(This section will serve as a general repository for information pertinent to this timeline until it becomes large enough to be divided into relevant subpages.)
The Andy Griffith Show
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In
Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In (second consecutive season)
Marcus Welby, M.D.
Those Were the Days
Those Were the Days (second consecutive season)
Those Were the Days (third consecutive season)
Sanford and Son
Rock Around the Clock
Rock Around the Clock (second consecutive season)
Rock Around the Clock (third consecutive season)
The Richard Pryor Show
The Richard Pryor Show (second consecutive season)
Texas
Properly the Award of Merit, handed out by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) on an annual basis since the early 1930s; popularly known as simply the Academy Awards (despite the fact that many Academies hand out awards) or the Oscars (the nickname for the nude, sword-bearing man depicted in the statuette). Any awards not listed here can be assumed to have gone to their OTL recipient.
The following awards were handed out at the 43rd Academy Awards, on April 15, 1971, recognizing the best in film for the year 1970:
Patton (20th Century Fox).
George C. Scott as Gen. George S. Patton, in Patton. Scott refused the award, and would (many years later) ask that it be presented to the Patton Museum; the Academy grudgingly complied.
Larry Kramer, for Women in Love.
The following awards were handed out at the 44th Academy Awards, on April 10, 1972, recognizing the best in film for the year 1971:
Napoleon (MGM), awarded to Stanley Kubrick (accepted on his behalf by Edgar M. Bronfman, Sr.).
Stanley Kubrick, for Napoleon (accepted on his behalf by John Alcott, who had won for Best Cinematography earlier that evening).
David Hemmings as Napoleon Bonaparte, in Napoleon. Hemmings, at the age of 30 years, 144 days, became the youngest person to accept this award, beating the record previously held by Marlon Brando.
Jane Fonda as Bree Daniels, in Klute.
Ben Johnson as Sam the Lion, in The Last Picture Show.
Cloris Leachman as Ruth Popper, in The Last Picture Show.
Paddy Chafesky, for The Hospital.
Stanley Kubrick for Napoleon, adapted from the biography by Felix Markham (accepted on his behalf by Markham).
Milena Canonero, for Napoleon.
John Alcott, for Napoleon.
Bill Butler, for Napoleon.
The following awards were handed out at the 45th Academy Awards, on March 27, 1973, recognizing the best in film for the year 1972:
Cabaret (Allied Artists).
Bob Fosse, for Cabaret.
Marlon Brando as Don Vito Corleone, in The Godfather. Brando became the fourth actor to win the award twice (as he had previously won for On The Waterfront), after Fredric March, Spencer Tracy, and Gary Cooper. Of those three men, only March still lived at the time of the ceremony.
Liza Minnelli as Sally Bowles, in Cabaret.
Joel Grey as the Master of Ceremonies, in Cabaret.
Nino Rota, for The Godfather.
The following awards were handed out at the 46th Academy Awards, on April 2, 1974, recognizing the best in film for the year 1973:
The Exorcist (Warner Bros.), awarded to William Peter Blatty.
Peter Bogdanovich, for The Exorcist.
Jamie Lee Curtis as Regan MacNeil, in The Exorcist. Curtis, at the age of 15 years, 131 days, became the youngest person to accept this award, and the youngest performer to receive any award in a competitive category, in both cases beating the record previously held by Patty Duke.
The following awards were handed out at the 47th Academy Awards, on April 8, 1975, recognizing the best in film for the year 1974:
Chinatown (Paramount), awarded to Robert Evans.
Francis Ford Coppola, for The Godfather Part II.
Harvey Korman as Hedley LaMarr, in Blazing Saddles.
The Emmy Awards have been presented by the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (ATAS) on an annual basis since 1948. The name “Emmy” is a corruption of “Immy”, a nickname for image orthicon tubes used in early television cameras; the term was thus feminized to better fit the statuette, a winged woman holding an atom. Any awards not listed here can be assumed to have gone to their OTL recipient.
The following awards were handed out at the 20th Emmy Awards, on May 19, 1968, recognizing outstanding television for the 1967-68 season:
The Lucy Show, produced by Desilu Productions (Lucille Ball, Gary Morton, and Tommy Thompson); aired on CBS.
Star Trek, produced by Desilu Productions (Gene Roddenberry and Gene L. Coon); aired on NBC.
Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, produced by George Schlatter and Ed Friendly; aired on NBC.
Lucille Ball as Lucy Carmichael, in The Lucy Show (CBS). (second consecutive win; fourth overall, and second in this role)
Barbara Bain as Cinnamon Carter, in Mission: Impossible (CBS). (second consecutive win)
Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock, in Star Trek (NBC).
Donald R. Rode, for the episode “The Doomsday Machine” of Star Trek (NBC).
The following awards were handed out at the 21st Emmy Awards, on June 8, 1969, recognizing outstanding television for the 1968-69 season:
Get Smart, produced by Talent Associates (Buck Henry, Arne Sultan, and Burt Nodella); aired on ABC.
Mission: Impossible, produced by Desilu Productions (Bruce Geller and Joseph Lantman); aired on CBS. (second overall win)
Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, produced by Ed Friendly; aired on NBC. (second consecutive win)
Martin Landau as Rollin Hand, in Mission: Impossible (CBS).
