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- Recollections of the Beatles are offered by John Lennon, who discusses the group's popularity during the 1960's and his career since they disbanded. Lennon also recounts his legal battle to avoid deportation from the U.S. This program was originally taped April 7th 1975 and aired April 28th 1975.
- Tom interviews Orson Welles and the discussion includes the theater, Hollywood, personality myths, famous radio shows, magic, religion, death, and childhood memories.
- The topic is lady promoters.
- Cheech & Chong promote their film "Nice Dreams;" Minnelli talks to Barrett about her concert tour; Arnold Schwarzenegger promotes his book "Arnold's Body Building for Men" and his film "Conan the Barbarian;" Author Friday talks about the changing sexual attitudes of women. Rock group The Dregs perform "Pride of the Farm."
- 1973–1981TV Episode
- Tom Snyder looks at new theories concerning the assassination of President Kennedy.
- Tom Snyder has a behind-the-scenes look at the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus in New York's Madison Square Garden.
- Tom Synder interviews personalities from the "Golden Age of Radio".
- Host Tom Snyder and his guest panel delve into the sensitive and controversial issue of euthanasia. The discussion focuses on the medical and ethical dilemma of terminally ill children as well as those born with severe birth defects, and who decides their ultimate fate. First of two parts.
- Tom chats with sportscasters Dick Enberg, Marv Albert, Bob Prince, and Harry Caray to discuss whether sportscasters hired by teams should "tell it like it is".
- Tom discusses marriage and divorce.
- Geoffrey Holder demonstrates the fine art of Island cooking; silent era child star Baby Peggy is interviewed.
- Mary Pickford is remembered by friends and family at her home Pickfair.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder sits down for a chat with the Reverend Ike and Billy James Hargis, two noted Christian American evangelists. Ike and Hargis eagerly offer their rather controversial and sometimes shocking views on religion in America.
- Host Tom Snyder with a discussion on "The Charles Manson Case" and "Political Terrorism".
- Astrologer Joseph Goodavage foretold date and time of the San Andreas fault's earth's quaking in CA, "the big one" two weeks thence. At the date and time foretold Mount Saint Helen's erupted instead of the San Andreas earth's quaking.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder joins the NBC schedule in this talk and discussion series which promises to cover contemporary and sometimes controversial topics. In the premiere episode, Tom's guests include Peter and Suzy Heck, publishers of Swing Magazine, their live-in friend Maureen, Patrick and Ann LaFollette and their live-in friend Joe Hoffman. The two sets of triads are on hand for an informative discussion of group marriage.
- As premiere week of the series continues, Tom's scheduled guests include queen of the groupie scene Sable Starr, other rock groupies Queenie and Chuck, and a chat with prolific private investigator Jay J. Armes, the detective with prosthetic hands.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder concludes his first successful week as host of this late night NBC talk series. Tom and his panel of expert guests examine and debate the controversial topic of brutality within the world of professional sports.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder delves into the topic of flying saucers. His discussion panel includes United States Air Force advisor, astronomer, and scientist Dr. Allen Hynek, who was once a skeptic but now researches unidentified flying objects, Dr. William Kaufman, and ordinary citizens who claim to have witnessed the phenomena.
- In this edition host Tom Snyder discusses the world of betting with Larry Merchant, author of The National Football Lottery, and professional sports bettor Lem Banker. He also addresses the topic of illegitimate children with NBC news journalist Marjorie Margolies.
- Tom leads a discussion of casual sex in the male-female relationship from the independent perspectives of a man and a woman. His guests include Nicole Ariana, author of the bestselling How to Pick Up Men!, while Don Martin teaches men how to do the same with the opposite sex.
- With Watergate raging, Tom takes an in depth look at the subject of political trickery. His guests include crafty Democratic operative Dick Tuck, famous for his tricks on Richard Nixon, and Hunter Thompson, anti-Nixon author of Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72 .
- Child abuse and adoption are explored by Tom Snyder and his guest panel: Margo Fritz of Parents Anonymous, Dorothy DeBolt, founder of Aid To Adoption of Special Kids, and Dr. Edward Lenoski of the University of Southern California Medical Center, a pediatrician and expert in the study of child abuse.
- In honor of Halloween, veteran NBC television journalist Tom Snyder spends the hour conducting a fascinating, in-depth conversation with master of the macabre, prolific director, writer, and actor Alfred Hitchcock, who discusses his venerable career.
- In a continuation of Halloween themed topics introduced in the previous installment with a full-hour, one-on-one interview with filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock, Tom delves into the occult with a guest panel of men and women who are real-life practitioners of witchcraft. Guest Solomon Weir, an employee of the Louisville, Kentucky police department, performs a cursing ritual.
- Tom engages in a candid discussion of legalized prostitution with his guests prostitute and feminist Margo St James, founder of COYOTE (Call Off Your Old Tired Ethics), Joe Conforte, owner of Nevada's infamous Mustang Ranch, and Rick Lutz. Also scheduled is disc jockey Wolfman Jack, who expounds on the music industry.
- Host Tom Snyder is joined by guests former pro-football player and Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Peter Gent, now author of the semi-autobiographical novel North Dallas Forty, and Merlin Olsen, veteran defensive tackle with the Los Angeles Rams. The sportsmen relate the use of drugs in professional sports. Food critic Raymond Sokolov also appears.
- Teenaged spiritual leader Guru Maharaj Ji appears as Tom's featured guest to expound on his beliefs and promote a recently released autobiography. Andrew St. George, adventurer and lecturer,, regales Tom and the audience with his engaging accounts of the Central Intelligence Agency.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder is joined for the hour by State of Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Hebert S. Denenberg. Denenberg discusses consumer advocacy as well as a potential Democratic ticket run in 1974 for the Pennsylvania Senate.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder is joined by newspaper reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Woodward and Bernstein of The Washington Post discuss their role in breaking the story of the Watergate scandal and its myriad ramifications.
