The Reading Club (partially found WHUT talk show; 1999-2001): Difference between revisions

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{{InfoboxLost
{{InfoboxLost
|title=<center>The Reading Club</center>
|title=<center>The Reading Club</center>
|image=
|image=The_Reading_Club_Logo.gif
|imagecaption=
|imagecaption=Logo of the show.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
}}


'''''The Reading Club''''' was a public TV show that was made by Howard University Television, in cooperation with Dunbar Productions and WHUT-TV.<ref name="peabody">[http://dbs.galib.uga.edu/cgi-bin/parc.cgi?userid=galileo&query=id%3A2000_2000049_pst_1 ''The Reading Club,'' Peabody Awards Collection, 2000049 PST 1 of 1, Walter J. Brown Media Archives & Peabody Awards Collection, University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.] Retrieved 13 Feb '18</ref> The talk show was hosted by former WCBS-TV New York anchor Carol Martin.<ref name="peabody /> Eventually, Renee Poussaint would take over as host after "working on a documentary about a meeting between historian John Hope Franklin and Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa."<ref>[https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2002/aug/19/20020819-040928-5485r ''The Washington Times'' article about black history] Retrieved 14 Feb'18</ref> The talk show went on for 13 weeks.<ref name="washingtonpost">[https://highbeam.com/doc/1P2-628757.html ''The Washington Post'' article on ''The Reading Club.''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref><ref name="chicagosuntimes">[https://highbeam.com/doc/1P2-4516164.html A ''Chicago Sun-Times'' article on ''The Reading Club.''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref> The TV series debuted and aired on WHUT-TV in September of 1999.<ref name="washingtonpost" /> The series then debuted on WYIN-TV in Indiana on October 6, 1999.<ref name="chicagosuntimes" />
'''''The Reading Club''''' was a public TV show that was made by Howard University Television, in cooperation with Dunbar Productions and WHUT, a local Washington, D.C. channel.<ref name="peabody">[http://dbs.galib.uga.edu/cgi-bin/parc.cgi?userid=galileo&query=id%3A2000_2000049_pst_1 ''The Reading Club,'' Peabody Awards Collection, 2000049 PST 1 of 1, Walter J. Brown Media Archives & Peabody Awards Collection, University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.] Retrieved 13 Feb '18</ref> The talk show was hosted by former WCBS New York anchor Carol Martin.<ref name="peabody /> Eventually, Renee Poussaint would take over as host for the show's second season after "working on a documentary about a meeting between historian John Hope Franklin and Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa."<ref>[https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2002/aug/19/20020819-040928-5485r ''The Washington Times'' article about black history] Retrieved 14 Feb'18</ref> The first season of the talk show went on for 13 weeks.<ref name="washingtonpost">[https://highbeam.com/doc/1P2-628757.html ''The Washington Post'' article on ''The Reading Club.''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref><ref name="chicagosuntimes">[https://highbeam.com/doc/1P2-4516164.html A ''Chicago Sun-Times'' article on ''The Reading Club.''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref>


===Premise===
==Premise==
Allison J. Davis, on of the many executive producers of ''The Reading Club'' was inspired by her friends, to create and air a talk show on books.<ref>[https://highbeam.com/doc/1P3-45077433.html ''Black Issues Book Review'' article on the origin of ''The Reading Club''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref> The series focused on serving "the African American community by educating, informing and inspiring individuals to broaden their horizons through more reading."<ref name="peabody" /> Each episode had different "club members," which were various African American women.<ref name="peabody" /> In fact, these women were selected from actual book clubs across the U.S. Usually, they would discuss various topics in several books like self-discovery and love.
Allison J. Davis, on of the many executive producers of ''The Reading Club'' was inspired by her friends, to create and air a talk show on books.<ref>[https://highbeam.com/doc/1P3-45077433.html ''Black Issues Book Review'' article on the origin of ''The Reading Club''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref> The series focused on serving "the African American community by educating, informing and inspiring individuals to broaden their horizons through more reading."<ref name="peabody" /> Each episode had different "club members," which were various African American women.<ref name="peabody" /> In fact, these women were selected from actual book clubs across the U.S. Usually, they would discuss various topics in several books like self-discovery and love.


