyd Bridges as Jim Conrad, the manager of the gigantic San Francisco International Airport, which at the time the series aired was said to be handling over 15,000,000 passengers annually and employing over 35,000 persons. Bob Hatten (Clu Gulager) was his chief of security, an important role at a time when security was beginning to emerge as a real-life major issue in air transport. June (Barbara Werle) was Conrad's secretary. Airport situations drawn from real life were addressed, such as protesting demonstrators, mechanical malfunctions, and similar problems.

San Francisico International Airport was the second program in the Four in One rotation, following McCloud. The six episodes were first shown in order from late October until early December, 1970, and were then replaced in the Wednesday night 10 PM Eastern time slot by Night Gallery. Once Night Gallery and The Psychiatrist had completed their first runs, episodes of all four series were rerun interspersed with each other. Night Gallery was picked up for the next season as a stand-alone series and McCloud was renewed as an element in a new wheel series, NBC Mystery Movie, but San Francisco International Airport and The Psychiatrist were cancelled with no more episodes ordered beyond the initial six.

The pilot for this series, also called San Francisco International Airport or simply San Francisco International, had been aired in the spring as a TV movie before the series premiered. It was largely similar, but starred Pernell Roberts as Conrad rather than Bridges. Despite the fact that critical response was underwhelming, the six episodes that comprised the series were ordered -- with the stipulation that Roberts be replaced in the starring role by Bridges. This pilot was the subject of an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000.

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