- Tom Snyder leads a candid discussion on the trials and tribulations of being a single young American in the 1970s. Actor Ben Murphy of the television series Alias Smith and Jones also joins Tom to talk about his upcoming male centerfold spread in VIVA magazine.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder hosts this NBC late night discussion series. In tonight's installment, Tom and his featured guests engage in an examination of black exploitation films, a rising, successful and sometimes controversial genre of filmmaking.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder hosts this NBC late night discussion series. In tonight's installment, Tom and his featured guests engage in a discussion of the nation's developing energy crisis as the result of Saudi Arabia's oil embargo.
- Host Tom Snyder explains network censorship and the story behind the eleventh hour decision to pull tonight's scheduled broadcast which had been pre-recorded. The show followed Tom and his NBC crew to the Los Angeles nudist colony Elysium Fields Institute. Although no onscreen nudity was shown, the program was deemed to controversial to air.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder hosts this NBC late night discussion series. In tonight's installment, Tom engages in an acerbic conversation with social and political satirist Mort Sahl, who discusses his vinyl comedy hit Sing a Song of Watergate.
- In an episode previously scheduled but pulled by the network, Tom ventures out of his studio to conduct an episode shot entirely on location at the famed nudist colony Elysium Fields Institute in Los Angeles. Ed Lange, the institute's founder, joins Tom and his guests for a sensational examination of nudity and psychological inhibitions in America.
- Host Tom Snyder is joined for the hour by infamous McNairy County, Tennessee sheriff Buford T. Pusser. Pusser, the subject of a best-selling book and recent Hollywood movie, recounts his dangerous lawman exploits and separates fact from fiction.
- In this installment of NBC-TV's successful late night discussion series, scheduled guests conduct an examination of the police force,, its employees, violent behavior, firearms, and the contemporary ideology of using non-lethal weapons in law enforcement.
- Host Tom Snyder is joined by former prisoner and Teamster's Union leader James "Jimmy" Hoffa. Hoffa sits down for a thorough interview about his life, his career, and his future which could include regaining control of the Teamster's union despite an agreement to not seek management of any labor union until 1980.
- Host Tom Snyder sits down with three writers. Lawrence J. Peter, author of The Peter Principle, talks about his latest effort The Peter Plan. Professor Thomas L. Martin explains his work, Snafus and Blunders. Third guest Caroline Bird promotes her current work Everything a Women Needs to Know to Get Paid What She's Worth.
- Host Tom Snyder conducts an emotional interview with local, 25 year old photographer Keith Stefan who was diagnosed with terminal Hodgkin's disease a few years earlier. Keith speaks openly of his desire to live with the disease rather than die from it.
- Veteran broadcast journalist Tom Snyder conducts an interview in this installment with New York City's prolific and authoritative Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Milton Halpern. Halpern offers his opinion of contemporary medical issues and recounts some of the sensational cases which have highlighted his venerable career.
- In this installment of the late night discussion series, host Tom Snyder welcomes guest John Wallace Spencer, author of the million copy bestseller Limbo of the Lost. Spencer talks about his book which explores the mysterious disappearance of airplanes, ships, and people within the Bermuda Triangle.
- Host Tom Snyder interviews a controversial lesbian couple who candidly discuss their commitment to raising eight children together as a family. He is also joined by a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent specializing in the technique of electronic surveillance.
- Various guests join this installment of host Tom Snyder's late night discussion series. Sexagenerian Ms. Emylin Cordelia Mayberry speaks with Tom regarding her challenges as a modern day, female prospector. Other guests include Henry Gris, who relates his recent, unusual trip behind the Iron Curtain. National correspondent and commentator Dick Strout is also scheduled.
- Host Tom Snyder moderates a debate between Nobel Prize winning physicist Dr. William Shockley and conservative activist Roy Innis, executive director of the Congress of Racial Equality. This debate follows a previously scheduled one between the two guests at Princeton University in which Innis abruptly withdrew due to a ban on media coverage. Innis is set to debate Shockley's controversial proposition that racial disparity exists due to genetics, with the black race intellectually inferior to whites.
- Host Tom Snyder welcomes celebrated journalist Adela Rogers St. John, once nicknamed The World's Greatest Girl Reporter. St. John opens up about her storied career beginning with her early days as writer for Photoplay magazine. She also touches on her political connections, from speech writing for Richard Nixon to a warm camaraderie with Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
- In the conclusion of a comprehensive and heavily debated two-part installment, Tom and his guest panel delve into the sensitive and controversial issue of euthanasia. The discussion continues its focus on the medical and ethical dilemma of who decides whether or not children who are terminally ill or born with severe birth defects live.
- Outspoken activist and Hollywood actress Jane Fonda joins Tom for a passionate discussion of the current military and political circumstances in South Vietnam. They're joined by Jane's husband Tom Hayden, founder of the IndoChina Peace Campaign.
- Tom welcomes to the show feminist writer Nancy Friday, author of the New York Times bestseller My Secret Garden. Friday and Tom chat about the overlooked topic of women's sexual fantasies, stories Friday gathered from a disparate group of women through correspondence and recorded interviews.
- Scheduled guests include veteran burlesque dancer Sally Rand, who discusses her venerable career with Tom Snyder. Roberta Teitel is also on hand to talk about her one-of-a-kind business venture Lifestyle Experiment Program, a service that grants people their wildest fantasies.
- In this special Christmas edition of Tomorrow, Tom welcomes to his show a disparate group of young children all aged between seven to ten years old. With Tom they engage in a fascinating discussion of their lives, their opinions, and any topic that arises by happenstance.
- Tom sits down with medical experts and average people for a frank and often sobering examination of alcoholism in America. Guests include: Dr . William Rader, staff psychiatrist of the University of Southern California Medical School, and Vivian Gary, consultant and senior staff psychologist of the Alcoholic Rehabilitation Center in Long Beach. In the first of a two-part installment, real-life alcoholics submit to psychodrama therapy in which the re-enact from both sides various incidents related to their alcoholism.
