List of ViacomCBS television programs
This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience.(April 2019) |
This is a list of television series produced and/or owned by ViacomCBS' brands, including for Paramount Television Studios, CBS Studios, CBS Media Ventures, CBS News, and ViacomCBS Domestic Media Networks. This list also includes shows produced or distributed by ViacomCBS' predecessor companies, including by CBS Productions, Viacom Productions/Enterprises, Big Ticket Entertainment, DreamWorks Television, Miramax Television, Awesomeness, the older incarnation of Desilu Productions, Paramount Television, Bing Crosby Productions, Rysher Entertainment, Television Program Enterprises, Republic Pictures Television, Laurel Entertainment, ABC Films, NBC Films, QM Productions, Taft Entertainment Television/Worldvision Enterprises, Group W/Eyemark Entertainment, Showtime Networks, King World Productions and Spelling Television.
CBS Studios[]
Note: Formerly known as CBS Paramount Television and CBS Television Studios.
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Late Show with David Letterman | 1993–2015 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Worldwide Pants Incorporated |
7th Heaven | 1996–2007 | The WB/The CW | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with Spelling Television |
The King of Queens | 1998–2007 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Columbia TriStar Television/Sony Pictures Television and Hanley Productions Distributed in the U.S. by SPT |
Girlfriends | 2000–2008 | UPN, The CW | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with Happy Camper Productions (2000–2008) and Grammnet Productions |
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | 2000–2015 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Alliance Atlantis |
The Amazing Race | 2001–present | co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television, Earthview, Inc., Worldrace Productions, Amazing Race Productions and ABC Studios Distributed outside of the U.S. by Disney Media Distribution. | |
The Dead Zone | 2002–2007 | USA Network | continued from Paramount Network Television; co-production with Crescent Entertainment (seasons 1–3), Lionsgate Television, The Segan Company (seasons 1–5), Modern Entertainment (seasons 1–3), Piller2 Productions / The Piller/Segan Company and Dead Zone Production Company Distributed in the U.S. by Lionsgate/Debmar-Mercury |
Without a Trace | 2002–2009 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Warner Bros. Television CBS Paramount Network Television produced seasons 5–7 |
CSI: Miami | 2002–2012 | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Alliance Atlantis | |
NCIS | 2003–present | Spin-off of JAG; co-production with Belisarius Productions; continued from Paramount Television | |
Cold Case | 2003–2010 | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Warner Bros. Television | |
The 4400 | 2004–2007 | USA Network | continued from Viacom Productions/Paramount Network Television; co-production with American Zoetrope, BSkyB, Renegade 83 Productions and 4400 Productions |
CSI: NY | 2004–2013 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Alliance Atlantis |
Everybody Hates Chris | 2005–2009 | UPN/The CW | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with CR Enterprises and 3 Arts Entertainment |
The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson | 2005–2014 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Worldwide Pants Incorporated |
NUMB3RS | 2005–2010 | CBS | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with Scott Free Productions, The Barry Schindel Company (2005–2007); (seasons 2–3) and Post 109 Productions (2009–2010); (season 6) |
Ghost Whisperer | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with Sander/Moses Productions, Touchstone Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Media Distribution. | ||
Medium | 2005–2011 | NBC/CBS | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with Picturemaker Productions and Grammnet Productions |
Criminal Minds | 2005–2020 | CBS | continued from Paramount Television; co-production with The Mark Gordon Company and Touchstone Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Disney Media Distribution. |
The Game | 2006–2015 | The CW/BET | co-production with Georgia Media 2011–2015); (seasons 4–9), Happy Camper Productions 2006–2008); (seasons 1–2), Akil Productions (2008–2015); (seasons 3–9), Grammnet Productions, and BET Original Productions (2011–2015); (seasons 4–9) |
Cane | 2007 | CBS | co-production with Once a Frog Productions, El Sendero Productions, Interscope Television, and ABC Studios |
Aliens in America | 2007–2008 | The CW | co-production with Guarascio/Port Productions, Mr. Bigshot Fancy-Pants Productions and Warner Bros. Television |
Gossip Girl | 2007–2012 | co-production with Alloy Entertainment, College Hill Pictures (seasons 1–3), Fake Empire Productions (seasons 4–6), and Warner Bros. Television | |
Rules of Engagement | 2007–2013 | CBS | co-production with Game Six Productions, Happy Madison Productions and Sony Pictures Television Distributed in the U.S. by SPT |
Worst Week | 2008–2009 | co-production with Two Soups Productions, Hat Trick Productions and Universal Media Studios Distributed in the U.S. by NBCUniversal Television Distribution Based on the TV series The Worst Week of My Life by Hat Trick Productions and the BBC | |
Gary Unmarried | 2008–2010 | co-production with Ed Yeager Productions, Rude Mood Productions (both season 1 only) and ABC Studios Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Flashpoint | 2008–2012 | CTV, CBS, ION | co-production with Pink Sky Entertainment and Avamar Entertainment |
90210 | 2008–2013 | The CW | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Sachs/Judah Productions (season 1 only) Based on Beverly Hills 90210 |
The Good Wife | 2009–2016 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Scott Free Productions, King Size Productions and Small Wishes Productions (season 1 only) |
Melrose Place | 2009–2010 | The CW | Pilot only; co-production with Slavkin/Swimmer Continuation of the 1990s TV series of the same name |
NCIS: Los Angeles | 2009–present | CBS | co-production with R. Scott Gemmill Productions (2016–present) and Shane Brennan Productions Expansion of NCIS. |
The Vampire Diaries | 2009–2017 | The CW | co-production with Outerbanks Entertainment, Alloy Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television |
Hawaii Five-0 | 2010–2020 | CBS | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with K/O Paper Products and 101st Street Television Based on the 1968 TV series |
Blue Bloods | 2010–present | continued from CBS Productions; co-production with Panda Productions (2010–2020), The Leonard Goldberg Company (2020–present), and Paw in Your Face Productions (2010–2011) | |
Hellcats | 2010–2011 | The CW | co-production with Five & Dime Productions and Warner Bros. Television |
The Talk | 2010–present | CBS | |
Mad Love | 2011 | co-production with Two Soups Productions, FanFare Productions and Sony Pictures Television | |
Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior | co-production with The Mark Gordon Company, Bernero Productions and ABC Studios Distributed outside of the U.S. by Disney Media Distribution Expansion of Criminal Minds | ||
CHAOS | co-production with Rat Entertainment, Certified Pulp and 20th Century Fox Television | ||
Unforgettable | 2011–2016 | CBS/A&E | co-production with Timberman/Beverly Productions and Sony Pictures Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by SPT |
A Gifted Man | 2011–2012 | CBS | co-production with Baer Bones and Timberman/Beverly Productions |
Ringer | The CW | pilot only; co-production with Green Eggs and Pam Productions, Inc., Brillstein Entertainment Partners, ABC Studios, Warner Bros. Television and CBS Productions | |
The Secret Circle | co-production with Outerbanks Entertainment, Alloy Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television | ||
Hart of Dixie | 2011–2015 | co-production with Fake Empire, Dogarooski Productions (season 4) and Warner Bros. Television | |
Made in Jersey | 2012 | CBS | co-production with Left Coast Productions, FanFare Productions and Sony Pictures Television |
Common Law | USA Network | co-production with Junction Entertainment | |
Vegas | 2012–2013 | CBS | co-production with Happy Valley Productions, Tree Line Film and Arthur Sarkissian Productions |
Emily Owens, M.D. | The CW | co-production with The Dan Jinks Company and Warner Bros. Television | |
Elementary | 2012–2019 | CBS | co-production with Hill of Beans Productions and Timberman-Beverly Productions |
Beauty & the Beast | 2012–2016 | The CW | co-production with Witt/Thomas Productions, WhizBang Films and Take 5 Productions Based on the 1987 TV series of the same name |
Under the Dome | 2013–2015 | CBS | co-production with Amblin Television and Baer Bones |
We Are Men | 2013 | co-production with The Tannenbaum Company and Roughhouse Productions | |
Cult | The CW | co-production with Rockne S. O'Bannon Television, Fake Empire Productions, and Warner Bros. Television | |
King & Maxwell | TNT | co-production with Shane Brennan Productions | |
The Millers | 2013–2014 | CBS | co-production with Amigos de Garcia Productions |
The Tomorrow People | The CW | co-production with Berlanti/Plec, FremantleMedia North America and Warner Bros. Television Based on the 1973 television series by Thames Television | |
The Originals | 2013–2018 | co-production with My So-Called Company, Alloy Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television | |
Reign | 2013–2017 | co-production with Joyful Girl Productions, Take 5 Productions, WhizBang Films and Warner Bros. Television | |
Intelligence | 2014 | CBS | co-production with Michael Seitzman's Pictures, Tripp Vinson Productions, The Barry Schindel Company and ABC Studios |
Bad Teacher | co-production with Gifted And Talented Camp, Mosaic Media Group, Quantity Entertainment and Sony Pictures Television Based on the 2011 movie by Columbia Pictures | ||
Reckless | co-production with Sander/Moses Productions | ||
Star-Crossed | The CW | co-production with Space Floor TV, Olé Productions and Warner Bros. Television | |
Extant | 2014–2015 | CBS | co-production with 22 Plates Productions (season 1) and Amblin Television |
The McCarthys | co-production with Bambi Cottages Productions, Olive Bridge Entertainment and Sony Pictures Television | ||
Scorpion | 2014–2018 | co-production with K/O Paper Products, Blackjack Films, Perfect Storm Entertainment and SB Projects | |
Madam Secretary | 2014–2019 | co-production with Barbara Hall Productions and Revelations Entertainment | |
NCIS: New Orleans | 2014–2021 | co-production with Wings Productions and When Pigs Fly Incorporated (seasons 1–4) | |
The 100 | 2014–2020 | The CW | co-production with Alloy Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television |
Jane the Virgin | 2014–2019 | co-production with S Productions, Poppy Productions, RCTV, Electus and Warner Bros. Television Based on the 2002 TV series Juana la Virgen by RCTV | |
Power | 2014–2020 | Starz | co-production with End of Episode, Inc., Maluwi Productions, Atmosphere Television and G-Unit Films and Television Inc. |
Young & Hungry | 2014–2018 | ABC Family/[1]Freeform | co-production with Waffle Toaster Productions, Relativity Television/Critical Content,[2] Blondie Girl Productions and The Tannenbaum Company |
Celebrity Name Game | 2014–2016 | Syndication | co-production with Coquette Productions, Entertain the Brutes, Green Mountain West Inc., Fremantle and Debmar-Mercury |
Battle Creek | 2015 | CBS | co-production with Shore Z Productions, Gran Via Productions and Sony Pictures Television |
The Messengers | The CW | co-production with Thunder Road Television and Warner Bros. Television | |
Significant Mother | co-production with Alloy Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television | ||
Limitless | 2015–2016 | CBS | co-production with K/O Paper Products, Action This Day! and Relativity Television/Critical Content |
Impastor | TV Land | co-production with All in Vane Productions, The Tannenbaum Company and TV Land Original Productions | |
The Odd Couple | 2015–2017 | CBS | co-production with The Tannenbaum Company and Timberman-Beverly Productions Based on the 1965 play of the same name, the 1968 movie, and the 1970 TV series |
Zoo | co-production with James Patterson Entertainment, Tree Line Film and Midnight Radio | ||
Code Black | 2015–2018 | co-production with Michael Seitzman's Pictures, Tiny Pyro Productions and ABC Studios | |
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend | 2015–2019 | The CW | co-production with LeanMachine, Webbterfuge (season 1), Black Lamb (seasons 2–4), racheldoesstuff (seasons 2–4) and Warner Bros. Television |
The Late Late Show with James Corden | 2015–present | CBS | co-production with Fulwell 73 |
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert | co-production with Spartina Productions | ||
Angel from Hell | 2016 | co-production with Quill Entertainment | |
BrainDead | co-production with King Size Productions and Scott Free Productions | ||
American Gothic | co-production with Full Fathom Five, Hyla Regilla Productions and Amblin Television | ||
Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders | 2016–2017 | co-production with The Mark Gordon Company, Erica Messer Productions and ABC Studios Distributed outside of the U.S. by Disney Media Distribution Expansion of Criminal Minds | |
The Great Indoors | co-production with Gibbons Bros. Productions and Shiny Brass Lamp Productions | ||
Pure Genius | co-production with True Jack Productions and Universal Television | ||
No Tomorrow | The CW | co-production with Rede Globo, Electus and Warner Bros. Television Based on the 2012 TV series Como Aproveitar o Fim do Mundo by Rede Globo | |
Incorporated | Syfy | co-production with Algorithm Entertainment, Pearl Street Films and Universal Cable Productions | |