===Availability===
==Availability==
Very little is known about it. No video footage or pictures can be found online. The lack of video footage is due to the fact that ''The Reading Club'' only aired episodes for a short time. Only 19 half-hour episodes were produced.<ref>[http://tvguide.com/tvshows/reading-club/episodes/429051 TV Guide page with a cast an episode list] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref> It is speculated that the series aired reruns until September 30, 2000 when the ''PBS Kids Bookworm Bunch'' block came out, thus kicking the show to obscurity.
The lack of video footage is due to the fact that ''The Reading Club'' only aired episodes for a short time. Only 26 half-hour episodes were produced.<ref>[http://tvguide.com/tvshows/reading-club/episodes/429051 TV Guide page with a cast an inaccurate episode list] Retrieved 14 Feb '18</ref> It is speculated that the series aired reruns until September 30, 2002 when the ''PBS Kids Bookworm Bunch'' block was airing, thus kicking the show to obscurity.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Television Station
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Location
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Date of Debut
|-
|WCEU||Daytona Beach, Florida||September 5, 1999
|-
|KNME||Albuquerque, New Mexico||September 6, 1999
|-
|WTBU||Indianapolis, Indiana||September 6, 1999
|-
|WTVS||Detroit, Michigan||September 6, 1999
|-
|WHUT||Washington, District of Columbia||September 7, 1999
|-
|KDTN||Dallas, Texas||September 8, 1999
|-
|WKMJ/KET 2||Louisville, Kentucky||September 9, 1999
|-
|KLCS||Los Angeles, California||September 10, 1999
|-
|KLRU/2 cable||Austin, Texas||September 10, 1999
|-
|WNET||New York, New York||September 10, 1999
|-
|WPTO||Oxford/Cincinnati, Ohio||September 10, 1999
|-
|KRCB||Rohnert Park, California||September 12, 1999
|-
|WHUT||Washington, District of Columbia||September 12, 1999
|-
|WGVK||Grand Rapids, Michigan||September 13, 1999
|-
|KTCI||Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota||September 14, 1999
|-
|WHMG||Schenectady, New York||September 26, 1999
|-
|WLAE||New Orleans, Louisiana||October 1, 1999
|-
|Kentucky ETV||Statewide Kentucky||October 2, 1999
|-
|Mississippi ETV||Statewide Mississippi||October 2, 1999
|-
|Nebraska ETV||Statewide Nebraska||October 2, 1999
|-
|WXXI||Rochester, New York||October 4, 1999
|-
|WYIN/Channel 56||Merrillville, Indiana||October 6, 1999
|-
|WKAR||East Landing, Michigan||October 18, 1999
|-
|WYBE||Philadelphia, Pennsylvania||November 1, 1999
|-
|WIPB||Muncie, Indiana||January 9, 2000
|}


===Episodes===
===Episodes===
The series debuted on WCEU on September 5, 1999.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20030211112857/http://www.thereadingclub.com:80/watch.html Official chart of when the series debuted across the U.S.] Retrieved 15 Feb '18</ref>
====Season 1 (1999-2000)====
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
Line 30: Line 90:
|4||Benilde Little's ''The Itch''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|4||Benilde Little's ''The Itch''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|5||Mother and Daughter's Book Club||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|5||Shireen Dodson's ''Mother and Daughter's Book Club||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|6||Janet McDonald's ''Project Girl''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|7||Iyanla Vanzant's ''Yesterday, I Cried''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|8||Ralph Ellison's ''Juneteenth''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|9||Edwidge Danticat's ''The Farming of Bones''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|10||Harriett Cole's ''How to Be: A Guide to Conscious Living for African American People''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|11||Sister Souljah's ''The Coldest Winter Ever''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|12||Myrlie Evers-Williams' ''Watch Me Fly''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|13||Linnie Frank and Andria Hall's ''This Far by Faith''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|13||Renita Weems's ''Listening to God''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|}
 