- In the conclusion to a two-part in depth examination of alcoholism in America, Tom and his panel continue to expose the insidious nature of the disease. Guests include Dr. William Rader, Vivian Gary, and alcoholic patients who share their personal experiences to help others.
- In the final colorcast of 1973, Tom has a seat on-set to review some of the most memorable and unusual installments of the season. Highlights from shows featuring witchcraft, a visit to an infamous Nevada brothel, a female fight promoter, group marriage, death and dying, and a letter from a viewer who was saved from death after watching the show on dying. In the final moments guest Francisco Lupica demonstrates the cosmic beam experience. Tom wishes the audience a very happy 1974.
- Tomorrow rings in the New Year with a look at the new year to come. Host Tom Snyder and his guests speculate what 1974 holds for the United States. Topics such as the economy, the energy crisis, inflation, and employment are discussed by experts in each field.
- Tomorrow examines the sometimes sensationalized topic of transsexualism. Host Tom Snyder is joined in the discussion by Dr. John Money, a psychologist and founder of the Johns Hopkins Gender Identity Clinic, and Roberta Cowell, recipient of gender reassignment surgery.
- Violence takes center stage of this installment of Tomorrow. Host Tom Snyder is joined in the discussion by a woman who murdered her husband and by other persons whose daily lives have been adversely affected by various presentations of violent behavior.
- Death is once again the topic on the series. Host Tom Snyder leads a discussion among his guests, all of whom report life-altering experiences after narrowly escaping from situations in which they were likely to have been killed. They share how they now view life and death.
- The topic of sexual surrogacy is discussed. Tom welcomes Sylvia Kars and Danny Tompkins, two Los Angeles area sexual surrogates for men and women. Author Sam Julty speaks about his own impotency, and Dr. James McCary, University of Houston professor, postulates on early sex education.
- Host Tom Snyder is joined by Christopher Taylor, 1972 United States Olympic bronze medalist, who explains how he segued into a professional super heavyweight wrestling career. Los Angeles area sportscaster Dick Lane talks about his own career. Maury Graham recounts his nomadic life as the king of hobos. Joe Girard, the world's most successful car salesman, is also scheduled.
- Host Tom Snyder is joined by contentious white supremacist David Duke, a twenty-three year old Louisiana native elected Grand Dragon of Ku Klux Klan, who explains his controversial views. A look at the film Birth of a Nation rounds out the hour.
- Tom and his panel of guests take a hard look at the future of the United States and what it will need in order to survive. On hand for the discussion are futurists Ted Gordon president of the Futures Group, and Barbara Hubbard, current chair lady of the Committee for the Future. Also joining are businessman Warren Avis, founder of Avis Rental Cars, and Dr. James Dator, director of social sciences research at the University of Hawaii.
- In a first for Tomorrow, host Tom Snyder and his guests are joined by a live studio audience as the series travels from its Burbank, California studios to New York City for six episodes recorded at 30 Rockefeller Plaza. Tom takes the audience on a whirlwind tour around The Big Apple then settles down for a devil of a conversation about exorcism.
- In the second installment of six shows videotaped on location in New York City, Tom escorts the audience on a fascinating behind the scenes expedition of the New York Times to the see the production and distribution of a major metropolitan newspaper.
- In the third of six episodes videotaped at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, host Tom Snyder and the live studio audience welcomes rival boxers Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier ahead of their upcoming bout at Madison Square Garden. Also scheduled is prolific WNBC radio personality Don Imus to talk about the current opinions of New Yorkers.
- In the fourth of six episodes taped in New York City, Tom and the live audience participate in a discussion of network television news coverage of major events. Guests include veteran broadcast journalists Frank McGee of NBC, and Harry Reasoner, anchor of the ABC Evening News. Also scheduled, actors E.G. Marshall and Oscar winner Kim Hunter discuss the resurgence of radio drama with the launch of the syndicated program CBS Radio Mystery Theater.
- In the fifth of six episodes taped in New York City, host Tom Snyder welcomes three successful women in the field of journalism. His guests are Barbara Walters of NBC's Today Show; Helen Thomas, White House Correspondent for United Press International; and Shana Alexander, the first female columnist for Life Magazine and first female editor of McCall's.
- In the final special installment recorded in New York, Tom interviews William R. Phillips, an NYPD officer accused of corruption and murder. Phillips discusses the book he co-authored, On the Pad. A visit to the infamous Continental Baths club fills the remaining time.
- With this telecast, Tomorrow returns to its home base of Burbank, California. Tonight's guests are Dr. Emil Freireich, director of cancer research at MD Anderson Hospital in Texas, and Dr. Carl Symington, noted in the field of radiotherapy. Tom and the medical experts review advanced and developing protocols in cancer treatment.
- The escalating incidence of obesity in the United States forms the basis of tonight's discussion. Host Tom Snyder welcomes guests to the show who have struggled with morbid obesity, and they recount the negative effects it has had upon their lives.
- Host Tom Snyder engages in conversation with the developer of carburetor prototype that could aid in the nation's energy crisis. He is also joined by Sondra Diamond, who fought to overcome the effects of severe cerebral palsy to earn certification as a licensed counselor, and Peter Breggin, a psychiatrist against the use of medication and surgery as treatments for mental illness.
- A panel of popular radio personalities convene with Tom to reveal the most important issues on the minds of their phone-in listeners. Joining the discussion are Chicagoan Dave Baum of WIND, Teddi Levison and Mickie Silverstein from WRNG in Atlanta, and Jerry Williams of WBZ Boston.
- Host Tom Snyder interviews Dr. Aaron Stern, author of the 1971 book The Making of a Genius. Dr. Stern describes his controversial theory of intelligence, which is one based on environment rather than race or heredity, and how it can be utilized to help children from the most impoverished backgrounds become geniuses.