Kevin Can Wait | 2016–2018 | CBS | co-production with Hey Eddie Productions and Mohawk Productions (season 1) and Sony Pictures Television |
Man with a Plan | 2016–2020 | co-production with Double Double Bonus Entertainment and 3 Arts Entertainment | |
Bull | 2016–present | co-production with Amblin Television (seasons 1–3), Picturemaker Productions (season 2–present), Atelier Paul Attanasio and Stage 29 Productions | |
MacGyver | 2016–2021 | co-production with Lionsgate Television, Atomic Monster Productions and 101st Street Television Based on the 1985 TV series by Paramount Television | |
Riverdale | 2017–present | The CW | co-production with Berlanti Productions, Archie Comics and Warner Bros. Television |
Superior Donuts | 2017–2018 | CBS | co-production with Daily Productions, Goldman-Donovan Productions & Teitelbaum Artists |
Doubt | 2017 | co-production with Timberman/Beverly Productions | |
The Good Fight | 2017–present | CBS (Premiere)[3][4][5] CBS All Access/Paramount+ |
co-production with Scott Free Productions and King Size Productions |
Candy Crush | 2017 | CBS | co-production with Pulse Creative, King and Lionsgate Television |
Salvation | 2017–2018 | co-production with Still Married Productions and Secret Hideout | |
Star Trek: Discovery | 2017–present | CBS (Premiere) CBS All Access/Paramount+ |
co-production with Secret Hideout, Living Dead Guy Productions, and Roddenberry Entertainment Prequel to the 1966 TV series by Desilu, Norway Corporation, and Paramount Television |
SEAL Team | CBS | co-production with Chulack Productions, East 25 C (season 1), Timberman/Beverly Productions and John Glenn Entertainment (seasons 2–3), | |
S.W.A.T. | co-production with MiddKid Productions, Kansas Art Productions, Perfect Storm Entertainment, Original Film and Sony Pictures Television Based on the 1975 TV series of the same name by Spelling-Goldberg Productions and the 2003 film of the same name by Columbia Pictures | ||
No Activity | CBS All Access/Paramount+ | co-production with Funny or Die, Gary Sanchez Productions and Jungle Entertainment | |
9JKL | 2017–2018 | CBS | co-production with Liscolaide Productions, Trill TV[6] and Kapital Entertainment[7] |
American Vandal | Netflix | co-production with Funny or Die, Woodhead Entertainment and 3 Arts Entertainment[8] | |
Valor | The CW | co-production with Warner Bros. Television and Ostar Productions | |
Wisdom of the Crowd | CBS | co-production with Algorithm Entertainment, Keshet International and Universal Television | |
The Guest Book | TBS | co-production with Studio T and Amigos de Garcia Productions | |
Dynasty | 2017–present | The CW | co-production with Fake Empire Productions, Richard and Esther Shapiro Productions and Rabbit Ears, Inc. Based on the 1981 television series of the same name |
Carpool Karaoke: The Series | Apple Music | co-production with Fulwell 73[9] | |
Return of the Mac | 2017 | Pop[10] | co-production with T Group Productions |
Life Sentence | 2018 | The CW | co-production with In Good Company, Doozer and Warner Bros. Television |
One Dollar | CBS All Access | co-production with Zobot Projects and Anonymous Content | |
Instinct | 2018–2019 | CBS | co-production with 34 Films, Webbterfuge, James Patterson Entertainment and Secret Hideout |
Strange Angel | CBS All Access | co-production with Scott Free Productions, Sailor Bear, Digilio Films, and Pantalone Films | |
Insatiable | Netflix | co-production with Storied Media Group and Ryan Seacrest Productions | |
Whistleblower | CBS | co-production with CBS News | |
FBI | 2018–present | co-production with Wolf Films (season 1), Wolf Entertainment (season 2–present) and Universal Television | |
Magnum P.I. | co-production with 101 Street Entertainment (2018–2020); (seasons 1–2), Perfect Storm Entertainment, Davis Entertainment and Universal Television Based on the 1980 TV series by Universal Television, Glen A. Larson Productions, and Belisarius Productions | ||
The Neighborhood | co-production with Kapital Entertainment, Trill Television and A Bird and a Bear Entertainment | ||
All American | The CW | co-production with Berlanti Productions, April Blair's Company (season 1 only) and Warner Bros. Television | |
Charmed | co-production with Poppy Productions, Reveal Entertainment, Stay Married Productions (since season 2) and Propagate Based on the 1998 series of the same name by Spelling Television | ||
Legacies | co-production with My So-Called Company, Alloy Entertainment and Warner Bros. Television | ||
Our Cartoon President | Showtime | co-production with Spartina Productions and Licht Media Solutions | |
Happy Together | 2018–2019 | CBS | co-production with Fulwell 73 and 3 Arts Entertainment |
God Friended Me | 2018–2020 | co-production with Berlanti Productions, I Have an Idea and Warner Bros. Television | |
Fam | 2019 | co-production with Kushellivision, Trill Television and Kapital Entertainment | |
The Code | co-production with Timberman-Beverly Productions | ||
The Red Line | co-production with Berlanti Productions, Array Filmworks and Warner Bros. Television | ||
Unbelievable | Netflix | co-production with Katie Couric Media, Escapist Fare, Timberman/Beverly Productions And Sage Lane Productions | |
Roswell, New Mexico | 2019–present | The CW | co-production with Amblin Television, My So-Called Company, Bender Brown Productions and Warner Bros. Television |
The Twilight Zone | 2019–2020 | CBS All Access | co-production with Monkeypaw Productions and Genre Films Based on the 1959 TV series by Cayuga Productions and CBS Productions |
In the Dark | 2019–present | The CW | co-production with Red Hour and Warner Bros. Television |
Dead to Me | Netflix | co-production with Gary Sanchez Productions and Visualized, Inc. | |
Blood & Treasure | CBS | co-production with Propagate and Lake June Productions | |
BH90210 | 2019 | Fox | co-production with Alberghini Chessler Productions and Fox Entertainment |
Carol's Second Act | 2019–2020 | CBS | co-production with FourBoys Entertainment and Kapital Entertainment |
Why Women Kill | 2019–present | CBS All Access/Paramount+ | co-production with Black Lamb, Acme Productions, Cherry Productions and Imagine Television |
All Rise | 2019–2021 | CBS | co-production with Shimmering Pictures, Skyemac Productions, Tall Baby Productions and Warner Bros. Television |
Evil | 2019–present | CBS/Paramount+ | co-production with King Size Productions |
The Unicorn | 2019–2021 | CBS | co-production with Mike and Bill Productions, Trill TV and Kapital Entertainment |
Nancy Drew | 2019–present | The CW | co-production with Warm Bloody Sunday Productions, Furious Productions and Fake Empire Productions |
The Moodys | 2019–2021 | Fox | co-production with The Tannenbaum Company, Jungle Entertainment and Fox Entertainment |
FBI: Most Wanted | 2020–present | CBS | co-production with Wolf Entertainment and Universal Television |
68 Whiskey | 2020 | Paramount Network | co-production with Imagine Television Studios, yes Studios and Little City Ironworks |
Diary of a Future President | 2020–present | Disney+ | co-production with I Can & I Will Productions |
Star Trek: Picard | CBS All Access/Paramount+ | co-production with Secret Hideout, Weed Road Pictures, Escapist Fare and Roddenberry Entertainment Based on the 1966 TV series and its 1987 spin-off | |
Tooning Out the News | co-production with Spartina Productions Licht Media Solutions and RJ Fried Worldwide | ||
Katy Keene | 2020 | The CW | co-production with Berlanti Productions, Archie Comics and Warner Bros. Television A spin-off of Riverdale |
Tommy | CBS | co-production with Atelier Paul Attansio Productions, Heel & Toe Films and Amblin Television | |
Broke | co-production with Sunshine Bakery Productions, Sutton Street Productions, Propagate, RCN TV and Reasonant TV | ||
Most Dangerous Game | 2020–present | Quibi/The Roku Channel | co-production with BlackJack Films, Mayhem Pictures and Silver Reel |
Power Book II: Ghost | Starz | co-production with End of Episode, Inc., G-Unit Films and Television Inc. and Atmosphere Television | |
The Comey Rule | 2020 | Showtime | co-production with Home Run Productions, Secret Hideout and The Story Factory |
That Animal Rescue Show | 2020–present | CBS All Access | co-production with Stage 29 Productions, Detour Filmproduction and 1851 Productions |
The Stand | 2020–2021 | co-production with Mosaic Media Group and Vertigo Entertainment | |
Walker | 2021–present | The CW | co-production with Rideback, Stick to Your Guns Productions and Pursued by a Bear Based on the 1993 TV series by CBS Productions and Columbia Pictures Television |
The Equalizer | CBS | co-production with Davis Entertainment, Martin Chase Productions, Milmar Films, Flavor Unit Entertainment and Universal Television Based on the 1985 TV series by Universal Television | |
Clarice | co-production with MGM Television and Secret Hideout Based on the 1990 movie The Silence of the Lambs by Orion Pictures | ||
For Heaven's Sake | Paramount+/CBC Gem | co-production with Funny or Die and Muse Entertainment | |
The Bite | 2021 | Spectrum | co-production with King Size Productions |
The Republic of Sarah | The CW | co-production with Fulwell 73 and Black Lamb | |
Gossip Girl | 2021–present | HBO Max | co-production with Warner Bros. Television, Fake Empire Productions and Alloy Entertainment |
Power Book III: Raising Kanan | Starz | co-production with End of Episode, Inc., G-Unit Film & Television, Atmosphere Television and Lionsgate Television | |
House Calls with Dr. Phil | CBS | co-production with Stage 29 Productions | |
The Lost Symbol | Peacock | co-production with Universal Television and Imagine Television Studios | |
NCIS: Hawai'i | Coming 2021 | CBS | |
FBI: International | co-production with Wolf Entertainment and Universal Television | ||
CSI: Vegas | co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television | ||
Ghosts | co-production with Lionsgate Television, BBC Studios and Monumental Television | ||
Guilty Party | Paramount+ | co-production with Funny or Die and Mosaic | |
4400 | The CW | ||
Star Trek: Prodigy | Paramount+/Nickelodeon | co-production with Nickelodeon Animation Studio, Roddenberry Entertainment and Secret Hideout Based on the 1966 TV series, and its spin-offs by Desilu Productions and Paramount Television | |
Swagger! | Apple TV+ | co-production with Imagine Television Studios | |
Good Sam[11] | Coming 2022 | CBS | co-production with Sutton St. Productions |
Smallwood[12] | |||
The Never Game | TBA | ||
The Porch | co-production with Kapital Entertainment | ||
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds | Paramount+ | co-production with Secret Hideout and Roddenberry Entertainment Prequel to the 1966 TV series by Desilu Productions and Norway Corporation | |
Topangaland | CBS | co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Television | |
Life and Deaf[13] | Disney+ | co-production with Four Boys Entertainment | |
Washed Up[14] | Peacock | co-production with Titmouse, Inc. | |
Here She Lies | TBA | co-production with The Tannenbaum Company | |
Everybody Hates Chris[15] | TBA | ||
Panther Baby[15] | Starz | ||
Shtisel[15] | TBA | co-production with Fremantle |
Paramount Television[]
Title | Network | Original run | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Lucy Show | CBS | 1962–1968 | Produced by Desilu Productions until 1967 |
You Don't Say! | NBC | 1963–1969 | |
Mission: Impossible | CBS | 1966–1973 | |
Star Trek | NBC | 1966–1969 | Produced by Desilu Productions until 1967 Co-production with Norway Corporation |
Mannix | CBS | 1967–1975 | Produced by Desilu Productions in 1967 |
Here's Lucy | 1968–1974 | Co-production for Season 1 only with Lucille Ball Productions Currently owned by Desilu Too, LLC. | |
The Brady Bunch | ABC | 1969–1974 | Co-production with Redwood Productions, Inc. |
Love, American Style | co-production with Parker-Margolin Productions, Inc. | ||
The Young Lawyers | 1970–1971 | Co-production with Crane Productions, Inc. | |
Barefoot in the Park | 1970 | Based on the 1967 film | |
The Immortal | 1970–1971 | ||
The Odd Couple | 1970–1975 | Based on the 1968 film co-production with R.G. Productions, Inc. | |
Longstreet | 1971–1972 | Co-production with Edling Productions, Inc. and Corsican Productions, Inc. | |
Spyforce | Nine Network | 1971–1973 | Co-production with Nine Network |
The Sandy Duncan Show | CBS | 1971–1972 | Co-production with Jefferson/Sultan Productions, Inc. |
Me and the Chimp | 1972 | ||
The Brady Kids | ABC | 1972–1973 | Co-production with Filmation Associates |
Catch-22 | 1973 | Based on the 1970 film by Paramount Pictures | |
Love Story | NBC | 1973–1974 | Based on the 1970 movie |
The Magician | co-production with B & B Productions, Inc. | ||
Star Trek: The Animated Series | co-production with Filmation Associates Continuation of the 1966 TV series | ||
Happy Days | ABC | 1974–1984 | Co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions (1974–1981) (seasons 1–8), Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions (1981–1984) (seasons 9–11) and Henderson Production Company, Inc. (1978–1984) (seasons 6–11) |
Petrocelli | NBC | 1974–1976 | based on the 1970 film The Lawyer by Paramount Pictures Co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions |
Paper Moon | ABC | 1974–1975 | based on the 1973 film Co-production with The Culzean Corporation |
Archer | NBC | 1975 | |
Kate McShane | CBS | ||
Rita and Spot | ABC | 1975-1980 | Co-productions with Katy Sherriff Productions |
Barbary Coast | 1975–1976 | Co-production with Francy Productions, Inc. | |
The Cop and the Kid | NBC | 1975 | |
The Oddball Couple | ABC | 1975–1977 | co-production with DePatie-Freleng Enterprises |
When Things Were Rotten | 1975 | Co-production with Crossbow Productions, Inc. | |
The Lost Islands | Network 10 | 1976 | co-production with Network 10 |
Laverne & Shirley | ABC | 1976–1983 | Co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions (seasons 1–6), Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions (seasons 7–8) and Henderson Production Company, Inc. |