Barbara Bain as Cinnamon Carter, in Mission: Impossible (CBS). (third consecutive win)
Donald R. Rode, for the episode “Of Gods and Men” of Star Trek (NBC). (second consecutive win)
The following awards were handed out at the 22nd Emmy Awards, on June 7, 1970, recognizing outstanding television for the 1969-70 season:
Room 222, produced by Paramount Television (Gene Reynolds and James L. Brooks); aired on ABC.
Star Trek, produced by Desilu Productions (Gene Roddenberry, Gene L. Coon, Robert H. Justman, and D.C. Fontana); aired on NBC. (second overall win)
The David Frost Show, produced by Westinghouse Broadcasting (David Frost and Peter Baker); aired in syndication.
Barbara Bain as Cinnamon Carter, in Mission: Impossible (CBS). (fourth consecutive win)
Michael Constantine as Mr. Seymour Kaufman, in Room 222 (ABC).
Karen Valentine as Miss Alice Johnson, in Room 222 (ABC).
Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock, in Star Trek (NBC). (second overall win)
Donald R. Rode, for the episode “Yesteryear” of Star Trek (NBC). (third consecutive win)
The following awards were handed out at the 23rd Emmy Awards, on May 9, 1971, recognizing outstanding television for the 1970-71 season:
Those Were the Days, produced by Tandem Productions (Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin); aired on CBS.
Star Trek, produced by Desilu Productions (Gene Roddenberry, Gene L. Coon, Robert H. Justman, and D.C. Fontana); aired on NBC. (second consecutive win, third overall)
The Flip Wilson Show, produced by Bob Henry Productions and Clerow Productions (Monty Kay, Bob Henry, and Flip Wilson); aired on NBC.
Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison, in The Odd Couple (ABC).
Jean Stapleton as Edith Bunker, in Those Were the Days (CBS).
Barbara Bain as Cinnamon Carter, in Mission: Impossible (CBS). (fifth consecutive win)
Edward Asner as Lou Grant, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (CBS).
Valerie Harper as Rhoda Morgenstern, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (CBS).
Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock, in Star Trek (NBC). (second consecutive win, third overall)
Donald R. Rode, for the episode “The Sleepers of Selene” of Star Trek (NBC). (fourth consecutive win)
The following awards were handed out at the 24th Emmy Awards, on May 6, 1972, recognizing outstanding television for the 1971-72 season:
Those Were the Days, produced by Tandem Productions (Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin); aired on CBS. (second consecutive win)
Elizabeth R, produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation (Christopher Sarson and Roderick Graham); aired on PBS.
The Flip Wilson Show, produced by Bob Henry Productions and Clerow Productions (Monty Kay, Bob Henry, and Flip Wilson); aired on NBC. (second consecutive win)
Carroll O'Connor as Archie Bunker, in Those Were the Days (CBS).
Jean Stapleton as Edith Bunker, in Those Were the Days (CBS). (second consecutive win)
Glenda Jackson as Queen Elizabeth I, in Elizabeth R (PBS).
Edward Asner as Lou Grant, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (CBS). (second consecutive win)
Penny Marshall as Gloria Bunker-Higgins, in Those Were the Days (CBS).
The following awards were handed out at the 25th Emmy Awards, on May 20, 1973, recognizing outstanding television for the 1972-73 season:
Those Were the Days, produced by Tandem Productions (Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin); aired on CBS. (third consecutive win)
Spencer's Mountain, produced by Lorimar Productions (Lee Rich and Robert L. Jacks); aired on CBS.
The Carol Burnett Show, produced by Punkin' Productions, Inc. (Joe Hamilton, Arnie Rosen, and Carol Burnett); aired on CBS.
Jack Klugman as Oscar Madison, in The Odd Couple (ABC). (second overall win)
Mary Tyler Moore as Mary Richards, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (CBS).
Edward Asner as Lou Grant, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (CBS). (third consecutive win)
Valerie Harper as Rhoda Morgenstern, in The Mary Tyler Moore Show (CBS). (second overall win)
The following awards were handed out at the 26th Emmy Awards, on May 28, 1974, recognizing outstanding television for the 1973-74 season:
The Mary Tyler Moore Show, produced by Paramount Television (James L. Brooks, Allan Burns, and Ed. Weinberger); aired on CBS.
Kojack, produced by Universal Television (Abby Mann, Matthew Rapf, and James Duff McAdams); aired on CBS.
The Carol Burnett Show, produced by Punkin' Productions, Inc. (Joe Hamilton, Arnie Rosen, and Carol Burnett); aired on CBS. (second consecutive win)
Carroll O'Connor as Archie Bunker, in Those Were the Days (CBS). (second overall win)
Mary Tyler Moore as Mary Richards, in Those Were the Days (CBS). (second consecutive win)
Telly Savalas as Lt. Theodore “Teddy” Kojack, in Kojack (CBS).
Richard Dreyfuss as Richard Higgins, in Those Were the Days (CBS).
Penny Marshall as Gloria Bunker-Higgins, in Those Were the Days (CBS). (second overall win)