MDA Labor Day Telethon

MDA Labor Day Telethon

The MDA Show of Strength is an annual televised benefit concert held each Labor Day Weekend in the United States to raise money for the Muscular Dystrophy Association (MDA). The program is the successor to the Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon, an annual telethon that ran until 2010.

The history of MDA's telethon dates back to the 1950s, when the Jerry Lewis Thanksgiving Party for MDA raised funds for MDA's New York City area operations. The telethon has been held annually on Labor Day weekend since 1966, and has raised $2.45 billion dollars for MDA from its inception through 2009.

The telethon was founded and hosted by actor and comedian, Jerry Lewis, from its 1966 inception until 2010.

From 1966 to 2010, the telethon aired up to 21½ hours, starting on the Sunday evening preceding Labor Day and continuing until late Monday afternoon. MDA calls its network of participating stations the "Love Network". The show originated from Las Vegas for twenty-eight of the years it aired.

In 2011, it was seen on the Sunday evening before Labor Day for six hours; This edition, syndicated to approximately 160 television stations throughout the United States on Sunday, September 4, 2011, was also the first edition without Jerry Lewis as host. Nigel Lythgoe, Jann Carl, Alison Sweeney and Nancy O'Dell, all who were originally tapped to co-host the telethon with Lewis, shared hosting duties in the 2011 edition.

The 2012 edition, now renamed the MDA Show of Strength (thus no longer referring to itself as a telethon) aired Sunday, September 2, 2012, and was reduced to three hours for prime-time broadcast. The telethon was seen at 8PM ET/PT, 7PM CT/MT, and seen live in the Eastern and Central time zones.

Read more about MDA Labor Day Telethon:  Ed McMahon, Scheduling, Theme Songs, Canada, Puerto Rico, Hurricanes and Other Shortfalls, Tote Board, Criticism, Miscellaneous

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