- Raymond Rohauer, whose previously scheduled appearance was postponed, is Tom Snyder's guest. A noted film collector and preservationist, Rohauer shows and discusses segments from D. W. Griffith's classic silent film Birth of a Nation, and talks about his film collection.
- Host Tom Snyder spends the hour with another examination of death and dying. His guests include Orville Kelly, a former serviceman from Burlington, Iowa who is diagnosed with terminal lymphoma, and Dr. Herman Feifel, noted expert on the subject and author of The Meaning of Death.
- Dr. John McCarthy a cognitive scientist and director of Stanford University's Artificial Intelligence Center for Computer Research shows off the tools of his trade with a computerized robot that has been programmed to perform tasks associated with human thought. Also, Tom places a telephone call to an Alaskan town that needs a fire truck.
- Tom leads a discussion about the travails of over the road truck drivers in the United States. Truckers from different regions of America reveal how they are affected by contemporary problems such as the energy crisis. Also, a segment on the organizers of lavish Hollywood parties.
- Tomorrow takes a look at Catholicism in the 1970s. Host Tom Snyder's guests include Father Eugene Kennedy, a Maryknoll priest and proponent for contemporary church reform; and Catholic feminist Patricia McQuillan, founder and chairman of the organization Catholics for a Free Choice.
- The Ku Klux Klan is the subject of this installment of Tomorrow. Host Tom Snyder embarks on another round of questioning with returning guest, the controversial David Duke, Grand Dragon of the white supremacist group. Also joining the discussion for counterpoint is Hosea Williams, civil rights activist and leader.
- The recently sensationalized phenomenon of demonic possession and its treatment via exorcism is revisited in this installment. However, host Tom Snyder and his guests eschew the stereotypical trappings of the subject and turn their focus this time to a secular and non-Catholic perspective.
- The world of professional sporting is the subject of this discussion. Tom's scheduled guests include Bill Russell, Seattle Supersonics coach and NBA commentator; Bob Cousy, former NBA All Star and Most Valuable Player; Mike Trope, agent signing talent for the recently formed World Football League; and Bob Woolf, prolific sports agent.
- In this edition of Tomorrow, Tom and his guests cover the story of weekly newspapers in America. Joining the discussion are Mississippi native Hazel Smith, founder of the Lexington Advertiser; Archer Fullingham, Texas publisher of the Kountze News, Ed DeCourcy, editor of the Argus-Champion in New Hampshire; and Ray Geiger from the Farmer's Almanac.
- Tom and his guests devote tonight and tomorrow's Tomorrow program to a comprehensive examination of rape. Discussing the subject are a victim of the crime, law enforcement personnel, a female karate instructor who teaches self-defense against assault, and the founder of the New York Rape Coalition.
- In the conclusion of a two-part examination of rape, host Tom Snyder is joined by two attorneys, the first a defense attorney and the second one who proposes amending current rape legislation. Also scheduled is a psychological profiler of those commit rape as well as those who fall victim to the crime.
- Tomorrow delves into the plight of the elderly. Host Tom Snyder's guest for this edition is Maggie Kuhn, who founded the Grey Panthers following her mandatory retirement from a job she loved in 1970. Kuhn and Snyder rap about some of the issues facing the aged population and how her organization has addressed them.
- Host Tom Snyder welcomes to the program three professional photographers who contributed their work to Life magazine. Discussing their experiences and providing accompanying iconic photos are guests Ralph Morse, Dave Scherman, and Bill Eppridge.
- Deeply personal stories from the civilian perspective of the war in Vietnam are presented in this installment of Tomorrow. Host Tom Snyder speaks with Dick Hughes, an actor and conscientious objector who visited Vietnam in 1968 and has remained there to help street children known as The Shoeshine Boys. Also featured is Richard C. Ramsom. Ransom, a New York attorney, traveled to Vietnam to come to terms with the death of his son Mike, who opposed the conflict but went willingly and died after stepping on a mine.
- Tom's guest is Jerold Kuhn, author of "Marriage Counseling: Fact or Fallacy?". Kuhn, executive director of the American Institute of Family Relations Los Angeles, conducts counseling sessions with guests who have real-life marital problems. Marriage counseling students also appear and participate in the televised sessions.
- Provocative radio personality Bill Ballance, star of syndicated radio talk shows The Bill Ballance Show and Feminine Forum, is the featured guest on this installment of Tomorrow. Nancy Friday, author of My Secret Garden, is also slated for a return appearance.
- Tomorrow explores the new fascination with cosmetic surgery and beauty. Guests include author Jeannie Sakol, who has undergone several surgical procedures; Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Dr. Kurt Wagner, makeup artist Pablo Manzoni creative director of Elizabeth Arden, and Diana Vreeland, fashionista and former editor of Vogue.
- Crime and rehabilitation are the subject of this installment of Tomorrow. Host Tom Snyder discusses the topic with guest John Maher. A recovering alcoholic and heroin addict, Maher is the founder and director of San Francisco's Delancey Street Foundation, a non-profit organization devoted to academic and vocational training for ex-cons. Also scheduled for the discussion are four participants in the Delancey Street program.
- Host Tom Snyder welcomes to the program featured guest Richard Szumskl, head of photographic production services for the Audio-Visual Department of San Jose State College. Szumski explains and demonstrates the use of Kirlian photography, a technique used to capture images of electrical discharges.
- In the second part of an examination of crime in America, Tom's scheduled guests include: Robert DiGrazia, Boston police commissioner; Dr. George Kirkham, criminology professor at Florida State University who worked as a cop for free last summer; James Bannon, commander of Detroit's decoy squad STRESS (Stop The Robberies, Enjoy Safe Streets); and Henry Gay, a black police officer from Monrovia, California who was raised in a crime-ridden area.
- Host Tom Snyder welcomes three professors from Long Island University to tonight's program. The three describe the origin and application of a unique, timely, and free from partisanship college course they are scheduled to teach next month on the Watergate scandal.
