Sally Jessy Raphael was one of the first audience-participation, issue-driven talk shows to have a female host, predating Oprah by three years. The program was an iconic part of the tabloid talk show genre that pervaded daytime television throughout much of the 1980s and 1990s. When the show started out it covered topics such as people with extreme religious beliefs, but in the later shows Sally and her after specialist Pat Ferrari moved on to more personal family matters such as pregnant and/or out-of-control teens. Topics of the show varied wildly, from the controversial and hard-hitting stories to more lighthearted fare such as hypnotists getting guests to do funny gags. As a result, when content ratings were introduced in the 1990s, the ratings for Sally varied widely from episode to episode, from TV-G to TV-14. Drag queens were frequently featured on the show, usually in fun, and some even dressed as Sally impersonators. The show that garnered her largest ratings was dedicated to women with large breasts. In the early years of the nationally syndicated run, Sally Jessy Raphael remained a half hour show, but in 1986, Raphael expanded production of each episode to an hour's length. However, broadcast markets were allowed to retain a half-hour packaging of her show, which most opted for, especially since stations already had successful half-hour entries, no matter local or national, scheduled before or after Sally. The 30-minute edits resorted to running the closing credit crawls before segments wrapped up, often as guests still had the floor. While only a select few markets picked up the full-hour Sally shows in the 1986-87 season, an increasing number of stations made the option over the next few years, especially as networks started to free up their daytime slots. For example, in January 1989, WCVB-TV in Boston, which had been airing the 30-minute Sally broadcasts at 11 a.m., opted to go with the hour-long version when the ABCsoap operaRyan's Hope, which WCVB aired at 11:30, was canceled. By 1990, all stations that carried Sally were airing her shows for 60 minutes. From the summer of 1987 through August 1989, the show originated from the studios of New Haven, Connecticut's WTNH, where one large studio of the ABC affiliate's facility was divided to house both the talk show and WTNH's news set. In August 1989, Sally moved into the Unitel facilities in Manhattan, also home to MTV, and later, Rush Limbaugh. In 1998, the show moved to new production facilities in the former grand ballroom of the Hotel Pennsylvania, also in New York City, where it remained until its cancellation in 2002, sharing the space with sister series Maury with differing sets and studio layouts. Famous con manSteve Comisar appeared on Sally as a fraud prevention expert, under the name Brett Champion.
Cancelation
The show was canceled due to low ratings, as well as the fading popularity of the genre as a whole, in 2002.
Afterlife
Sally has never been rerun on traditional television. In 2018, Nosey, a free online streaming service offering video of daytime television shows began making episodes of Sally available for viewing.
The children's show, Sesame Street parodied this talk show and its host as Sally Messy Yuckyael, a Grouch character. Sally has also appeared in the 1991 The Addams Family movie as a cameo.