Serpico | NBC | 1976–1977 | based on the 1973 film co-production with Emmet G. Lavery, Jr. Productions, Inc. |
The Brady Bunch Hour | ABC | Currently owned by and co-production with Sid & Marty Krofft Productions | |
Kum-Kum | Syndication | 1976 | English dub production; originally produced in Japan by ITC Japan |
Busting Loose | CBS | 1977 | Co-production with Hayadou Productions |
Blansky's Beauties | ABC | co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions Inc. and Henderson Production Company, Inc. | |
Mulligan's Stew | NBC | Co-production with Christiana Productions | |
Dog and Cat | ABC | Co-production with Lawrence Gordon Productions | |
Future Cop | co-production with The Culzean Corporation and Tovern Productions, Inc. | ||
Szysznyk | CBS | 1977–1978 | co-produced with Four's Company Productions |
Having Babies | ABC | 1978–1979 | Co-production with The Jozak Company |
Grandpa Goes to Washington | NBC | ||
Taxi | ABC, NBC | 1978–1983 | co-production with John Charles Walters Productions |
Mork & Mindy | ABC | 1978–1982 | co-production with Henderson Production Company, Inc. and Miller-Milkis Productions, Inc. (1978–1981) and also later episodes with Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions (1981–1982) |
The Ted Knight Show | CBS | 1978 | |
Who's Watching the Kids? | NBC | co-production with Henderson Production Company, Inc. | |
Makin' It | ABC | 1979 | co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions, Henderson Production Company, Inc. and The Stigwood Group, Ltd. |
Working Stiffs | CBS | Co-production with Frog Productions and Huk, Inc. | |
Struck by Lightning | co-production with Fellows-Keegan Productions | ||
Out of the Blue | ABC | Co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions | |
Brothers and Sisters | NBC | Co-production with Frog Productions Inc. and Huk, Inc. | |
Sweepstakes | Co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions | ||
Make Me Laugh | Syndication | 1979–1980 | Co-produced by Lukehill Productions |
Flo's Yellow Rose | NBC (first two seasons only); ABC (seasons 3–5) | 1979-1984 | Co-production with D'Angelo Bullock Allen Productions |
The Associates | ABC | 1979–1980 | co-production with John Charles Walters Productions |
Angie | Co-production with Miller-Milkis Productions (season 1), Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions (season 2) and Henderson Production Company, Inc. | ||
The Bad News Bears | CBS | Based on the 1976 film Co-production with Huk, Inc. and Frog Productions | |
Solid Gold | Syndication | 1980–1988 | Co-production with Operation Prime Time, Bob Banner Associates and Brad Lachman Productions, Inc. |
Goodtime Girls | ABC | 1980 | Co-production with Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions |
Tenspeed and Brown Shoe | Co-production with Stephen J. Cannell Productions, who now owns the rights to the series except for the pilot | ||
Here's Boomer | NBC | 1980–1982 | Co-production with A.C. Lyles Productions and Daniel Wilson Productions |
The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang | ABC | Co-production with Hanna-Barbera An expansion of Happy Days | |
Bosom Buddies | Co-production with Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions | ||
Hans Christian Andersen | Syndication | 1980 | English dub production; originally produced in Japan by Mushi Production |
The Brady Brides | NBC | 1981 | Co-production with Redwood Productions An expansion of The Brady Bunch |
Nero Wolfe | |||
Foul Play | ABC | Based on the 1978 film by Paramount Pictures co-production with Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions and Myrt-Hal Productions Inc. | |
Best of the West | 1981–1982 | Co-production with Weinberger/Daniels Productions | |
Laverne & Shirley in the Army | Co-production with Hanna-Barbera Productions An expansion of Laverne & Shirley | ||
Police Squad! | ABC | 1982 | Later adapted into The Naked Gun film franchise. |
Smiley's People | Syndication/BBC | Co-production with BBC Worldwide | |
Making the Grade | CBS | Co-production with Ubu Productions | |
Madame's Place | Syndication | 1982–1983 | Co-production with Madame, Inc. and Brad Lachman Productions |
Joanie Loves Chachi | ABC | An expansion of Happy Days co-produced by Miller-Milkis-Boyett Productions and Henderson Production Company, Inc. | |
Star of the Family | 1982 | ||
The Powers of Matthew Star | NBC | 1982–1983 | Co-produced by with Daniel Wilson Productions, Harve Bennett Productions (1982-83) and also later episodes with Bruce Lansbury Productions, Ltd. (1983) |
The New Odd Couple | ABC | co-production with Henderson Production Company, Inc. | |
Mork & Mindy/Laverne & Shirley/Fonz Hour | Co-production with Hanna-Barbera Productions and Ruby-Spears Enterprises | ||
Family Ties | NBC | 1982–1989 | Co-production with Ubu Productions |
Cheers | 1982–1993 | Co-production with Charles/Burrows/Charles Productions | |
Webster | ABC/Syndication | 1983–1989 | Co-production with Georgian Bay, Ltd. and Emmanuel Lewis Entertainment Enterprises Inc. (1986–1989) |
Ryan's Four | ABC | 1983 | Co-production with Fair Dinkum, Inc. and Groverton Productions Ltd. |
Mr. Smith | NBC | co-production with Weinberger/Daniels Productions | |
The Renegades | ABC | co-production with Lawrence Gordon Productions | |
Shaping Up | 1984 | co-production with Estin-Simon Productions | |
Brothers | Showtime | 1984–1989 | Co-production with Gary Nardino Productions |
Call to Glory | ABC | 1984–1985 | Co-production with Tisch/Avnet Productions, Inc. |
Anything for Money | Syndication | Co-production with Bernstein/Hovis Productions and Impact Studios | |
Hometown | CBS | 1985 | Co-production with Kirgette Productions |
The New Love, American Style | ABC | 1985–1986 | A daytime reboot of the 1969–1974 prime time series |
America | Syndication | ||
MacGyver | ABC | 1985–1992 | Co-production with Henry Winkler/John Rich Productions |
All Is Forgiven | NBC | 1986 | Co-production with Charles/Burrows/Charles Company |
Gung Ho | ABC | Based on the 1986 movie | |
Mr. Sunshine | Co-production with Henry Winkler/John Rich Productions | ||
Sanchez of Bel Air | USA Network | Co-produced with Dog Lips Productions | |
The Cavanaughs | CBS | 1986–1989 | Co-production with Mandy Films |
The Tortellis | NBC | 1987 | Co-production with Charles/Burrows/Charles Company |
Hard Knocks | Showtime | Co-production with Gary Nardino-Chris Thompson Productions | |
Duet | Fox | 1987–1989 | Co-production with Ubu Productions |
Marblehead Manor | Syndication | 1987–1988 | Co-production with Dames-Fraser- Productions |
The Bronx Zoo | NBC | Co-production with Ubu Productions | |
Star Trek: The Next Generation | Syndication | 1987–1994 | An update of the 1966 TV series |
Friday the 13th: The Series | 1987–1990 | with Hometown Films Inspired by the 1980 movie Friday the 13th and its sequels | |
Day by Day | NBC | 1988–1989 | Co-production with Ubu Productions |
Wipeout | Syndication | Co-production with Dames-Fraser Productions | |
Dear John | NBC | 1988–1992 | Co-production with Ed. Weinberger Productions Based on the 1986 TV series of the same name by BBC |
Mission: Impossible | ABC | 1988–1990 | An update of the 1966 TV series Co-production with Jeffrey Hayes Productions |
War of the Worlds | Syndication | Based on the 1953 movie with Ten Four Productions, Triumph Entertainment and Hometown Films | |
Dolphin Cove | CBS | 1989 | Co-production with Dick Berg/Stoneherge Productions |
The Arsenio Hall Show | Syndication | 1989–1994 | Co-production with Arsenio Hall Communications |
Hard Copy | 1989–1999 | ||
Open House | Fox | 1989–1990 | Co-production with Ubu Productions |
The Bradys | CBS | 1990 | Co-production with Brady Productions A continuation of The Brady Bunch |
His & Hers | Co-production with Ubu Productions | ||
Down Home | NBC | 1990–1991 | Co-production with Savage Cake Productions and Jabberwocky Productions |
Tim Conway's Funny America | ABC | 1990 | |
Wings | NBC | 1990–1997 | Co-production with Grub Street Productions |
Ferris Bueller | 1990–1991 | Co-production with Maysh Ltd. Productions Based on the 1986 movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off | |
American Dreamer | co-production with Ubu Productions | ||
E.A.R.T.H. Force | CBS | 1990 | Co-production with Chapman/Dial |
The Party Machine | Syndication | 1991 | Co-production with Peeples Productions and Arsenio Hall Communications |
Sons and Daughters | CBS | Co-production with B&E Productions | |
Verdict | |||
Maury | Syndication | 1991–1998 | Paramount stopped distributing Maury in 1998; Studios USA assumed production afterward
Co-production with MoPo Productions |
The Royal Family | CBS | 1991–1992 | Co-production with Eddie Murphy Television |
Flesh 'n' Blood | NBC | 1991 | Co-production with Triangle Entertainment, Lavish Productions and Tailfin Productions |
Brooklyn Bridge | CBS | 1991–1993 | Co-production with Ubu Productions |
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles | ABC | Prequel to the film Raiders of the Lost Ark and its sequels | |
Sightings | Fox | 1992–1997 | Co-produced by Winkler/Daniel Productions (1991–93) (seasons 1–2), (60-minute specials) The Berkeley Group (1991–92) (specials only) Sather Gate Productions (1992–93) (season 2) Wilshire Court Productions (1992–93) (season 2) Ann Daniel Productions (1994–98) (seasons 4-5), (120-minute specials) Fair Dinkum Productions (seasons 4-5), (120-minute specials) Triage Entertainment (1996–98) (season 6) |
Love at First Sight | Syndication | 1992 | |
Middle Ages | CBS | Co-production with Stan Rogow Productions | |
Flying Blind | Fox | 1992–1993 | Co-production with Sweetum Productions and Viacom Productions |
Bob | CBS | Co-production with Steinkellners & Sutton | |
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | Syndication | 1993–1999 | Based on the 1966 series and its spin off |
The Untouchables | 1993–1994 | Based on the 1987 movie and its predecessor TV series co-production with Christopher Crowe Productions | |
Big Wave Dave's | CBS | 1993 | co-production with Levine & Isaacs Productions |
Frasier | NBC | 1993–2004 | co-production with Grub Street Productions an expansion of Cheers |
The Mommies | 1993–1995 | co-production with Speer-Grossman Productions | |
The Jon Stewart Show | MTV/Syndication | season 2; co-production with Busboy Productions and MTV Productions | |
South of Sunset | CBS | 1993 | co-production with Stan Rogow Productions and Byrum Power & Light |
Itsy Bitsy Spider | USA Network | 1994–1996 | Co-production with Hyperion Animation |
Viper | NBC, Syndication | 1994–1999 | Co-production with Pet Fly Productions |
Leeza | 1994–2000 | Co-production with Leeza Gibbons Enterprises | |
The New Price is Right | Syndication | 1994–1995 | Co-production with Mark Goodson Productions[N 1] |
Duckman | USA Network | 1994–1997 | Co-production with Klasky Csupo and Reno & Osborn Productions |
The Busy World of Richard Scarry | Showtime | Co-production with Cinar, France 3, BBC, Family Channel, Beta Film (Germany), and Telefilm Canada[N 2] | |
Sister, Sister | ABC, The WB | 1994–1999 | Co-production with de Passe Entertainment |
Star Trek: Voyager | UPN | 1995–2001 | Based on the 1966 series and its spin-off |
The Watcher | 1995 | Co-production with Christopher Crowe Productions | |
Pig Sty | Co-production with Staley/Long Productions | ||
Platypus Man | Co-production with Fanaro-Nathan Productions | ||
The Marshal | ABC | Co-production with Buffalo Wallet Productions and Western Sandblast | |
Marker | UPN | Distribution only; produced by Stephen J. Cannell Productions | |
Legend | Distribution only; produced by Gekko Film Corp. and Mike & Bill Productions | ||
Almost Perfect | CBS | 1995–1996 | Co-production with Robin Schiff Productions and Levine & Isaacs Productions |
The Pursuit of Happiness | NBC | 1995 | Co-production with Grub Street Productions |
JAG | NBC/CBS | 1995–2005 | co-production with Belisarius Productions and NBC Productions (1995–1996) (season 1) |
The Home Court | NBC | 1995–1996 | |
Moesha | UPN | 1996–2001 | distribution continued from Worldvision Enterprises; produced by Big Ticket Television and Saradipity Productions |
Good Company | CBS | 1996 | Co-production with Staley/Long Productions |
Judge Judy | Syndication | 1996–2021 | Produced from 1999 to 2006; co-production with Queen Bee Productions and Big Ticket Entertainment |
Clueless | ABC, UPN | 1996–1999 | Co-production with Cockamamie Productions Based on the 1995 movie |
The Sentinel | UPN | Co-production with Pet Fly Productions | |
America's Dumbest Criminals | Syndication | 1996–2000 | continued from Worldvision Enterprises Currently owned by FilmRise |
Real TV | 1996–2001 | Co-production with RTV News Inc. | |
Nash Bridges | CBS | continued from Rysher Entertainment; co-production with The Don Johnson Company and Carlton Cuse Productions | |
Arli$$ | HBO | 1996–2002 | International distribution continued from Rysher Entertainment; produced by HBO and Tollin/Robbins Productions |
Orleans | CBS | 1997 | Co-production with Samoset Productions |
Fired Up | NBC | 1997–1998 | Co-production with Grammnet Productions |
George and Leo | CBS | Co-production with Staley/Long Productions | |
Hitz | UPN | 1997 | Produced by Vaczy-Gamble Productions and MTV Productions |
Jenny | NBC | 1997–1998 | Produced by Mark & Howard Productions and MTV Productions |
Three | The WB | 1998 | Produced by Rego Park Film & Television and MTV Productions |
The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer | UPN | Co-production with Fanaro-Nathan Productions | |
Judge Joe Brown | Syndication | 1998–2013 | Produced from 1999 to 2006 |
LateLine | NBC/Showtime | 1998–1999 | Co-production with Markus-Franken Productions |
The Howie Mandel Show | Syndication | Co-production with 3 Arts Entertainment and Alevy Productions Inc. | |
Maggie | Lifetime | Co-production with Atomic Television | |
DiResta | UPN | Co-production with Maple Seed | |
Encore! Encore! | NBC | Co-production with Grub Street Productions | |
Judge Mills Lane | Syndication | 1998–2001 | continued from Rysher Entertainment |
