The Overmyer Network/
United Network was a short-lived
television network. It was intended to be a
fourth national commercial network in the United States, competing with the
Big Three television networks. The network was founded by self-made millionaire
Daniel H. Overmyer, who built five
UHF stations from 1965 to 1967 (including Toledo's WDHO-TV (now
WNWO-TV, an NBC affiliate), which signed on the air on May 3, 1966). A social conservative ("I'm against smut," he declared), Overmyer began to produce his own programs, and decided to create a nationwide hookup, enticing existing stations with a 50-50 profit split with potential affiliates (something that the established network's affiliates had been trying to get from
ABC,
CBS and
NBC for years). Under the leadership of former ABC television president Oliver Treyz, the ON was scheduled to debut in the fall of 1967 with anywhere from 75 to 125 affiliates with an 8 hour broadcasting day.