====Season 2 (2000-2001)====
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|-
|-
|6||Ralph Ellison's ''Juneteenth''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
! style="background-color:lightblue" | #
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Book
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Host
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Status
|-
|-
|7||Edwidge Danticat's ''The Farming of Bones''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|1||''The Color of Water'' by James McBride||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|8||Harriett Cole's ''How to Be: A Guide to Conscious Living for African American People''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|2||Diane McKinney's ''Blues Dancing''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|9||Myrlie Evers-Williams' ''Watch Me Fly''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|3||Wilson Wesley's ''The Devil Riding''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|10||Linnie Frank and Andria Hall's ''This Far by Faith''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|4||Van Whitfield's ''Something's Wrong With Your Scale!''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|11||Janet McDonald's ''Project Girl''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|5||Breena Clarke's ''River Cross My Heart''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|12||Iyanla Vanzant's ''Yesterday, I Cried''||Carol Martin||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|6||Eric Jerome Dickey's ''Cheaters''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|13||N/A ("Reading Club")||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|7||T.D. Jakes' ''Maximize the Moment: God's Action Plan for Your Life''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|14||Diane McKinney's ''Blues Dancing''||Carol Martin or Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|8||Douglas F. Greer's ''Blind Ambitions''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|15||Wilson Wesley's ''The Devil Riding''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|9||Shay Youngblood's ''Black Girl in Paris''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|16||Shay Youngblood's ''Black Girl in Paris''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|10||Tananarive Due's ''The Black Rose''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|17||T.D. Jakes' ''Maximize the Moment: God's Action Plan for Your Life''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|11||A'Lelia Bundles's ''On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam CJ Walker''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|18||Douglas F. Greer's ''Blind Ambition''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|12||Octavia E. Butler's ''Parable of the Talents''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|-
|-
|19||Octavia E. Butler's ''Parable of the Talents''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|13||Rene Swindle's ''Please, Please, Please''||Renee Poussaint||<span style="color:red;">Lost</span>
|}
|}
==External Link==
 
==Gallery==
This is the only video associated with the show to have been discovered.
{{Video|perrow  =1
  |service1    =archiveorg
  |id1        =JanetMcDonaldsInterviewWithTheReadingClub
  |description1 =An interview with Janet McDonalds.
}}
[[File:Renee_Poussaint_The_Reading_Club.gif|thumb|300px|center|Renee Poussaint in the only surviving picture of ''The Reading Club.'']]
 
==External Links==
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20021129021019/http://www.thereadingclub.com Official website (accessible via Wayback Machine)] Retrieved 15 Feb '18
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20000618190702/http://www.vpt.org:80/whatson/schedule.html A schedule page, mentioning ''The Reading Club.''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20000618190702/http://www.vpt.org:80/whatson/schedule.html A schedule page, mentioning ''The Reading Club.''] Retrieved 14 Feb '18


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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Lost recordings of real incidents|Reading Club, The]]
[[Category:Lost recordings of real incidents]]
[[Category:Lost TV|Reading Club, The]]
[[Category:Lost TV]]

Revision as of 00:10, 16 February 2018

The Reading Club Logo.gif

Logo of the show.

Status: Lost


The Reading Club was a public TV show that was made by Howard University Television, in cooperation with Dunbar Productions and WHUT, a local Washington, D.C. channel.[1] The talk show was hosted by former WCBS New York anchor Carol Martin.[1] Eventually, Renee Poussaint would take over as host for the show's second season after "working on a documentary about a meeting between historian John Hope Franklin and Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa."[2] The first season of the talk show went on for 13 weeks.[3][4]

Premise

Allison J. Davis, on of the many executive producers of The Reading Club was inspired by her friends, to create and air a talk show on books.[5] The series focused on serving "the African American community by educating, informing and inspiring individuals to broaden their horizons through more reading."[1] Each episode had different "club members," which were various African American women.[1] In fact, these women were selected from actual book clubs across the U.S. Usually, they would discuss various topics in several books like self-discovery and love.