Seven Days | UPN | Co-production with Crowe Entertainment | |
Becker | CBS | 1998–2004 | Co-production with Dave Hackel Productions and Industry Entertainment |
Love & Money | 1999–2000 | Co-production with CBS Productions and Staley/Long Productions | |
Relic Hunter | Syndication | 1999–2002 | Produced by CHUM Limited, ProSieben Media AG, M6, Rysher Entertainment Gaumont Television (1999–2001) seasons 1-2), Fireworks Entertainment Amy International Productions, Farrier Ltd. (2001–02) (season 3) and Groupe M6 |
Hope Island | PAX TV | 1999–2000 | Co-production with Lionsgate Television Based on the 1996 TV series Ballykissangel by the BBC |
Now and Again | CBS | Co-production with Picturemaker Productions and CBS Productions | |
Soul Food: The Series | Showtime | 2000–2004 | Based on the 1997 film co-production with Fox Television Studios (seasons 1 and 2)/20th Century Fox Television (seasons 3–5) Water Walk Productions, Edmonds Entertainment and State Street Pictures |
Grapevine | CBS | 2000 | Co-production with CBS Productions |
Higher Ground | Fox Family | Co-production with Crescent Entertainment, Lionsgate Television and WIC Entertainment Distributed in the U.S. by Lionsgate/Debmar-Mercury | |
The Trouble with Normal | ABC | Co-production with Garfield Grove Productions and Touchstone Television | |
Level 9 | UPN | 2000–2001 | Co-production with Sacret Productions |
Maximum Exposure | Syndication | 2000–2002 | Co-production with First Television and RTV News Inc. |
Queen of Swords | Syndication/Global | 2000–2001 | US distribution only; produced by Mercury Entertainment Corporation, Telefónica, Morena Films, Costume and Production Services Inc., Amy International Artists, Fireworks Entertainment and M6 |
That's Life | CBS | 2000–2002 | Co-production with Film Noir |
One on One | UPN | 2001–2006 | Co-production with The Greenblatt/Janollari Studio and Daddy's Girl Productions |
Manhunt | 2001 | ||
Hot Ticket | Syndication | 2001–2004 | |
Some of My Best Friends | CBS | 2001 | Based on the 1997 film Kiss Me, Guido by Paramount Pictures Co-production with Axelrod/Widdoes Entertainment |
Big Apple | Co-production with Red Board Productions and Yerkovich Productions | ||
Kristin | NBC | Co-production with Markusfarms Productions | |
Men, Women & Dogs | The WB | Co-production with Staley/Long Productions | |
Fling | Fox | ||
Star Trek: Enterprise | UPN | 2001–2005 | Prequel to the 1966 TV series Star Trek |
Philly | ABC | 2001–2002 | Co-production with Steven Bochco Productions |
Rendez-View | Syndication | ||
Wolf Lake | CBS | Produced by Cherry Pie Productions and Big Ticket Television | |
Special Unit 2 | UPN | Co-production with Rego Park Film and Television | |
Raising Dad | WB | Co-production with Albion Productions | |
In-Laws | NBC | 2002–2003 | Co-production with Grammnet Productions and NBC Studios |
Andy Richter Controls the Universe | Fox | Co-production with Garfield Grove Productions and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Disney Media Distribution | |
Life Moments | Syndication | ||
Dr. Phil | 2002–present | Co-distributed with King World Productions | |
First Monday | CBS | 2002 | Co-production with Bellisarius Productions |
Do Over | The WB | Co-production with The Littlefield Company, 3 Hounds Productions and MHS Productions | |
Bram & Alice | CBS | Co-production with Picador Productions and Knotty Entertainment | |
The Random Years | UPN | Co-production with Big Phone Productions | |
A Minute with Stan Hooper | Fox | 2003 | Co-production with Bungalow 78 Productions |
Kingpin | NBC | Produced by Knee Deep Productions, NBC Studios and Spelling Television Distributed in the U.S. by NBCUniversal Television Distribution | |
Keen Eddie | Fox | 2003–2004 | Co-production with Frequency Films, Simon West Productions and The Littlefield Company |
Unexplained Mysteries | Syndication | ||
It's All Relative | ABC | Co-production with Storyline Entertainment, Naturally Blond Productions and Touchstone Television | |
Deadwood | HBO | 2004–2006 | Co-production with Red Board Productions |
Dance 360 | Syndication | 2004–2005 | Co-produced with C to the B Productions and Regan Jon Productions |
The Insider | 2004–2017 | Distributed from 2004 to 2006 | |
Second Time Around | UPN | 2004–2005 | Co-produced with Regan Jon Productions and C to the B Productions |
Medical Investigation | NBC | Co-production with Landscape Entertainment and NBCUniversal Television Studio Distributed outside of the U.S. by NBCUniversal Television Distribution. | |
Threshold | CBS | 2005–2006 | Co-produced by Braga Productions, Heyday Films and Phantom Four Films |
Cuts | UPN | Co-production with The Greenblatt/Janollari Studio, Penrose Productions and Daddy's Girl Productions | |
Love, Inc. | Co-production with Chase T.V., Burg Koules Television and The Littlefield Company | ||
The Bad Girl's Guide | 2005 | Co-production with Flame Ventures | |
Sex, Love & Secrets | Co-production with The Jonathan Axelrod and Kelly Edwards Company | ||
Life on a Stick | Fox | Co-production with Garfield Grove Productions | |
Blind Justice | ABC | Co-production with Steven Bochco Productions | |
Out of Practice | CBS | 2005–2006 | Co-production with Knotty Entertainment and Picador Productions |
Love Monkey | 2006 | Co-production with Bayahibe Films Ltd., Thirtyfour Films Inc. and Sony Pictures Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Sony. | |
South Beach | UPN | Co-production with Flame Television, Nuyorican Productions and 44 Blue Productions | |
Courting Alex | CBS | Co-production with April Fools Productions and Touchstone Television |
Desilu Productions[]
Viacom Productions[]
- The Terrytoons library[16] (1921–1986) (passed over from CBS, ownership eventually coming full-circle back to CBS in 2006)
Title | Years | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
My Three Sons | 1960–1972 | ABC, CBS | distribution only; produced by Don Fedderson Productions Represented by MCA TV from 1960 to 1965, then in association with CBS from 1965 to 1972. Viacom International has distributed the entire series in separate packages, although the majority of the color CBS episodes (Seasons 6–10) are the ones that are syndicated today. Most of the earlier black-and-white shows were not syndicated until they began airing on MeTV on May 29, 2017. CBS currently owns the distribution rights to all 380 episodes produced. |
What's My Line? | 1968–1975 | Syndication | distribution only; produced by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions[N 1] |
The Mary Tyler Moore Show[16] | 1970–1977 | CBS | distribution only; produced by MTM Enterprises Currently owned by 20th Century Fox Television |
All in the Family[16] | 1971–1979 | distribution only; produced by Tandem Productions [N 3] | |
The Bob Newhart Show[16] | 1972–1978 | distribution only; produced by MTM Enterprises Currently owned by 20th Century Fox Television | |
The Rookies[16] | 1972–1976 | ABC | distribution continued from Worldvision Enterprises; produced by Spelling-Goldberg Productions[N 3] |
The Barkleys | 1972–1973 | NBC | with DePatie–Freleng Enterprises In the public domain |
The Houndcats | |||
Ozzie's Girls | 1972–1974 | Syndication | with Filmways |
The Price Is Right (Nighttime version) | 1972–1980 | [N 1] | |
Doc Elliot | 1973–1974 | ABC | International distribution only; produced by Lorimar Television[N 4] |
The Harlem Globetrotters Popcorn Machine | 1974–1975 | CBS | with Funhouse Productions and Yongestreet Productions |
Apple's Way | International distribution only; produced by Lorimar Television[N 4] | ||
Korg: 70,000 B.C. | ABC | distribution only; produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions Later distributed by The Program Exchange and Worldvision Enterprises[N 4] | |
The $25,000 Pyramid | 1974–1979 | Syndication | distribution only; produced by Bob Stewart Productions[N 3] |
The Blue Knight | 1975–1976 | CBS | International distribution only; produced by Lorimar Television[N 4] |
The $128,000 Question | 1976–1978 | Syndication | with Cinelar Associates |
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams[16] | 1977–1978 | NBC | distribution only; produced by Sunn Classic Pictures |
Family Feud | 1977–1985 | Syndication | distribution only; produced by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions[N 1] |
The Love Experts | 1978–1979 | with Bob Stewart Productions[N 3] | |
You Don't Say! | with Ralph Andrews Productions | ||
The MacKenzies of Paradise Cove | 1979 | ABC | with Blinn/Thorpe Productions |
Dear Detective | 1979 | CBS | with Kibee-Hargrove Productions |
The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle | 1979–1981 | with Filmation | |
Amigo and Friends | 1979–1982 | Syndication | with Televisa and Hanna-Barbera Productions Currently owned by Televisa and Warner Bros. Television |
To Tell the Truth | 1980–1981 | distribution only; produced by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions[N 1] | |
East of Eden | 1981 | ABC | miniseries; with Mace Neufeld Productions |
American Dream | with Mace Neufeld Productions[17] | ||
Nurse | 1981–1982 | CBS | with Robert Halmi, Inc. |
The Devlin Connection | 1982 | NBC | co-produced by Jerry Thorpe Productions and Mammoth Films, Inc. |
Amanda's | 1983 | ABC | Based on the TV series Fawlty Towers by the British Broadcasting Corporation
also known as “Amanda By the Sea” |
Ace Crawford, Private Eye | CBS | co-produced with Conway Enterprises | |
The Master | 1984 | NBC | co-produced by Michael Sloan Productions |
The Cosby Show | 1984–1992 | distribution only; produced by Carsey-Werner Productions and Bill Cosby Currently owned by Carsey-Werner | |
Star Games | 1985–1986 | Syndication | |
Easy Street | 1986–1987 | NBC | |
Split Second | Syndication | produced by Stefan Hatos-Monty Hall Productions[N 1] | |
What a Country! | Based on the TV series Mind Your Language by London Weekend Television
with Ripstar Productions, Primetime Entertainment and Tribune Entertainment | ||
Matlock | 1986–1995 | NBC, ABC | with InterMedia Entertainment Company (1986–1987), season 1), The Fred Silverman Company (1987–1995), (seasons 1–9), Strathmore Productions (1986–1988), (seasons 1–2) and Dean Hargrove Productions (1988–1995), (seasons 3–9) |
Adventures of the Little Koala | 1987 | Nickelodeon | English dub production with Cinar Films; originally produced in Japan by Topcraft |
Frank's Place | 1987–1988 | CBS | |
Mighty Mouse: The New Adventures | with Bakshi-Hyde Ventures and Terrytoons | ||
A Different World | 1987–1993 | NBC | distribution only; produced by Carsey-Werner Productions and Bill Cosby Currently owned by Carsey-Werner |
Jake and the Fatman | 1987–1992 | CBS | with The Fred Silverman Company, Strathmore Productions (1987–1988) and Dean Hargrove Productions (1988–1992) |
Father Dowling Mysteries | 1987–1991 | NBC, ABC | with The Fred Silverman Company and Dean Hargrove Productions |
Double Dare | 1988–1989 | Syndication | distribution; co-production with Nickelodeon |
Finders Keepers | with Nickelodeon and Fox Television Stations | ||
Superboy | 1988–1992 | with Alexander and Ilya Salkind Productions, Cantharus Productions, Lowry Productions and DC Comics Warner Bros. currently handles home media and international distribution | |
Roseanne | 1988–2018 | ABC | distribution only; produced by Wind Dancer Productions (season 1), Full Moon and High Tide Productions (seasons 7–9), Mohawk Productions (season 10), Jax Media (season 10) and in association with The Carsey-Werner Company Currently owned by Carsey-Werner |
Remote Control | 1989–1990 | Syndication | distribution; co-production with MTV |
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! | distribution only; produced by Nintendo of America and DIC Entertainment[N 2] | ||
Snoops | CBS | with Tima Love Productions and Solt/Egan Company | |
Max Monroe: Loose Cannon | 1990 | co-produced by Dean Hargrove Productions | |
The Marshall Chronicles | ABC | co-produced by Jay Kleckner for Sweetum Productions[18] | |
Super Force | 1990–1992 | Syndication | with Premiere Limited Productions |
Lightning Force | 1991–1992 | distribution only; produced by Crescent Entertainment and Chesler-Perlmutter Productions | |
Johnny B... On the Loose[19] | 1991 | distribution only; produced by Brandmeier Productions, The Pierce/Silverman Company and NBC Productions | |
Flying Blind | 1992–1993 | FOX | Co-produced by Sweetum Productions |
Key West | 1993 | with Stonehenge Productions | |
Diagnosis: Murder | 1993–2001 | CBS | with The Fred Silverman Company and Dean Hargrove Productions |
Deadly Games | 1995–1997 | UPN | with Shaken not Stirred Productions and Rumbleshake Productions |
Townies | 1996–1997 | ABC | with Vanity Logo Productions and Carsey-Werner Productions Currently owned by Carsey-Werner |
The Adventures of Corduroy | Direct-to-video | co-produced by Benjamin Productions, Lin Oliver Productions, Inc. and Graz Entertainment, Inc.[20] | |
Sabrina, the Teenage Witch | 1996–2003 | ABC, The WB | with Archie Comics, Hartbreak Films and Finishing The Hat Productions (for season 1 only) |
Linc's | 1998–2000 | Showtime | with Tim Reid Productions |
The Hoop Life | 1999–2000 | co-produced by Hardwood Productions and The Levinson/Fontana Company | |
The Beat | 2000 | UPN | with The Levinson/Fontana Company |
Ed | 2000–2004 | NBC | with NBC Studios and Worldwide Pants |
The Division | 2001–2004 | Lifetime | with Kedzie Productions |
Strange Frequency | 2001 | VH1 | with Once & Future Films and Broadway Video |
Baby Bob | 2002–2003 | CBS | with Scribbler's Pillory Productions |
Haunted | 2002 | UPN | with Industry Entertainment and CBS Productions |
Jake 2.0 | 2003–2004 | with David Greenwalt Productions, Matthews/Scharbo Productions and Silent H Productions | |
The Handler | 2003–2004 | CBS | with Haddock Entertainment |
CBS Productions[]
Most pre-1976 series produced by CBS or distributed by CBS Films were later distributed by Viacom and Paramount Television, then eventually came back full-circle to CBS in 2006.
