1963–64 United States network television schedule

The following is the 1963–64 network television schedule for the three major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States. The schedule covers primetime hours from September 1963 through August 1964. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the 1962–63 season.

ABC began its new fall schedule a week early, beating CBS and NBC out of the starting gate. New series debuting this week included sci-fi anthology The Outer Limits, police/lawyer series Arrest and Trial, drama The Fugitive, and game show 100 Grand. ABC also completely revamped its Friday night schedule, with two new series: detective show Burke's Law, sitcom The Farmer's Daughter, and returning boxing program The Fight of the Week. Fight would mark the end of boxing on network television. Weekly boxing telecasts had debuted on network TV in 1940 and had enjoyed a run on all networks at various times, but after September 11, 1964, weekly primetime boxing series would disappear entirely from network television. ABC introduced two variety hours that fall with The Jimmy Dean Show and the short lived The Jerry Lewis Show.

CBS's success with rural comedies The Andy Griffith Show and The Beverly Hillbillies had convinced the network that rural sitcoms would continue to be popular. As a result, CBS president James Aubrey added what some critics described as an "endless procession of country clones [of] the wildly successful Beverly Hillbillies" to the network's schedule. Petticoat Junction, from the same producers of Hillbillies, debuted on September 24. CBS also brought two show business veterans to weekly variety television that year with The Judy Garland Show and The Danny Kaye Show.

Westerns continued to be popular on television, and all three networks scheduled several Western series. NBC, in particular, retained a number of Westerns on its fall 1963 schedule: two returning series The Virginian and Bonanza, and new series Temple Houston, and Redigo. NBC's Western-heavy schedule would pay off, as Bonanza again became the second highest-rated TV series in the Nielsen ratings that year; The Virginian reached #17. CBS's Gunsmoke reached #20. However, some Westerns from the previous season was cancelled, some examples are Laramie and Empire, which due to low ratings.

On July 17, 1963, NBC removed The Robert Taylor Show from the lineup due to conflicts between the producers and the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.

All times are Eastern and Pacific. New fall series are highlighted in bold.

Each of the 30 highest-rated shows is listed with its rank and rating as determined by Nielsen Media Research.

Two historical and landmark events occurred during this network TV season. The first was the JFK Assassination, which took place on Friday, November 22, 1963. Many programs that were originally scheduled to air on that weekend on all three networks (and on the day of the assassination) on prime time had to be pushed back to the following weekend due to all three networks doing news coverage that would last until November 26.

The second event was the live American debut of The Beatles on the Ed Sullivan Show on February 9, 1964. An estimated 73 million people tuned in to watch the Fab Four perform on the program, which made it one of the highest rated TV episodes in the history of prime time television.


 * Yellow indicates the top 10 programs for the season.
 * Cyan indicates the top 20 programs for the season.
 * Magenta indicates the top 30 programs for the season.

Sunday
Notes: Mister Ed aired on CBS from 6:30 to 7 p.m. 100 Grand only lasted three weeks, and was replaced by Laughs For Sale, which ran until December 1963. In April 1964, The Celebrity Game was added to CBS' primetime lineup. Empire on ABC consisted of reruns of the 1962-63 NBC TV series. Brenner on CBS consisted of ten new episodes — the first produced for the show since 1959 — followed by reruns of episodes first aired in 1959 and 1961.

Monday
Notes: Beginning in September, CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (formerly Walter Cronkite with the News) and The Huntley-Brinkley Report expanded to a half-hour, airing weekdays at 6:30 p.m. Vacation Playhouse was an anthology series made up entirely of unsold television pilots.

Tuesday
Note: The 1964 CBS summer series High Adventure with Lowell Thomas consisted of reruns of specials which had aired under that title during the late 1950s. In January 1964, Redigo was cancelled and replaced with You Don't Say!.

Thursday
Note: Ensign O'Toole on ABC consisted of reruns of the 1962-1963 NBC situation comedy. On NBC, The Robert Taylor Show was supposed to air at 7:30-8:30, but it was never aired and replaced by Temple Houston on the schedule at the last minute.

Friday
Note:  77 Sunset Strip on ABC ended February 7, 1964, replaced the next week by Destry. On December 6, 1963, The Farmer's Daughter was put on another day and timeslot, and put The Price Is Right at 9:30pm.

Saturday
Notes: ABC-TV Presents: The Hollywood Palace debuted on January 4, 1964, replacing The Jerry Lewis Show.

On CBS, Summer Playhouse was a summer anthology series consisting of unsold television pilots.