Availability

The lack of video footage is due to the fact that The Reading Club only aired episodes for a short time. Only 26 half-hour episodes were produced.[6] It is speculated that the series aired reruns until September 30, 2002 when the PBS Kids Bookworm Bunch block was airing, thus kicking the show to obscurity.

Television Station Location Date of Debut
WCEU Daytona Beach, Florida September 5, 1999
KNME Albuquerque, New Mexico September 6, 1999
WTBU Indianapolis, Indiana September 6, 1999
WTVS Detroit, Michigan September 6, 1999
WHUT Washington, District of Columbia September 7, 1999
KDTN Dallas, Texas September 8, 1999
WKMJ/KET 2 Louisville, Kentucky September 9, 1999
KLCS Los Angeles, California September 10, 1999
KLRU/2 cable Austin, Texas September 10, 1999
WNET New York, New York September 10, 1999
WPTO Oxford/Cincinnati, Ohio September 10, 1999
KRCB Rohnert Park, California September 12, 1999
WHUT Washington, District of Columbia September 12, 1999
WGVK Grand Rapids, Michigan September 13, 1999
KTCI Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota September 14, 1999
WHMG Schenectady, New York September 26, 1999
WLAE New Orleans, Louisiana October 1, 1999
Kentucky ETV Statewide Kentucky October 2, 1999
Mississippi ETV Statewide Mississippi October 2, 1999
Nebraska ETV Statewide Nebraska October 2, 1999
WXXI Rochester, New York October 4, 1999
WYIN/Channel 56 Merrillville, Indiana October 6, 1999
WKAR East Landing, Michigan October 18, 1999
WYBE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania November 1, 1999
WIPB Muncie, Indiana January 9, 2000

Episodes

The series debuted on WCEU on September 5, 1999.[7]

Season 1 (1999-2000)

# Book Host Status
1 Lawrence Graham's Our Kind of People: Inside Americ's Black Upper Class Carol Martin Lost
2 Pearl Cleage's What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day Carol Martin Lost
3 Jill Nelson's Straight, No Chaser: How I Became a Grown-up Black Woman Carol Martin Lost
4 Benilde Little's The Itch Carol Martin Lost
5 Shireen Dodson's Mother and Daughter's Book Club Carol Martin Lost
6 Janet McDonald's Project Girl Carol Martin Lost
7 Iyanla Vanzant's Yesterday, I Cried Carol Martin Lost
8 Ralph Ellison's Juneteenth Carol Martin Lost
9 Edwidge Danticat's The Farming of Bones Carol Martin Lost
10 Harriett Cole's How to Be: A Guide to Conscious Living for African American People Carol Martin Lost
11 Sister Souljah's The Coldest Winter Ever Carol Martin Lost
12 Myrlie Evers-Williams' Watch Me Fly Carol Martin Lost
13 Linnie Frank and Andria Hall's This Far by Faith Carol Martin Lost
13 Renita Weems's Listening to God Carol Martin Lost

Season 2 (2000-2001)

# Book Host Status
1 The Color of Water by James McBride Renee Poussaint Lost
2 Diane McKinney's Blues Dancing Renee Poussaint Lost
3 Wilson Wesley's The Devil Riding Renee Poussaint Lost
4 Van Whitfield's Something's Wrong With Your Scale! Renee Poussaint Lost
5 Breena Clarke's River Cross My Heart Renee Poussaint Lost
6 Eric Jerome Dickey's Cheaters Renee Poussaint Lost
7 T.D. Jakes' Maximize the Moment: God's Action Plan for Your Life Renee Poussaint Lost
8 Douglas F. Greer's Blind Ambitions Renee Poussaint Lost
9 Shay Youngblood's Black Girl in Paris Renee Poussaint Lost
10 Tananarive Due's The Black Rose Renee Poussaint Lost
11 A'Lelia Bundles's On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam CJ Walker Renee Poussaint Lost
12 Octavia E. Butler's Parable of the Talents Renee Poussaint Lost
13 Rene Swindle's Please, Please, Please Renee Poussaint Lost

Gallery

This is the only video associated with the show to have been discovered.

An interview with Janet McDonalds.

Renee Poussaint in the only surviving picture of The Reading Club.

External Links

References