- The discussion topic is political torture. Tom's guests are South Dakota senator James Abourezk, concerned about United States complicity in the torture of political prisoners; Amy Augustus, executive director of the human rights organization Amnesty International; and Marcos Arruda, a Brazilian activist for social justice and democracy who was held prisoner and brutally tortured by the Brazilian government.
- With the deadline for filing income taxes rapidly approaching, this installment of Tomorrow focuses on facts which the average audience member might not know about the Internal Revenue Service, and it offers suggestions on how to avoid problems while trying to beat the tax season filing deadline.
- Notable sports figures convene to discuss their careers with host Tom Snyder. Program guests include: bodybuilder and 1973 Mr. America winner Jim Morris; bodybuilder and 1973 Mr. Olympia winner Arnold Schwarzennegger; Mayo Kaan, an aging bodybuilder who claims to have been the original model for Superman; and Mike Gammon and Judi McGuire, a husband and wife team of roller derby skaters.
- Tom and his crew travel to the newly opened Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tennessee, for the first of two installments videotaped on location. Tom interviews legendary country performers and discusses the genre's meteoric rise in public popularity.
- In the first of two installments videotaped on location at the Tennessee State Penitentiary, the prison's inmates and guards are the program's guests. Tom interviews inmates William Thomas Hardison, a young, prominent local businessman convicted of forging stocks, and Stephen Gaskin, counterculture leader of The Farm, a commune in Summertown, TN, and recently convicted on a marijuana possession charge.
- Part two of special episodes of Tomorrow that were videotaped on location in the Tennessee State Penitentiary in Nashville. Host Tom Snyder continues his investigation with interviews from the prison's staff and inmates for a rare look at daily life in a Southern correctional facility.
- Part two of host Tom Snyder's visit to the Grand Ole Opry house in Nashville, Tennessee. Tom continues his interviews with country music stars and personnel who discuss the genre's history, popularity, and how public reactions are affecting country music styles.
- In honor of April Fool's Day, the program eschews its usual serious, controversial subjects for a decidedly different change of pace. Host Tom Snyder, using clips from previous installments, takes a lighthearted look at bloopers and on-air funny moments from Tomorrow.
- Tom Snyder hosts a post Oscars program immediately following the 46th annual Academy Awards. Guests include actress Mercedes McCambridge who explains how she developed the voice of the devil for The Exorcist, and Dick Whittington who dishes about "charming and bumbling" Marvin Hamlisch.
- Host Tom Snyder explains why NBC declined to broadcast his taped interview with Martin Luther King's accused assassin James Earl Ray, which was scheduled to air the previous week during a series of special Nashville-based episodes. The interview finally airs in this installment of Tomorrow.
- Transsexualism is the subject of this installment. Host Tom Snyder discusses the topic with Dr. Norman M. Fisk, a psychiatrist at Stanford University and one two directors of the college's Gender Reorientation clinic. Additional guests are a couple of participants from Dr. Fisk's program.
- Tom examines contemporary issues facing disabled veterans. His guests include Paul Rattisti of the Veterans Administration; Wayne Capson of the Paralyzed Veterans Association; Sherman Roodzant of the Disabled American Veterans; and Ron Knvic of the American Veterans Movement.
- High rolling gamblers are the subject of tonight's program. Tom's scheduled guests include Benny Binion, owner of Binion's Horseshoe Casino; rounder Amarillo Slim, author of Play Poker to Win; and Joe Bernstein, noted professional poker player.
- Psychic phenomena is the subject examined in this installment of Tomorrow. Host Tom Snyder welcomes guests Kenny Kingston, celebrity and professional psychic medium; and entertainer Flip Wilson. Kenny discusses his abilities and predicts what will happen. Flip discusses his haunted Hollywood home.
- Nearly four years after the tragedy, Tomorrow takes a look back at the Kent State shootings in four students were killed and nine injured by Ohio National Guardsmen. Joining host Tom Snyder are parents of some of the victims and spokesperson from the Guardsmen.
- Host Tom Snyder conducts an interview with flamboyant evangelistic minister Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, colloquially known as "Reverend Ike". Eikerenkoetter shares his unorthodox "science of living" philosophy in which the lack of money is the root of all evil and sacrifice is to be avoided.
- In a follow up to a previously televised story, host Tom Snyder welcomes John Maher back to the program. Maher, a recovering alcoholic and heroin addict, is the founder and director of San Francisco's Delancey Street Foundation, a non-profit organization that helps ex-convicts adjust to life following incarceration.
- Tomorrow covers the topic of sexuality and relationships. To discuss the subject, Tom is joined by Nena and George O'Neill, authors of Open Marriage: A New Lifestyle for Couples; and Dr. Benjamin Graber, M.D. and Georgia Graber, RN; husband and wife directors of the Sexual Therapy Research Institute in Marina del Ray.
- Host Tom Snyder conducts an interview with George Reedy, former press secretary to Lyndon B Johnson and currently dean of the journalism department at Marquette University. Reedy talks about politics, the circumstances surrounding his estrangement from President Johnson, and his 1970 book The Twilight of the Presidency.
- Tomorrow takes another look at prostitution. Tom speaks with Margo St. James, who has become a union organizer for prostitutes; and Sausalito city council member Sally Stanford, legendary San Francisco bordello madam. St. James and Stanford advocate the decriminalization of prostitution rather than legalization.
- Captain Edgar Mitchell, formerly of NASA and lunar module pilot of Apollo 14, sits down for a chat with host Tom Snyder. Mitchell discusses his belief in paranormal phenomena such as unidentified flying objects and extra sensory perception.
- Academy award nominated motion picture director Peter Bogdanovich joins host Tom Snyder for a discussion of film. Bogdanovich talks about his career and past successes such Paper Moon, as well as his soon to be released picture Daisy Miller starring wife Cybill Shepherd.
