February 3 and 10 - A six-hour retrospective of Bob Hope's more than 30 years of entertaining at military bases and hospitals in the U.S. and abroad airs on NBC.
March 21 - On the season finale of the soap opera Dallas, the infamous character J.R. Ewing is shot by an unseen assailant leading to the catchphrase "Who Shot JR?"
May 24 - The Not Ready For Prime Time Players appear in their final episode on Saturday Night Live, and many feel it is the end of an era for the venerable series.
June 23 - The David Letterman Show debuts on NBC. Letterman's humor doesn't go over well with a morning audience, and the show is soon cancelled. Letterman would go on to host a late night show two years later.
June 30 - The ABC game show Family Feud moves from airing at 11:30 AM/ET to 12 noon. It is one of the few shows that survived in the 12 noon timeslot considering the fact that many shows that were slated for the noon timeslot on the networks were subject to being pre-empted for local news broadcasts in many markets.
Summer - SAG and AFTRA go out on strike, effecting television programmes in the United States and Canada forever. Some television shows were permitted to begin airing in late October while many Canadian shows were held back until well into April, 1982.
August 1 - After a failed experiment, the soap opera Another World airs its last regularly scheduled ninety-minute episode. The show returns to sixty minutes on August 4.
November 21 - The mystery of "Who Shot J.R.?" is solved on the soap opera series, Dallas. (Sue Ellen's sister Kristin, played by Mary Crosby, did the deed), drawing a record number of viewers.
December 12 - The burial of John Lennon takes place. It is strictly a private matter and none of the other Beatles attends.
December 30 - After 26 years on the air and 20 seasons on one network, NBC announces that the longest-running prime-time TV series, Disney's Wonderful World, will not be on the network's fall 1981 schedule. It will be picked up by CBS.