Note: Alternatively known as CBS Entertainment Productions from 1978 to 1995.
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Studio One | 1948–1958 | CBS | |
Lamp Unto My Feet | 1948–1979 | ||
The Amos 'n Andy Show | 1951–1953 | ||
Art Linkletter's House Party | 1952–1969 | ||
Our Miss Brooks | 1952–1956 | ||
You Are There | 1953–1957 1971–1972 |
||
The Red Skelton Show | 1953–1970 | co-production with Van Bernard Productions and Sursum Productions 1962–71 episodes currently owned by the Red Skelton estate | |
Make Room For Daddy/The Danny Thomas Show | 1953–1964 | ABC, CBS | Produced by Marterto Enterprises and T&L Productions Currently distributed by SFM Entertainment |
The Search | 1954–1955 | CBS | |
The Whistler | |||
The Lineup | 1954–1960 | ||
Navy Log | 1955–1958 | CBS, ABC | |
The Millionaire | 1955–1960 | CBS | distribution only; produced by Silverstone Films, Don Fedderson Productions and MCA TV |
Gunsmoke | 1955–1975 | with Arness & Company (season 6), The Arness Production Company (seasons 7–9) and Filmaster Productions | |
The Honeymooners | 1955–56 & beyond | the "Classic 39" shows, produced by Jackie Gleason Enterprises, distributed by CBS Films, then Viacom CBS owns the classic series outright, while the Gleason company owns the "lost episodes", but CBS distributes both packages; other Honeymooners material after this period are handled by the Gleason company and Paul Brownstein Productions | |
The Phil Silvers Show | 1955–1959 | ||
The Gray Ghost | 1957–1958 | Syndication | with Lindsley Parsons Picture Corporation |
Trackdown | 1957–1959 | CBS | with Four Star Films |
Have Gun–Will Travel | 1957–1963 | ||
Perry Mason | 1957–1966 | with Paisano Productions | |
Leonard Bernstein's Young People's Concerts | 1958–1972 | ||
Border Patrol | 1959 | Syndication | Produced by Chris-Jane Gallu Productions, Inc. in association with CBS Films |
Hotel de Paree | 1959–1960 | CBS | |
Rawhide | 1959–1965 | ||
The Twilight Zone | 1959–1964 | with Cayuga Productions, Inc. | |
The Andy Griffith Show | 1960–1968 | Produced by Mayberry Enterprises | |
Angel | 1960–1961 | Produced by Burligame Productions in association with CBS Films | |
The Brothers Brannagan | 1960–1961 | Syndication | Produced by CBS Films |
Gunslinger | 1961 | CBS | |
Way Out | co-produced with Talent Associates | ||
The Alvin Show | 1961–1962 | produced by Bagdasarian Film Corporation and Format Films Home entertainment rights are owned by Bagdasarian Productions | |
The Defenders | 1961–1965 | with Plautus Productions | |
The Dick Van Dyke Show | 1961–1966 | Produced by Calvada Productions Currently distributed by Paul Brownstein Productions | |
Oh! Those Bells | 1962 | ||
The Beverly Hillbillies | 1962–1971 | co-produced by Filmways | |
The Great Adventure | 1963–1964 | ||
Petticoat Junction | 1963–1970 | co-produced by Filmways | |
The Baileys of Balboa | 1964–1965 | produced by Richielieu Productions | |
The Reporter | 1964 | produced by Richielieu Productions | |
Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. | 1964–1969 | co-produced with T & L Productions, Ashland Productions[21] and Andy Griffith Enterprises | |
The Trials of O'Brien | 1965–1966 | Produced by Filmways | |
The Wild Wild West | 1965–1969 | with Michael Garrison Productions | |
Get Smart | 1965–1970 | NBC, CBS | season 5 only; with Talent Associates HBO/Warner Bros. Television owns home entertainment and international distribution rights |
Run, Buddy, Run | 1966–1967 | CBS | with Talent Associates |
Family Affair | 1966–1971 | produced by Don Fedderson Productions Distributed by CBS Television Distribution in the United States,[22] while international distribution is handled by NBCUniversal Television Distribution and home video rights owned by MPI Media Group via MPI Home Video[23] | |
Coronet Blue | 1967 | with Plautus Productions | |
Dundee and the Culhane | co-produced by Filmways Currently owned by MGM Television[citation needed] | ||
Cimarron Strip | 1967–1968 | with Stuart Whitman, Inc.[citation needed] | |
He & She | with Talent Associates | ||
Gentle Ben | 1967–1969 | produced by Ivan Tors Films | |
CBS Playhouse | 1967–1970 | ||
The Good Guys | 1968–1970 | with Talent Associates | |
Hawaii Five-O | 1968–1980 | with Leonard Freeman Productions | |
The Governor & J.J. | 1969–1970 | with Talent Associates-Norton Simon | |
Harlem Globetrotters | 1970–1971 | with Hanna-Barbera Productions | |
Storefront Lawyers | 1970 | with Leonard Freeman Enterprises Productions and National General Corporation | |
Dirty Sally | 1974 | ||
The Lives of Benjamin Franklin | |||
Khan! | 1975 | ||
Spencer's Pilots | 1976 | with Sweeney-Finnegan Productions Previously distributed by Worldvision Enterprises | |
Ball Four | co-production with Time Life Television | ||
The Andros Targets | 1977 | Previously distributed by Worldvision Enterprises | |
Signature | 1981–1982 | CBS Cable | [N 3] |
An American Portrait | 1984–1986 | CBS | interstitial series |
CBS Storybreak | 1985–1989 1993–1994 |
with Southern Star Productions and Hanna-Barbera Australia | |
Foley Square | 1985–1986 | with Shukovsky English Entertainment | |
The Twilight Zone | 1985–1989 | with London Films, Persistence of Vision (1985–87) (seasons 1–2) and Atlantis Films (1988–89) (season 3) | |
If Tomorrow Comes | 1986 | miniseries | |
Garbage Pail Kids | 1987 | N/A | |
The Adventures of Raggedy Ann and Andy | 1988–1990 | CBS | |
Blue Skies | 1988 | with McKeand Productions | |
The Pat Sajak Show | 1989–1990 | ||
Wolf | co-produced by Holcomb/Peckinpah Productions | ||
Rescue 911 | 1989–1996 | Distributed for U.S. television by MTM Enterprises (currently Disney–ABC Domestic Television) in association with Arnold Shapiro Productions | |
City | 1990 | with MTM Enterprises | |
Bagdad Cafe | 1990–1991 | Based on the 1987 movie by Island Pictures
with Mort Lachman and Associates, Zev Braun Pictures, and New World Television | |
Top Cops | 1990–1993 | with Grosso-Jacobson Productions | |
Evening Shade | 1990–1994 | with Bloodworth-Thomason Mozark Productions and Burt Reynolds Productions Distributed for U.S. television by MTM Enterprises (currently Disney-ABC Domestic Television) | |
You Take the Kids | 1990–1991 | with Paul Haggis Productions and MTM Enterprises | |
True Detectives | 1990–1991 | with Arnold Shapiro Productions | |
Riders in the Sky | 1991 | ||
P.S. I Luv U | 1991–1992 | with Glen A. Larson Productions | |
The Hollywood Game | with Pasta Productions & Rastar Television | ||
Night Games | |||
Intruders | 1992 | miniseries; with Dan Curtis Productions and Osiris Films | |
Grapevine | 1992 | with Corkscrew Productions and MGM Television | |
The Boys | 1993 | with Hughes O'Shannon Productions | |
The Building | with Bob & Alice Productions, Worldwide Pants and Columbia Pictures Television | ||
Dave's World | 1993–1997 | with The Producers Entertainment Group Ltd./Axelrod-Widdoes Productions, Fred Barron Productions, Livestock Productions (seasons 1–2) and Kitten in the Oven Productions (seasons 3–4) | |
Walker, Texas Ranger | 1993–2001 | Distributed for U.S. television by Sony Pictures Television | |
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman | 1993–1998 | Distributed for U.S. television by MTM Enterprises/20th Television (currently Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution) with The Sullivan Company | |
Shame on You | 1993 | four specials | |
Ned Blessing: The Story of My Life and Times | 1993 | with Wittliff/Pangaea and Hearst Entertainment | |
The Road Home | 1994 | with The Paltrow Group | |
Traps | 1994 | with Stephen J. Cannell Productions | |
The Gordon Elliott Show | 1994–1997 | Syndication | with 20th Television |
Touched by an Angel | 1994–2003 | CBS | with Moon Water Productions |
Under One Roof | 1995 | with The Thomas Carter Company | |
Buffalo Girls | 1995 | miniseries | |
Central Park West | 1995–1996 | with Darren Star Productions | |
Can't Hurry Love | with The Producers Entertainment Group Ltd./Axelrod–Widdoes Productions and TriStar Television co-owned with Sony Pictures Television | ||
Bonnie | with Bob & Alice Productions and Worldwide Pants | ||
Caroline in the City | 1995–1999 | NBC | with Barron/Pennette Productions and 3 Sisters Entertainment |
Nothing Lasts Forever | 1995 | CBS | miniseries |
Moloney | 1996–1997 | with TriStar Television, Predawn Productions and Three Putt Productions | |
Promised Land | 1996–1999 | with Moon Water Productions | |
Early Edition | 1996–2000 | with Three Characters Productions (1996-1998) (seasons 1–2), Angelica Films (1996-1998) (season 1–2), and TriStar Television (1996–1997) (season 1)/Columbia TriStar Television (1997–2000) (seasons 2-7) Distributed outside of the U.S. by Sony Pictures Television | |
The Gregory Hines Show | 1997–1998 | with Katlin/Bernstein Productions, Darric Productions and Columbia TriStar Television | |
Brooklyn South | with Steven Bochco Productions | ||
To Have & to Hold | 1998 | with The Greenblatt/Janollari Studio and Fox Television Studios | |
Maggie Winters | 1998–1999 | ||
L.A. Doctors | with Columbia TriStar Television and Johnson/Hancock Productions | ||
Kids Say the Darndest Things | 1998–2000 | with LMNO Productions and Linkletter/Atkins/Kritzer Productions Inc. | |
Martial Law | 1998–2000 | with Carlton Cuse Productions, Ruddy Morgan Productions, and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Sons of Thunder | 1999 | with Norris Brothers Entertainment | |
Work with Me | with Stephen Engel Productions, Calm Down Productions, Nat's Eye Productions and Studios USA Television | ||
Now and Again | 1999–2000 | with Paramount Television and Picturemaker Productions | |
Love & Money | with Paramount Television | ||
Ladies Man | 1999–2001 | with Columbia TriStar Television, Christopher Thompson Productions & Victor Levin Productions[citation needed] | |
Family Law | 1999–2002 | with Columbia TriStar Television and Paul Haggis Productions Distributed outside of the U.S. by Sony Pictures Television | |
Judging Amy | 1999–2005 | with Barbara Hall-Joseph Stern Productions and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
City of Angels | 2000 | with Steven Bochco Productions | |
Bette | 2000–2001 | with D-Train Productions, All Girl Productions, and Columbia TriStar Television | |
Welcome to New York | with Worldwide Pants, Crazy Canyon Productions, and Studios USA Television | ||
The District | 2000–2004 | with Di Novi Pictures and Studios USA/Universal Television | |
Yes, Dear | 2000–2006 | with Amigos de Garcia Productions, Cherry Tree Entertainment, and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Kate Brasher | 2001 | with Jersey Television and 20th Century Fox Television | |
The Education of Max Bickford | 2001–2002 | with Joe Cacaci Productions,[24] Sugar Mama Productions, Regency Television, and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
The Ellen Show | with The Hurwitz Company and Columbia TriStar Television | ||
The Agency | 2001–2003 | with Shaun Cassidy Productions, Radiant Productions and Studios USA/Universal Television | |
The Guardian | 2001–2004 | with David Hollander Productions, Gran Via Productions, and Columbia TriStar Television/Sony Pictures Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Sony Pictures Television | |
Haunted | 2002 | UPN | with Industry Entertainment and Viacom Productions |
Hack | 2002–2004 | CBS | with Pariah Television and Big Ticket Television |
Still Standing | 2002–2006 | with Tea Gal and Java Boy Productions and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Abby | 2003 | UPN | with Katlin/Bernstein Productions |
Queens Supreme | CBS | with Shoelace Productions, Spelling Television, Red Om Films, Revolution Studios and Shadowland Productions | |
Charlie Lawrence | with Jeffrey Richman Productions and 20th Century Fox Television | ||
Star Search | 2003–2004 | with 2929 Entertainment and A.Gold.er Productions | |
Joan of Arcadia | 2003–2005 | with Barbara Hall Productions and Sony Pictures Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Sony Pictures Television | |
Listen Up! | 2004–2005 | with Regency Television and 20th Century Fox Television Distributed in the U.S. by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
The Cleaner | 2008–2009 | A&E | with Once a Frog Productions |
The Beautiful Life | 2009 | The CW | with Katalyst Films, Page Fright Productions and Warner Bros. Television |
Melrose Place | 2009–2010 | with Slavkin/Swimmer | |
Accidentally on Purpose | CBS | with BermanBraun | |
Three Rivers | with Fixed Mark Productions | ||
Life Unexpected | 2010–2011 | The CW | with Best Day Ever Productions, Mojo Films and Warner Bros. Television |
The Defenders | CBS | with Carol Mendelsohn Productions | |
How to Be a Gentleman | 2011–2012 | with MRC | |
Ringer | The CW | with Green Eggs and Pam Productions, Brillstein Entertainment Partners, ABC Studios and Warner Bros. Television | |
¡Rob! | 2012 | CBS | with The Tannenbaum Company |
NYC 22 | with TriBeCa Productions and Post 109 Productions | ||
CSI: Cyber | 2015–2016 | with Jerry Bruckheimer Television and Content Partners LLC |
CBS Eye Productions[]
Title | Original run | Network | Co-production with |
---|---|---|---|
Discovery Specials | 1998–2003 | Discovery Channel | CBS News and Discovery Channel |
Discovery Health Specials | 1999–2005 | Discovery Health Channel | |
Half & Half | 2002–2006 | UPN | SisterLee Productions |
Platinum | 2003 | American Zoetrope, The Greenblatt/Janollari Studio and International Famous Players Radio Corporation | |
The Arsenio Hall Show | 2013–2014 | Syndication | Arsenio Hall Communications, Octagon Entertainment Productions and Tribune Broadcasting |
CBS Eye Animation Productions[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Star Trek: Lower Decks | 2020–present | CBS All Access | co-production with Secret Hideout, Important Science, Roddenberry Entertainment and Titmouse, Inc. |
The Harper House | 2021–present | Paramount+ | co-production with Neely Comics, 219 Productions and Titmouse, Inc. |
Big Ticket Entertainment[]
Note: Formerly known as Big Ticket Television.