- Host Tom Snyder interviews singer Tiny Tim, whom discusses his career, his televised marriage to Miss Vicki, and his family life afterward. Also scheduled is a discussion with Allen Gore, formerly with the New York Police Department. Gore exposes the techniques of confidence men.
- Tom welcomes guest George Putnam, KTLA's contentious conservative news anchor who recently departed the station. Also scheduled are Koco Eaton and Famebridge Payne, 12-year-old reporters for Youth News, a monthly news program broadcast for youngsters and produced at Washington D.C. television station WRC.
- The women's liberation movement is debated in this installment. Arguing the issue are Tom's guests married attorneys Mark and Brenda Feigen Fasteau, who are proponents of the Equal Rights Amendment, and staunch conservatives Phyllis and Fred Schlafly, who want to defeat it.
- Tom conducts a frank one-on-one interview with the brash, sassy, and forthcoming Martha Mitchell, estranged wife of Richard Nixon's attorney general John Mitchell. Mrs. Mitchell offers her candid assessment of Watergate, President Nixon, and her husband's conduct.
- In this installment of Tomorrow, host Tom Snyder chats with physicist and children's television personality Julius Sumner Miller about his career. Later, Tom takes a look at remote coverage of the Oddball Olympics in which 200 participants attempt to break Guinness world records.
- Jesuit priest Father John McLaughlin joins host Tom Snyder to discuss the impeachment of Richard Nixon. McLaughlin, a speech writer and special deputy assistant to President, publicly supports his employer and friend, arguing against impeachment for a man he considers to be moral and a victim in the Watergaye scandal.
- Tom engages his discussion panel in frank discourse on the subject of bisexuality. Guests include Phyllis and Donna Bramson, a mother and adult daughter who both identify as bisexual. Also on the panel are actor and artist Phil Twitchell and sex therapist Don Fass, who co-founded the National Bisexual Liberation association.
- Tom sits down for an interview with author Studs Terkel to chat about his latest non-fiction book "Working: People Talk About What They Do All Day and How They Feel About What They Do" which explores average jobs and the ways in which people find something meaningful in the work they do.
- Tomorrow takes a look at the accelerating problem of teenage alcoholism in America. Host Tom Snyder speaks with two teenaged alcoholics who reflect on their experiences and offer greater insight into the issue. Journalist Adela Rogers St. John is also scheduled to appear.
- The fourth anniversary of the Kent State shootings is covered in this installment of Tomorrow. Host Tom Snyder welcomes former students of the university who were on campus during the violent event, and they share their memories of that day along with a discussion of its aftermath.
- Television comedy writing is the topic as Tom welcomes four prolific, award winning writers of popular American situation comedies. Larry Gelbart of M*A*S*H, Tom Patchett and Jay Tarses of The Bob Newhart Show, and Paul Keyes of Rowan's Martin's Laugh In, discuss their careers and the entertainment industry.
- Actor Lloyd Nolan, and screenwriter Josh Greenfield join host Tom Snyder. Nolan and Greenfield, each fathers of sons diagnosed with autism, reveal the frustrations, struggles, and obstacles they have faced in caring for an autistic child and how that affects every aspect of family life.
- For a change of pace from serious subjects and controversial guests, this installment of Tomorrow focuses on the lively city of Los Angeles. Cruising around in a police patrol car, Tom escorts viewers on a tour of some of the fascinating places around town.
- In this live telecast following the issue of a warrant for her arrest on felony weapons charges, kidnapped heiress Patty Hearst is the subject of this edition of Tomorrow. Tom's guests include USC psychiatrist Dr. Frederic Hacker; San Francisco Chronicle reporter Paul Avery; terrorism specialist Wes Davis of the University of California ; and Colston Westbrook, Symbionese Liberation Army foe.
- Advancements in the treatment of chronic pain are examined by Tom's guests, doctors and their patients from the Temple Pain Clinic at Philadelphia's Temple University. Also, Tom chats with Newsday journalist Harry Pearson about a current of sewage sludge approaching the Long Island shore.
- Tom welcomes popular voices of the night, radio disc jockeys from various American cities. His scheduled guests include Los Angeles deejay Ray Briem; Philadelphian Bill Corsair from WCAU; WBZ Boston's Larry Glick; and Herb Jepko from Salt Lake City radio station KSL.
- Popular Hollywood columnist Rona Barrett talks about her career and the latest news and gossip from the entertainment industry. Also, Tom meets with prolific Newark police officer David Toma, whose law enforcement adventures inspired the recently canceled ABC-TV crime drama Toma, starring Tony Musante in the eponymous role.
- Tomorrow covers the world of professional baseball. Scheduled guests include venerable Los Angeles Dodgers announcer Vin Scully; former Major League Baseball center fielder Jim Piersall, whose mental health issues and mercurial antics were documented in the book and movie Fear Strikes Out; and Emmett Ashford, the first black MLB umpire.
- Following NBC's live telecast of the 26th Primetime Emmy awards, Tomorrow takes a look back at the Golden Age of Television. Among those joining Tom from the era are TV personalities Steve Allen, Buffalo Bob Smith, and Ralph Edwards; and director John Rich.
- In the first of three editions of Tomorrow videotaped on location in Las Vegas, scheduled guests include John Moss, winner of the 1974 World Series of Poker; Horseshoe Casino owner Bennv Binion, the event's host; Carl Cohen, senior Vice President of the MGM Grand hotel; professional blackjack dealer Gin Lynch of the Golden Nugget casino; and Las Vegas police spokesman Don V. Passiatore who drives host Tom Snyder down the Las Vegas strip.
- In the last of three editions recorded in Las Vegas, Tom receives a lesson in catching players who cheat from Michael Gaughan, the youngest casino owner in Vegas, and he has a chat with entertainment columnist Ralph Pearl about the most prolific Las Vegas entertainers. An excursion to the Guardian Angel Cathedral rounds out the visit.
