Castleman and Podrazik point out that although the three networks had added generally well-made public-affairs and news programs to their schedules, there were "too many of them and their sheer number diluted the audience and stretched resources far too thin to allow quality productions each week".
[1] CBS aired CBS Reports and Eyewitness, NBC broadcast Chet Huntley Reporting, David Brinkley's Journal and Actuality Specials, while ABC had Bell and Howell Close-up and the Howard K. Smith show.
[1] Despite Minow's complaints that the sitcoms of the era were "totally unrealistic" and his disdain for cartoons, the new sitcoms of 1962 were even more hostile to Minow's stated taste and were frequently "stretching further than ever for their situations"; increasingly fantastical premises such as hillbillies in the city (The Beverly Hillbillies) and cartoons set a century into the future (The Jetsons, ABC's first regularly-scheduled TV series to air in color) were among the new offerings.
Each of the 30 highest-rated shows is listed with its rank and rating as determined by Nielsen Media Research.
** Vacation Playhouse was an anthology series composed entirely of unsold television pilots.
Note: The CBS series Marshal Dillon consisted of reruns of episodes of Gunsmoke.