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Night Stand with Dick Dietrick | 1995–1997 | Syndication/E! | co-production with RC Entertainment |
Moesha | 1996–2002 | UPN | co-production with Regan Jon Productions (1996–1997) (seasons 1–2), Saradipity Productions (1997–1999) (seasons 3–4) and Jump in the Sun Productions (1997–2000) (seasons 3–5) |
Judge Judy | 1996–2021 | Syndication | CBS Primetime special produced by Queen Bee Productions[25] |
Judge Joe Brown | 1998–2013 | ||
The Parkers | 1999–2004 | UPN | co-production with Saradipity Productions and Regan Jon Productions (1999–2000) (season 1) |
Gary & Mike | 2001 | co-production with Bahr-Small Productions and Laika | |
Danny | CBS | co-production with Acme Productions and Johnny Bongos Productions | |
Wolf Lake | 2001–2002 | CBS, UPN | co-production with Cherry Pie Productions |
Greetings from Tucson | 2002–2003 | The WB | co-produced with Bang. and 3 Arts Entertainment |
Hack | 2002–2004 | CBS | co-production with Pariah Films and CBS Productions |
The Jamie Kennedy Experiment | The WB | co-production with Bahr-Small Productions, Karz Entertainment, and Warner Bros. Television | |
Swift Justice | 2010–2012 | Syndication | co-production with Swift Justice Productions, Inc. and Georgia Entertainment Industries (2010–2011) |
The Jeff Probst Show | 2012–2013 | co-produced with Great Adventure Productions | |
Hot Bench | 2014–present | co-produced by Queen Bee Productions |
Paramount Television Studios[]
Title | Network | Year(s) | Co-production companies | Notes | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minority Report | Fox | 2015 | Amblin Television and 20th Century Fox Television | Ended | |
Vinyl | HBO | 2016 | Jagged Productions, Sikelia Productions, and Cold Front Productions | ||
School of Rock | Nickelodeon | 2016–2018 | Armogida Brothers Productions and Passable Entertainment | ||
Shooter | USA Network | Leverage Entertainment, Closest to the Hole Productions, and Universal Cable Productions | initially in development at TNT | ||
Berlin Station | Epix | 2016–2019 | Third State, Harbor Men Pictures (Season 1), Solid State Pictures (Season 3), Vanessa Productions, LTD., and Anonymous Content | ||
A Series of Unfortunate Events | Netflix | 2017–2019 | Sonnenfeld Productions, Inc. and What is the Question? | ||
13 Reasons Why | 2017–2020 | July Moon Productions, Kicked to the Curb Productions, That Kid Ed Productions, and Anonymous Content | |||
The Contender | Epix | 2018 | MGM Television | ||
The Haunting of Hill House | Netflix | FlanaganFilm and Amblin Television | Miniseries | ||
Maniac | Anonymous Content | ||||
The Alienist | TNT | 2018–present | Anonymous Content and Studio T | Current | |
Condor |
|
Skydance Television and MGM Television | |||
Jack Ryan | Amazon Prime Video | Skydance Television and Amazon Studios | |||
Catch-22 | Hulu | 2019 | Anonymous Content | Miniseries | |
The Disappearance of Madeleine McCann | Netflix | Pulse Films | |||
Looking for Alaska | Hulu | Temple Hill Entertainment and Fake Empire Productions | |||
Watchmen | HBO | Warner Bros. Television, White Rabbit, and DC Films | |||
Boomerang | BET | 2019–present | Hilman Grad Productions | Current | |
First Wives Club | Tracy Yvonne Productions and Jax Media | ||||
Briarpatch | USA Network | 2020 | Universal Content Productions and Anonymous Content | Ended | |
Defending Jacob | Apple TV+ | Mimir Films, Mark Bomback Productions, and Anonymous Content | Miniseries | ||
The Haunting of Bly Manor | Netflix | Intrepid Pictures and Amblin Television | |||
Paradise Lost | Spectrum Originals | Anonymous Content | Ended | ||
When the Streetlights Go On | Quibi | Anonymous Content | |||
Home Before Dark | Apple TV+ | 2020–present | Anonymous Content | Current | |
Made for Love | HBO Max | 2021–present | Ghost Moon and 3dot Productions | ||
Heels | Starz | Lionsgate Television |
Upcoming[]
Title | Network | Year(s) | Co-production companies | Notes | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Station Eleven | 2021 | HBO Max | [26][27][28] | Miniseries; Filming | |
Joe Pickett | Spectrum Originals | TBA | Red Wagon Entertainment | [29][30] | Filming |
Long Slow Exhale | Spectrum Originals | TBA | Made Up Stories | [31][32] | |
Reacher | Amazon Prime Video | TBA | Amazon Studios and Skydance Television | [33][34] | |
Shantaram | Apple TV+ | TBA | Anonymous Content | initially in development at Warner Bros. Pictures[35][36][37] | |
Varsity Blues | The Roku Channel | TBA | Mandalay Sports Media | initially in development at CMT and ordered at Quibi[38][39] | |
Adventures in Wonder Park | Nickelodeon | TBA | Nickelodeon Animation Studio, Ilion Animation Studios, and Paramount Animation | First television series from Paramount Animation[40] | Series order |
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay | Showtime | TBA | CBS Studios | initially in development at HBO[41] | Miniseries order |
American Gigolo | TBA | Jerry Bruckheimer Television | [42][43][44][45] | Series order | |
Fatal Attraction | Paramount+ | TBA | Amblin Television | initially in development at Fox[46] | |
Flashdance | Paramount+ | TBA | [47][46] | ||
Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies | Paramount+ | TBA | Picturestart and Temple Hill Entertainment | initially ordered at HBO Max[48] | |
The Italian Job | Paramount+ | TBA | initially in development at NBC[46] | ||
Love Story | Paramount+ | TBA | CBS Studios | [46] | |
The Offer | Paramount+ | TBA | [49] | Miniseries order | |
The Parallax View | Paramount+ | TBA | [46] | Series order |
In development[]
Title | Network | Co-production companies | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
100 Days To Fall In Love | Showtime | Viacom International Studios | [50] |
Ace of Spades | Hulu | Anonymous Content | [51] |
Alex Cross | Amazon Prime Video | Amazon Studios, James Patterson Entertainment, and Skydance Television | [52] |
Ashecliffe | HBO | Appian Way Productions, Phoenix Pictures, and Sikelia Productions | [53] |
Battlefield | TBA | Anonymous Content | [54] |
Black Viking | Anonymous Content | [55] | |
Classified | HBO Max | [56] | |
The Couple Next Door | TBA | Anonymous Content and Sugar23 | [57] |
D.A.R.Y.L | TBS | [58] | |
The Devil in the White City | Hulu | Appian Way Productions and Sikelia Productions | [59] |
Event Horizon | Amazon Prime Video | Amazon Studios | [60] |
Explorers | TBA | Parliament of Owls and Sailor Bear Productions | [61] |
Furniss | AMC | AMC Studios, Anonymous Content, and Chapter Eleven | [62][63] |
Grace | TBA | [64] | |
Ghost | [65] | ||
I'll Never Tell | Broken Road Productions | [66] | |
Inner City Pressure | Pulse Films | [67] | |
Is There Still Sex in the City? | 3dot Productions and Anonymous Content | [68] | |
The Last of the Mohicans | HBO Max | Anonymous Content, Parliament of Owls, and Sugar23 | [69] |
Legbreakers | TBA | Anonymous Content and FLX | [70] |
The Library Book | Anonymous Content and Brillstein Entertainment Partners | [71] | |
Lindbergh | initially in development at DreamWorks Pictures[72][73] | ||
Lock Every Door | Anonymous Content | [74] | |
MaddAddam | Hulu | Anonymous Content and Rock Paper Scissors Entertainment | initially in development at HBO[75][76] |
Middlesex | TBA | initially in development at HBO[77] | |
Narc | [72] | ||
Raven Rock | NBC | Compari Entertainment, eOne, and Landscape Entertainment | [78][79] |
Snow Crash | HBO Max | The Kennedy/Marshall Company | initially in development at Amazon[80] |
A Special Place for Women | TBA | Swimsuit Competition | [81] |
Stranger in a Strange Land | Syfy | Mythology Entertainment, Scott Rudin Productions, Universal Content Productions, and Vecchio Entertainment | [82] |
Stupid Idiots | TBA | Anonymous Content | [83] |
Talisman | Netflix | Amblin Television and Netflix | initially in development as a feature film[84] |
Telex from Cuba | TBA | Anonymous Content | [85] |
Ten Borders | National Geographic | Scott Free Productions | [86] |
Terminator | TBA | Skydance Television and Annapurna Pictures | [72] |
Time Bandits | Apple TV+ | Anonymous Content and MRC | [87] |
Tinseltown | Spectrum Originals | Kapital Entertainment and KatCo | [88] |
The Truman Show | TBA | [72] | |
The Unexplainable Disappearance Of Mars Patel | Anonymous Content | [89] | |
Untitled Lady Jaye series | Amazon Prime Video | eOne and Skydance Television | [90] |
Untitled rent a family drama | TBA | Anonymous Content and Condé Nast Entertainment | [91] |
Velvet | Paramount Network | Anonymous Content and Chapter Eleven | [92] |
The Venery of Samantha Bird | Starz | Lionsgate Television and Pacesetter Productions | [93] |
The Village | TBA | Sundance Productions and All3Media | [72] |
The Warriors | Netflix | AGBO and Midnight Radio | initially in development at Hulu[94] |
The Windfall | TBA | Anonymous Content | [95] |
You Can't Catch Me | Broken Road Productions | [66] |
DreamWorks Television[]
Title | Years | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Champs | 1996 | ABC | with Ubu Productions |
High Incident | 1996–1997 | with Johnson/Pavone Productions, Nothing But Net, Inc. (season 1) and Donwell Productions (season 2) | |
Majority Rules | NBC | ||
Spin City | 1996–2002 | ABC | with Ubu Productions and LotteryHill Entertainment |
Ink | 1996–1997 | CBS | with Shukovsky English Entertainment and Addis/Wechsler Television |
Arsenio | 1997 | ABC | with David Rosenthal Productions and Arsenio Hall Communications |
Toonsylvania | 1998 | Fox Kids | produced by DreamWorks Animation |
Invasion America | The WB | produced by DreamWorks Animation | |
It's Like, You Know... | 1999–2000 | ABC | with 42 Pound Productions and EWH3 Productions |
Freaks and Geeks | NBC | with Apatow Productions | |
The Others | 2000 | NBC | with NBC Studios and Delusional Films |
Battery Park | with Ubu Productions | ||
The Job | 2001–2002 | ABC | co-production with The Cloudland Company, Apostle and Touchstone Television Rights co-owned with ABC Studios |
Band of Brothers | 2001 | HBO | miniseries; co-production with HBO and Playtone Rights owned by HBO |
Alienators: Evolution Continues | 2001–2002 | Fox Kids | produced by DreamWorks Television with DIC Entertainment, Columbia TriStar Television and The Montecito Picture Company Rights co-owned with DHX Media |
Undeclared | Fox | co-production with Apatow Productions | |
Off Centre | The WB | with Weitz, Weitz & Zuker and Warner Bros. Television[N 4] | |
Boomtown | 2002–2003 | NBC | with Nemo Films and NBC Studios Rights co-owned with NBCUniversal Television Distribution (distributed outside of the U.S. by MGM Television) |
Taken | 2002 | Sci Fi | miniseries |
Oliver Beene | 2003–2004 | Fox | with Steven Levitan Productions, ge.wirtz Films and Twentieth Century Fox Television Rights co-owned with Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution through 20th Century Fox Television. |