- In the second of three editions from Las Vegas, Tom chats with the Brown Bomber, former boxing champion Joe Louis, whose hard times have left him employed as a greeter at Caesar's Palace; Newsday reporter Lou Dolinar; and Las Vegas Sun newspaper publisher Hank Greenspun. Tom also takes on the role of best man for a chapel wedding.
- Host Tom Snyder discusses the provocative topic of homosexuality with guests Dr. Howard Brown, an accomplished New York physician and founder of the National Gay Task Force; and Baptist minister Troy Perry, founder of the Metropolitan Community Church in Los Angeles and author of an autobiography, The Lord is My Shepherd and He Knows I'm Gay.
- Host Tom Snyder engages in a heady discussion about the universe, its creation, and the debate over whether or not science and theology are compatible with one another or mutually exclusive. Tom's scheduled guest is Dr. Robert Jastrow, founder and director of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
- Tomorrow delves into the issue of suicide with guest Edwin Shneidman, the foremost authority on the research and study of suicide. Shneidman, co-founder of the Los Angeles Suicide Prevention Center and professor of medical psychology at UCLA, gives insight into potential suicidal behavior. Also featured in this edition, Tom undergoes an acupuncture treatment on-air in an attempt to cure his pharyngitis.
- An in-depth look at the life of a hit man highlights this sensational edition of Tomorrow. Utilizing a pseudonym and donning a mask to obscure his real identity, "Joey" answers host Tom Snyder's questions about his reasons for undertaking such a dangerous and brutal profession and how he has managed to elude capture and prosecution for his alleged crimes.
- Dr. William C. Rader, an expert on the disease of alcoholism who appeared on the program last December, returns to Tomorrow. A staff psychiatrist of the University of Southern California Medical School, Rader conducts another session of psychodrama therapy with real life participants. First of two parts.
- Second of a two-part special edition. University of California staff psychiatrist Dr. William C. Rader, an expert on the disease of alcoholism who appeared on the program last December, conducts another session of psychodrama therapy with real life participants.
- Tom welcomes unusual guests to tonight's edition of Tomorrow. Scheduled to appear are teenage comic book collector Mitch Mehdy, who last year paid a record amount for a rare comic; Astrid and Joel, a pair who perform songs they learned from aliens; and Robert Opel, infamous streaker from the Academy Awards telecast in April.
- Tom's guests tonight include Donald W. Santarelli, who recently resigned his post as director of the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration under murky circumstances; Ed Davis, outspoken chief of police in Los Angeles who reacts to Santarelli's decision; and James Mackey, a young man who was incorrectly accused of rape in 1972 but was acquitted by public defenders.
- Kelly Lange, KNBC Los Angeles' popular weather forecaster, is guest hostess tonight, substituting for Tom Snyder. Kelly interviews illusionist Uri Geller about his notable appearance last year on Johnny Carson's The Tonight Show; and talks with folk singer and activist Joan Baez. Also scheduled is Bertha the elephant.
- Host Tom Snyder interviews Richard Sprague, special prosecutor for the Philadelphia district attorney's office; and Jack Newfield, an investigative reporter with the Village Voice. The three discuss justice and Sprague's recent, successful prosecution of Tony Boyle for the murders of Jock Yablonski, his wife Margaret, and daughter Charlotte on New Year's Eve 1969.
- Kelly Lange substitutes for Tom Snyder in this edition devoted to controversial psychosurgery, the removal of brain tissue to alleviate violent behavior. Kelly talks with Berkeley psychiatrist Dr. Lee Coleman, co-founder of the Committee Opposed to the Abuse of Psychiatry; Mark Tyler, recipient of the surgery; and KNBC's Mike Gavin, with a story on lobotomizing prisoners.
- Tom interviews novelist Clifford Irving, who is now paroled after serving seventeen months in prison for orchestrating a fraudulent autobiography of reclusive business magnate Howard Hughes. Irving discusses his failed scheme, prison life, and his wife Edith, who was also indicted and imprisoned.
- Tom welcomes guest Dr. William Dement, director of Stanford University's Sleep Research Center for a discussion of sleep disorders. Also scheduled are psychiatrists Dr. Darrell Bolen and Dr. William Boyd from UCLA who speak on their study of gambling addiction.
- Tonight's topic is the world of dangerous sports. Tom talks with Billy Kidd, the first American to win an Olympic medal for alpine skiing; famed bullfighter Alfonso Bustamante; 1958 LeMans winner Phil Hill; and Car and Driver magazine editor Brock Yates, author of the book Sunday Driver.
- Tom welcomes to the show returning guests Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, Washington Post investigative reporters who broke the story of the Watergate scandal. They discuss the release of their new book All the President's Men, which chronicles their journey to expose corruption in the Nixon administration.
- Tom Snyder's guests are Champion Teutsch. psychologist and author of From Here to Happiness; and purveyor of dirty politics Donald Segretti, recently released from serving a four month prison sentence for conspiracy and distribution of illegal campaign material against the Democratic Party to ensure Nixon's re-election bid.
- Longtime smoker host Tom Snyder conducts a panel discussion on the habit. They discuss why people enjoy smoking, how they become addicted, the difficulties they face in breaking the addiction, and current techniques to help people give up the habit.
- Tom's guest for this edition of Tomorrow is the flamboyant and charismatic Louisiana minister Dr. Harrington, known to many in the New Orleans area as the "chaplain of Bourbon Street". Harrington chats with Tom about his religious ministry which he practices outside of the city's most popular bars and night spots.
- Tom's singular guest for this installment is William Wellman, one of Hollywood's most memorable writer-directors. Wellman discusses his uneven but prolific career including Wings, the first film to win the Academy award for best picture, and the legendary A Star is Born, for which Wellman received his only Oscar.
- Tom chats with Tony-award winning musical conductor Herbert Greene and his wife actress Carolyn Jones. Also scheduled are Earl Grollman, rabbi of the Beth El Temple Center in Belmont, Massachusetts and author of the book Explaining Death to Young People.