ABC
Returning Series
 * 77 Sunset Strip
 * ABC News Reports
 * The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet
 * The Avengers
 * Ben Casey
 * Combat!
 * The Donna Reed Show
 * The Fight of the Week
 * Hootenanny
 * The Lawrence Welk Show
 * Make That Spare
 * McHale's Navy
 * My Three Sons
 * The Price is Right
 * Wagon Train

New Series
 * 100 Grand
 * Arrest and Trial
 * Breaking Point
 * Burke's Law
 * Channing
 * Destry *
 * The Edie Adams Show
 * The Farmer's Daughter
 * The Fugitive
 * The Greatest Show on Earth
 * The Hollywood Palace *
 * The Jerry Lewis Show
 * The Jimmy Dean Show
 * Laughs For Sale
 * Let's Make a Deal
 * The Outer Limits
 * The Patty Duke Show
 * Saga of Western Man
 * The Sid Caesar Show
 * The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters

Not returning from 1962–63:
 * Alcoa Premiere
 * Beany and Cecil
 * Bell and Howell Closeup
 * Cheyenne
 * The Dakotas
 * The Gallant Men
 * Going My Way
 * Hawaiian Eye
 * Hollywood Special
 * Howard K. Smith: News and Comment
 * I'm Dickens, He's Fenster
 * The Jetsons
 * Leave It to Beaver
 * Mr. Smith Goes to Washington
 * Naked City
 * Our Man Higgins
 * The Rifleman
 * The Roy Rogers and Dale Evans Show
 * Stoney Burke
 * The Untouchables
 * The Valiant Years

CBS
Returning Series
 * The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
 * The Andy Griffith Show
 * The Beverly Hillbillies
 * Brenner
 * Candid Camera
 * CBS Reports
 * The Danny Thomas Show
 * The Defenders
 * The Dick Van Dyke Show
 * The Ed Sullivan Show
 * The Garry Moore Show
 * Gunsmoke
 * High Adventure with Lowell Thomas
 * I've Got a Secret
 * The Jack Benny Show
 * The Jackie Gleason Show
 * Lassie
 * The Lucy Show
 * Mister Ed
 * The Nurses
 * Password
 * Perry Mason
 * Rawhide
 * Route 66
 * Suspense
 * To Tell the Truth
 * The Twentieth Century
 * Twilight Zone
 * Vacation Playhouse
 * What's My Line

New Series
 * Chronicle *
 * The Danny Kaye Show
 * East Side/West Side
 * Glynis
 * The Great Adventure
 * The Judy Garland Show
 * Made in America *
 * My Favorite Martian
 * The New Phil Silvers Show
 * On Broadway Tonight *
 * Petticoat Junction
 * Slattery's People
 * Summer Playhouse *
 * Tell It to the Camera *

Not returning from 1962–63:
 * Dennis the Menace
 * Eyewitness
 * Fair Exchange
 * Have Gun - Will Travel
 * GE True
 * The Keefe Brasselle Show
 * The Lloyd Bridges Show
 * The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis
 * The New Loretta Young Show
 * The Real McCoys
 * Stump the Stars
 * The United States Steel Hour
 * Walter Cronkite with the News

NBC
Returning Series
 * The Alfred Hitchcock Hour (moved from CBS)
 * The Andy Williams Show
 * The Bell Telephone Hour
 * Bonanza
 * Dr. Kildare
 * The DuPont Show of the Week
 * The Eleventh Hour
 * Hazel
 * International Showtime
 * The Jack Paar Program
 * The Joey Bishop Show
 * Perry Como's Kraft Music Hall
 * Sing Along with Mitch
 * NBC Monday Night at the Movies
 * NBC Saturday Night at the Movies
 * The Virginian
 * Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color

New Series
 * Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theatre
 * Chrysler Presents a Bob Hope Special *
 * Espionage
 * Grindl
 * Harry's Girls
 * Hollywood and the Stars
 * Kraft Suspense Theatre
 * Mr. Novak
 * On Parade *
 * Redigo **
 * The Richard Boone Show
 * Temple Houston
 * That Was the Week That Was *
 * You Don't Say! *

Not returning from 1962–63:
 * Car 54, Where Are You?
 * Chet Huntley Reporting
 * David Brinkley's Journal
 * The Dick Powell Show
 * Don't Call Me Charlie!
 * Du Pont Show of the Week
 * Empire
 * Ensign O’Toole
 * The Huntley–Brinkley Report
 * It's a Man's World
 * Laramie
 * The Lively Ones
 * Saints and Sinners
 * Sam Benedict
 * Wide Country

Note: The * indicates that the program was introduced in midseason. The ** indicates that the program ran only for a partial season.