Las Vegas | 2003–2008 | NBC | with Gary Scott Thompson Productions and NBC Studios, later NBC Universal Television Studio and later Universal Media Studios Rights owned by NBCUniversal Television Distribution (distributed outside of the U.S. by MGM Television) |
Line of Fire | 2003–2004 | ABC | with Battle Plan Productions and Touchstone Television Rights owned by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution |
Rescue Me | 2004–2011 | FX | with The Cloudland Company, Apostle and Sony Pictures Television[N 3] |
Father of the Pride | 2004–2005 | NBC | produced by DreamWorks Animation Rights owned by NBCUniversal Television Distribution |
The Contender | 2005–2008 | NBC | with Mark Burnett Productions |
Into the West | 2005 | TNT | miniseries |
Miracle Workers | 2006 | ABC | with MedMiracle Productions Currently owned by Entertainment One |
Dog Bites Man | Comedy Central | with Comedy Central | |
On the Lot | 2007 | Fox | with Amblin Television and Mark Burnett Productions |
Carpoolers | 2007–2008 | ABC | with T.R.O.R.T., 3 Arts Entertainment and ABC Studios Rights owned by Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution |
Miramax Television[]
Title | Years | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The World of David the Gnome | 1987 | Nickelodeon | English dub only; co-production with CINAR for BRB Internacional |
Rebel Highway | 1994 | Showtime | as Dimension Television |
Wasteland | 1999–2000 | ABC | co-production with Outerbanks Entertainment |
Clerks: The Animated Series | 2000–2002 | co-production with Touchstone Television, View Askew Productions, Woltz International Pictures, and Walt Disney Television Animation (uncredited) | |
Project Greenlight | 2001–2005 | HBO | co-production with Adaptive Studios and Pearl Street Films |
Glory Days | 2002 | The WB | as Dimension Television; co-production with Outerbanks Entertainment |
Tokyo Pig | 2002–2003 | ABC Family | co-production with Buena Vista Television |
Semi-Homemade Cooking with Sandra Lee | 2003–2011 | Food Network | produced earlier episodes only |
Project Runway | 2004–2011 | Lifetime | seasons 1–9 only; co-production with Bunim/Murray Productions, Full Picture Entertainment, Heidi Klum Productions, Magical Elves Productions, and The Weinstein Company Television (Seasons 2–16) |
From Dusk till Dawn: The Series | 2014–2016 | El Rey Network | co-production with Sugarcane Entertainment, FactoryMade Ventures, and Rodriguez International Pictures |
Crow's Blood | 2017 | [96] |
Paramount Digital Entertainment[]
Title | Years | Network |
---|---|---|
The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers | 2010–2011 | Hulu |
The Hotwives | 2014–2015 | |
Resident Advisors | 2015 | |
Bajillion Dollar Propertie$ | 2016–2019 | Seeso/Pluto TV |
Insurge Pictures[]
Title | Airdate | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Burning Love | 2012–2013 | Yahoo! Screen/E! | co-production with Red Hour Productions, Abominable Pictures and Dancing Workfriend |
CBS News[]
- CBS Evening News (1948–present)
- Person to Person (1953–1961; 2012)
- Face the Nation (1954–present)
- CBS Morning News (1963–present)
- 60 Minutes (1968–present)
- In the News (1971–1986; 1997–1998) (interstitial series)
- Who's Who (1977)
- Razzmatazz (1977–1982) (co-production with Scholastic Magazines, Inc.)
- 30 Minutes (1978–1982)
- CBS News Sunday Morning (1979–present)
- CBS News Nightwatch (1982–1992)
- West 57th (August 13, 1985 – September 9, 1989)
- The Morning Program (1987)
- CBS This Morning (1987–1999; 2012–2021)
- 48 Hours (January 19, 1988 – present)
- Saturday Night with Connie Chung (1990)
- America Tonight (October 1, 1990 – 1991)
- Street Stories (January 9, 1992 – June 10, 1993)
- Up to the Minute (1992–2015)
- Eye to Eye with Connie Chung (June 17, 1993 – May 25, 1995)
- 20th Century with Mike Wallace (1994–2005)
- CBS News Saturday Morning (1997–1999)
- Public Eye with Bryant Gumbel (October 1, 1997 – 1998)
- 60 Minutes II (January 13, 1999 – September 2, 2005)
- The Early Show (1999–2012)
- The Saturday Early Show (1999–2012)
- 365gay News (2005–2009) (co-production with Logo)
- 60 Minutes Sports (2013–2017)
- Brooklyn DA (2013)
- CBS Overnight News (2015–present)
- CBS Weekend News (2016–present)
- CBS Mornings (2021–present)
ViacomCBS Domestic Media Networks[]
Title | Years | Network | Co-production with |
---|---|---|---|
Clone High | 2002–2003 | MTV Teletoon |
Nelvana, Touchstone Television, Lord Miller Productions, Doozer and Teletoon Distributed outside of the US by Nelvana |
3-South | MTV | Warner Bros. Animation | |
High School Reunion | 2003–2010 | TV Land | Next Entertainment, Telepictures Productions (seasons 1–2) and Warner Horizon Television (seasons 3–4) |
ALF's Hit Talk Show | 2004 | Burt Dubrow Productions and Paul Fusco Productions | |
Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County | 2004–2006 | MTV | Go Go Luckey Productions |
Living In TV Land | TV Land | ||
Video Mods | 2004–2005 | MTV2 | |
Wonder Showzen | 2005–2006 | PFFR and USA Cable Entertainment (season 1) | |
Chasing Farrah | 2005 | TV Land | |
Noah's Arc | 2005–2006 | Logo | |
Sit Down Comedy with David Steinberg | 2005–2007 | TV Land | Dark Light Pictures |
Can't Get a Date | 2006 | VH1/Logo | |
U.S. of Ant | Logo | ||
Where My Dogs At? | MTV2 | ||
My First Time | TV Land | ||
TV Land: Myths and Legends | 2007–2008 | Gay Rosenthal Productions | |
The Big Gay Sketch Show | 2007–2010 | Logo | Oh Really! Productions |
Friday: The Animated Series | 2007 | MTV2 | New Line Television and Cube Vision |
The Big 4-0 | 2008 | TV Land | 3 Ball Productions |
She's Got the Look | 2008–2010 | ||
Outsiders Inn | 2008 | CMT | |
Make My Day | 2009 | TV Land | |
The Cougar | MTV Networks, Next Entertainment and Warner Horizon Television | ||
How'd You Get So Rich? | 2009–2010 | Zoo Productions | |
First Love, Second Chance | 2010 | ||
Hot in Cleveland | 2010–2015 | Hazy Mills Productions and SamJen Productions | |
Harry Loves Lisa | 2010 | Good Clean Fun | |
Retired at 35 | 2011–2012 | Fore Flat Productions and Acme Productions | |
Happily Divorced | 2011–2013 | Uh-Oh Productions | |
Single Ladies | 2011–2015 | VH1/Centric | Blueice Pictures, Flavor Unit Entertainment and Water Walk Productions |
Guy Code | 2011–2015 | MTV2 | |
The Exes | TV Land | Mark Reisman Productions and Acme Productions | |
The Soul Man | 2012–2016 | Bird and a Bear Entertainment, Hazy Mills Productions and SamJen Productions | |
Forever Young | 2013 | 3 Ball Productions and Katalyst Films | |
Hit the Floor | 2013–2018 | VH1/BET | The Film Syndicate and In Cahoots Media |
Girl Code | MTV | ||
Kirstie | 2013–2014 | TV Land | Marco Pennette Productions |
Jennifer Falls | 2014 | Vanity Logo Productions and Acme Productions | |
Younger | 2015–2021 | Darren Star Productions and Jax Media | |
The Jim Gaffigan Show | 2015–2016 | Fedora Entertainment, Brillstein Entertainment Partners, Burrow Owl Productions, Jax Media and Chimichanga Productions, Inc. | |
Impastor | The Tannenbaum Company and All in Vane | ||
Kingin' with Tyga | MTV2 | 3 Ball Entertainment | |
Teachers | 2016–2019 | TV Land | Martel & Roberts Productions |
Lopez | 2016–2017 | Traviesco Productions, Altschuler Krinsky Works, 3 Arts Entertainment and Dakota Pictures | |
Nobodies | 2017–2018 | Jax Media and On the Day Productions | |
90's House | 2017 | MTV2 | Super Delicious Productions |
Daytime Divas | 2017 | VH1 | Osprey Entertainment and De Passe Jones Entertainment |
Nickelodeon[]
Title | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|
Pinwheel | 1977–1984 | Debuted less than two years prior to Nickelodeon's actual launch in 1979. |
America Goes Bananaz | 1979–1980 | |
Nickel Flicks | ||
By the Way | ||
Hocus Focus | ||
Video Comic Book | 1979–1981 | |
Livewire | 1980–1985 | |
Kids' Writes | 1981–1983 | co-production with Embassy Television[97][N 3] |
Against the Odds | 1982–1984 | |
Standby...Lights! Camera! Action! | 1982–1987 | |
You Can't Do That on Television | 1981–1990 | |
Mr. Wizard's World | 1983–1990 | |
Going Great | 1983–1984 | |
Nick Rocks | 1984–1989 | |
Out of Control | 1984–1985 | |
Turkey Television | 1985–1986 | |
Double Dare | 1986–1993 | |
Rated K: For Kids, By Kids | 1986–1988 | |
Finders Keepers | 1987–1988 | |
Kids' Court | 1988–1989 | |
Don't Just Sit There | 1988–1991 | |
Total Panic | 1989–1990 | |
Think Fast | 1989–1991 | |
Make the Grade | ||
Hey Dude | ||
Eureeka's Castle | 1989–1992 | co-production with Noyes & Laybourne |
On the Television | 1990–1991 | |
SK8-TV | 1990 | |
Wild & Crazy Kids | 1990–1992 2002 |
co-production with Woody Fraser Productions and Reeves Entertainment Group |
Outta Here! | 1990–1991 | |
Fifteen | 1991–1993 | Currently owned by Peter Rodgers Organization |
Welcome Freshman | ||
The Adventures of Pete & Pete | 1991–1996 | co-produced with Gordon Productions (1993-1995) and Wellsville Productions (1995-1996) |
Clarissa Explains It All | 1991–1994 | co-production with Thunder Pictures |
Salute Your Shorts | 1991–1992 | co-production with Propaganda Films |
Hi Honey, I'm Home! | co-production with RiPe Productions | |
Doug | 1991–1994 | distribution in North and South America co-production with Jumbo Pictures and Ellipse Programmé first four seasons only; seasons 5-7 were produced by Disney Television Animation |
Rugrats | 1991–2004 | co-production with Klasky Csupo |
The Ren & Stimpy Show | 1991–1996 | co-production with Spümcø (seasons 1-2), Games Animation (seasons 3–5) |
What Would You Do? | 1991–1993 | co-production with Woody Fraser Productions and Reeves Entertainment |
Nickelodeon Launch Box | 1991–1994 | co-production with NASA and Space Mirror Memorial |
Nick Jr. Rocks | 1991 | interstitial series |
Nickelodeon Arcade | 1992 | co-production with Bethea-Miteff Productions, Inc. |
Nick News with Linda Ellerbee | 1992–2015 | co-production with Lucky Duck Productions |
Roundhouse | 1992–1995 | co-production with Rebel Entertainment |
Are You Afraid of the Dark? | 1992–1996 1999–2000 |
co-production with Cinar[N 2] |
The Wild Side Show | 1992–1994 | |
Nickelodeon Guts | 1992–1996 | co-production with Chauncey Street Productions |
Weinerville | 1993–1996 | |
Legends of the Hidden Temple | 1993–1995 | co-production with Stone Stanley Productions |
Rocko's Modern Life | 1993–1996 | co-production with Joe Murray Productions |
Gullah Gullah Island | 1994–1998 | co-production with Magnet Productions (season 1) and Perez-Minton Productions |
Allegra's Window | 1994–1996 | co-production with Topstone Productions and Jumbo Pictures |
U to U | 1994–1995 | |
The Secret World of Alex Mack | 1994–1998 | co-production with Lynch Entertainment, RHI Entertainment/Hallmark Entertainment Rights co-owned with Sonar Entertainment |
All That | 1994–2015 | co-production with Tollin/Robbins Productions (seasons 1–10), Schneider's Bakery (season 10) |
My Brother and Me | 1994–1995 | co-production with Burns & Burns |
Aaahh!!! Real Monsters | 1994–1997 | co-production with Klasky Csupo |
Nick in the Afternoon | 1995–1998 | interstitial series |
Little Bear | 1995–2003 | co-production for Nelvana[N 5] |
Space Cases | 1996–1997 | co-production with Cinar[N 2] |