- Tomorrow takes a look at the life and career of the contentious late stand-up comedian Lenny Bruce, whose life was complicated by drug addiction and conviction on obscenity charges. Tom's guest is Albert Goldman, author of Bruce's biographical book Ladies and Gentlemen - Lenny Bruce!.
- Tom welcomes back to Tomorrow four members of the Delancey Street Foundation, a San Francisco a non-profit organization devoted to academic and vocational training for ex-cons. The guests discuss criminal techniques and how to avoid being "ripped off" by them.
- Tom's sole guest for this broadcast is former MI6 agent Dusko Popov, who was purportedly the inspiration for author Ian Fleming's iconic fictional spy James Bond. Popov recently released his non-fiction but likely embellished book Spy/Counterspy, an engrossing account of his exploits.
- Host Tom Snyder examines the issue of collecting and storing personal data of American citizens. His guest is Aryeh Neier, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, who opposes the storage of information in computerized data banks due to its potential misuse and invasion of privacy. They discuss proposed legislation that would restrict information storage.
- Tom is joined on the program by NBC news colleague Tom Brokaw, along with Tom Jarriel, White House correspondent for ABC News. The men discuss the often complicated relationship between Richard Nixon's administration and the broadcast journalists who report on them.
- Conservatism in America is the topic of tonight's edition of Tomorrow.
- Scheduled guests for tonight's broadcast include Ken Clawson, communications director for the White House, who defends President Nixon's administration and condemns the leaks leading to Watergate. Tom also sits down for a chat with four young millionaires.
- Keith Stefan, a 26 year old photographer diagnosed with terminal Hodgkin's disease, makes a return visit to Tomorrow. He and host Tom Snyder discuss his current medical condition and the after effects of his first appearance on the show in December 1973, which saved the life of a suicidal viewer. An interview with humorist Jean Shephard is also scheduled.
- Tonight's guests include James W. McCord, former head of security for the Committee to Re-elect the President. McCord, who was sentenced to prison, discusses his current situation. Also scheduled to appear are concert lighting designer Chip Monck, now host of the rock and roll talk show Speakeasy; and Gary Perkins of Pacific Presentations, the LA company which organized April 1974's music festival California Jam.
- Tom's guest is Lynn Caine, author of the non-fiction book Widow, a deeply personal account of her attorney husband's death from cancer in 1971, and the aftermath that followed it. Tom and Caine discuss common problems women face in widowhood and what it takes to overcome them.
- Marijuana is the scheduled topic for this edition of Tomorrow.
- Host Tom Snyder chats with Chesterfield Smith, president of the American Bar Association, whose son was arrested last month for indecent exposure after streaking in a Lakeland, Florida restaurant; and Frank Barton, the prolific, venerable NBC announcer of radio and television set to retire soon from broadcasting.
- Tom welcomes to Tomorrow three of the longest-serving and most influential motion picture and entertainment syndicated newspaper columnists in America: Sidney Skolsky, Joyce Haber and Dorothy Manners. The trio discuss their storied careers and the contemporary movie industry.
- Two lively subjects are scheduled for discussion on this edition of Tomorrow. First up, a look at cryogenics. Tom speaks with Robert Nelson, president of the Cryonics Society of California who performed the first cryonic suspension in 1967; and television sitcom writer Dick Clair, a proponent of the process. Following cryogenics, the subject of male menopause is addressed.
- Tom's scheduled guest is A.C. Nielsen, head of the marketing research organization A.C. Nielsen Company which calculates television viewership ratings. Nielsen explains the methodology for measuring how many people are or are not watching a given program.
- Host Tom Snyder interviews Harry Brown, author of You Can Profit from a Monetary Crisis. Brown makes financial predictions about retail prices and the value of a dollar for the rest of the year and offers helpful suggestions for turning an economic crisis into personal opportunity.
- Tom's guests for this edition of Tomorrow are motorcycle patrolmen Scooter Joe Willins and Ken Kaufman, a pair of NYPD officers assigned to parking ticket detail in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area. The pair have solved over a dozen murder cases without the use of a gun and are the subject of a planned, upcoming book.
- Extra sensory perception is the topic tonight as Tom welcomes to the show Atoris, a psychic, and authors Lynn Schroeder and Sheila Ostrander of the newly released non-fiction book The Handbook of Psi Discoveries. The guests purport the existence of ESP powers within and around everyone though it's often dismissed as a hunch or just lucky intuition.
- People involved in life threatening sports are profiled as Tom speaks with Billy Kidd, the first American to win an Olympic medal for alpine skiing; famed bullfighter Alfonso Bustamante; 1958 LeMans winner Phil Hill; and Car and Driver magazine editor Brock Yates, author of the book Sunday Driver.
- Sexual therapy is the subject of this edition of Tomorrow.
- Dr. Alvin Poussaint, psychiatrist and Harvard Medical School professor, talks about children who must cope with sick parents; Dr. Fitzhugh Dodson, discusses his book How to Father and the role of male parents; James Dobson, author of Hide and Seek, talks with Tom about the cultivation of self-esteem in children.
- Tom's scheduled guest is prolific writer-producer Norman Lear, the man responsible for some of television's biggest hits, including All in the Family, Maude, and Sanford and Son. Tom interviews the laconic Lear about his career and the difficulties of producing the quality work for which he is known.
- The provocative and flamboyant Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II, better known as "Reverend Ike, the chaplain of Bourbon Street," joins Tom on the set for another discussion following his second appearance on Tomorrow this past April, when he and Tom discussed his unorthodox New Orleans street ministry.
- Tomorrow has an eye to the future as Tom welcomes two of America's most beloved authors of futuristic tales: Ray Bradbury, celebrated writer of speculative fiction as well as non-fiction works; and Gene Roddenberry, creator of the cult television series Star Trek.