The Mystery Files of Shelby Woo | 1996–1998 | co-production with Out of My Mind Productions and Cinar (season 4)[N 2] |
Kenan & Kel | 1996–2000 | co-production with Tollin/Robbins Productions |
Blue's Clues | 1996–2004 2006 |
|
Hey Arnold! | 1996–2002 | co-production with Snee-Oosh, Inc. |
KaBlam! | 1996–2000 | co-production with Flying Mallet, Inc. (season 4) |
The Angry Beavers | 1997–2001 | co-production with Gunther-Wahl Productions, Inc. |
Figure It Out | 1997–1999 2012–2013 |
|
The Journey of Allen Strange | 1997–2000 | co-production with Lynch Entertainment |
Binyah Binyah! | 1997 | |
Renford Rejects | 1998–2001 | co-production with Helion Pictures |
CatDog | 1998–2005 | co-production with Peter Hannan Productions |
Oh Yeah! Cartoons | 1998–2001 | co-production with Frederator Incorporated |
You're On! | 1998–1999 | co-production with Marjesam Productions |
Cousin Skeeter | 1998–2001 | co-production with Tollin/Robbins Productions |
The Wild Thornberrys | 1998–2004 | co-production with Klasky Csupo |
The Brothers Flub | 1999–2000 | produced by Sunbow Entertainment, Ravensburger Film + TV and Videal Currently owned by Studio 100 |
SpongeBob SquarePants | 1999–present | co-production with United Plankton Pictures |
Phred on Your Head Show | 1999–2000 | co-production with MTV Animation and Possible Worlds |
Rocket Power | 1999–2004 | co-production with Klasky Csupo |
100 Deeds for Eddie McDowd | 1999–2002 | co-production with Lynch Entertainment, Lincoln Field Productions, and Fireworks Entertainment Currently distributed outside of the U.S. by Kew Media Group |
The Amanda Show | co-production with Tollin/Robbins Productions | |
A Walk in Your Shoes | 1999–2005 | co-production with Dancing Toad Productions |
Little Bill | 1999–2004 | |
ChalkZone | 1998–1999; 2002–2008 |
co-production with Frederator Studios |
Double Dare 2000 | 2000 | |
Slime Time Live | 2000–2003 | |
Caitlin's Way | 2000–2002 | co-production with Riverwood Productions, Fireworks Entertainment, and Lynch Entertainment Currently distributed outside of the US by Kew Media Group |
The Brothers García | 2000–2004 | co-production with Sí TV |
Dora the Explorer | 2000–2019 | |
Pelswick | 2000–2002 | co-production with Nelvana and Hong Ying Animation[N 5] |
Noah Knows Best | 2000–2001 | co-production with Tested Ladder Entertainment |
As Told by Ginger | 2000–2005 | co-production with Klasky Csupo |
Oobi | co-production with Little Airplane Productions | |
Taina | 2001–2002 | co-production with Dorado Productions Distributed outside of the US by Nelvana |
The Fairly OddParents | 2001–2017 | co-production with Frederator Studios and Billionfold Inc. (2008–17) Episodes 1–65 are distributed outside of the US by Nelvana |
Invader Zim | 2001–2004 | |
Tiny Planets | 2001–2002 | U.S. only; co-production with Sesame Workshop, Pepper's Ghost Productions Ltd. and CITV |
Oswald | 2001–2003 | co-production with HIT Entertainment |
The URL with Phred Show | 2001–2002 | |
Sponk! | co-production with Insight Productions and Sesame Workshop | |
Degrassi: The Next Generation | 2001–2015 | co-production with Epitome Pictures/DHX Media and Bell Media[N 2] |
Action League Now! | 2001–2002 | co-production with Chuckimation and Flying Mallet, Inc. |
The Nick Cannon Show | 2002–2003 | co-production with Tollin/Robbins Productions |
Play with Me Sesame | 2002–2007 | co-production for Sesame Workshop |
The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius | 2002–2006 | co-production with O Entertainment and DNA Productions |
Nickelodeon Robot Wars | 2002 | co-production with Tinopolis |
Tractor Tom | 2002–2004 | co-production with Contender Entertainment Group Hibbert Ralph Entertainment CITV and Nick Jr |
Scaredy Camp | 2002–2003 | |
Yakkity Yak | co-production with Studio B Productions, Kapow Pictures, and Teletoon[N 2] | |
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles | 2003–2009 | co-produced by Mirage Studios and 4Kids Entertainment Acquired by Viacom International in 2009-2019 |
Miffy and Friends | 2003–2007 | co-production with Big Tent Entertainment Rights owned by Studio 100 |
All Grown Up! | 2003–2008 | co-production with Klasky Csupo |
My Life as a Teenage Robot | 2003–2009 | co-production with Frederator Studios |
Romeo! | 2003–2006 | co-production with Tom Lynch Company and P. Miller Collection |
Whoopi's Littleburg | 2004 | co-production with Lil' Whoop Productions and Shot in the Dark Productions |
Drake & Josh | 2004–2007 | |
Winx Club | 2004–present | seasons 3–7 and specials only; co-production and co-owned with Rainbow S.r.l. ViacomCBS became a co-owner of Rainbow S.r.l. itself in 2011 |
Nickelodeon Splat! | 2004 | |
Danny Phantom | 2004–2007 | co-production with Billionfold Inc. |
Peppa Pig | 2004–present | co-production with Astley Baker Davies for Entertainment One |
Fatherhood | 2004–2005 | |
Blue's Room | 2004–2007 | |
LazyTown | co-production with LazyTown Entertainment, Truenorth Production, and Les Enterprises Le Gué[N 4] | |
Curious Buddies | 2004–2005 | co-production with Spiffy Pictures |
Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide | 2004–2007 | coproduction with Jack Mackie Pictures and Apollo ProMovie |
Unfabulous | ||
The Backyardigans | 2004–2013 | co-production with Nelvana Distributed outside the United States by Nelvana |
Nicktoons Film Festival | 2004–2009 | co-production with Frederator Studios |
Family Face Off: Hollywood | 2004 | |
Zoey 101 | 2005–2008 | co-production with Schneider's Bakery, Apollo ProMovie and Dolphin Entertainment |
Avatar: The Last Airbender | ||
The Search For The Funniest Mom In America | 2005–2007 | |
Catscratch | ||
Rugrats Pre-School Daze | 2005 | |
Hi-Jinks | 2005–2006 | |
Friday Night Slimetime | ||
Go, Diego, Go! | 2005–2011 | |
Jack's Big Music Show | 2005–2008 | co-production with Spiffy Pictures |
South of Nowhere | 2005–2008 | co-production with Tom Lynch Company |
Purple and Brown | interstitial series; co-production for Aardman Animations | |
The X's | 2005–2006 | |
Mr. Meaty | 2005–2009 | co-production with 3J's Productions |
Kappa Mikey | 2006–2008 | co-production with Animation Collective Currently owned by Cake Entertainment |
Wonder Pets! | 2006–2013 | co-production with Little Airplane Productions |
Just for Kicks | 2006 | co-production with Brookwell McNamara Entertainment and Lil' Whoop Productions |
Pinky Dinky Doo | 2006–2009 | co-production with Cartoon Pizza for Sesame Workshop |
Wow! Wow! Wubbzy! | 2006–2010 | produced by Frederator Studios, Bolder Media, Film Roman and IDT Entertainment/Starz Distribution Currently owned by Lionsgate Television |
The Upside Down Show | 2006–2007 | co-production with Blink Films for Sesame Workshop |
At the Poocharelli's | 2006 | |
Random! Cartoons | 2006–2007 | co-production with Frederator Incorporated |
Just Jordan | 2007–2008 | co-production with Rosa Floribunda Productions (season 2) |
The Naked Brothers Band | 2007–2009 | co-production with Kidzhouse Entertainment and Worldwide Biggies |
El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera | 2007–2008 | co-production with Mexopolis |
Wayside | co-production with Teletoon and Nelvana[N 5] | |
Let's Just Play Go Healthy Challenge | 2007 | |
Yo Gabba Gabba! | 2007–2015 | produced by The Magic Store and WildBrain[N 2] |
Tak and the Power of Juju | 2007–2009 | |
Back at the Barnyard | 2007–2011 | co-production with Omation |
iCarly | 2007–2012 | co-production with Schneider's Bakery |
Bet The House | 2007–2008 | |
Ni Hao, Kai-Lan | 2007–2011 | co-production with Harringtoons Productions |
Dance on Sunset | 2008–2009 | |
The Mighty B! | 2008–2011 | co-production with Paper Kite Productions and Polka Dot Pictures |
Queen Bees | 2008 | co-production with Endemol USA |
The N's Student Body | ||
My Family's Got Guts | 2008–2009 | co-production with Worldwide Biggies and Five Alts Productions, LLC. |
Making Fiends | 2008 | |
True Jackson, VP | 2008–2011 | co-production with Gordon 3000 Industries |
The Penguins of Madagascar | 2008–2015 | co-production with DreamWorks Animation |
Ben & Holly's Little Kingdom | 2009–2014 | co-production with Astley Baker Davies for Entertainment One |
The Assistants | 2009 | produced by Tom Lynch Company Studios for Fireworks Entertainment Currently distributed outside of the U.S. by Kew Media Group |
Glenn Martin, DDS | 2009–2011 | co-production with The Tornante Company and Cuppa Coffee Studios |
Dancing Sushi | 2009–2010 | interstitial series; co-production with Animation Collective Currently owned by Cake Entertainment |
The Fresh Beat Band | 2009–2013 | |
The Troop | co-production with The Writers Room, No Equal Entertainment, and Tom Lynch Company Studios | |
BrainSurge | 2009–2014 | co-production with Stone & Company Entertainment and 310 Entertainment |
Fanboy & Chum Chum | co-production with Frederator Studios | |
Big Time Rush | 2009–2013 | co-production with Jack Mackie Pictures and Sony Music |
Team Umizoomi | 2010–2015 | co-production with Curious Pictures |
Victorious | 2010–2013 | co-production with Schneider's Bakery and Sony Music |
T.U.F.F. Puppy | 2010–2014 | co-production with Billionfold Inc. |
Planet Sheen | 2010–2013 | co-production with Omation |
House of Anubis | 2011–2013 | co-production with Studio 100 and Lime Pictures |
Bubble Guppies | 2011–2016, 2019–present | co-production with WildBrain (season 1), Nelvana (seasons 2–4), and Jam Filled Entertainment (season 5) |
Supah Ninjas | 2011–2013 | co-production with Varsity Pictures |
Bucket & Skinner's Epic Adventures | co-production with Tom Lynch Company Studios and Bugliari/McLaughlin Productions | |
Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness | 2011–2015 | co-production with DreamWorks Animation |
Hollywood Heights | 2012 | co-production with Sony Pictures Television and Televisa |
The Legend of Korra | 2012–2014 | co-production with Ginormous Madman and Studio Mir |
Robot and Monster | 2012–2015 | co-production with Smasho! Productions and Lowbar Productions |
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles | 2012–2017 | co-production with Mirage Studios and Lowbar Productions |
See Dad Run | 2012–2015 | co-production with Katlin Bernstein Productions and Bischoff Hervey Entertainment |
How to Rock | 2012 | co-production with Alloy Entertainment |
TeenNick Top 10 | 2012–2018 | co-production with Ncredible Entertainment |
Wendell & Vinnie | 2013 | co-production with Passable Entertainment and Kapital Entertainment |
Nick Studio 10 | interstitial series | |
Monsters vs. Aliens | 2013–2014 | co-production with DreamWorks Animation |
Sanjay and Craig | 2013–2016 | co-production with Forest City Rockers |
Sam & Cat | 2013–2014 | co-production with Schneider's Bakery |
AwesomenessTV | 2013–2015 | co-production with Awesomeness |
The Haunted Hathaways | co-production with Bugliari/McLaughlin Productions | |
PAW Patrol | 2013–present | co-production with Spin Master and Guru Studio |
Instant Mom | 2013–2015 | co-production with Stockholm Syndrome and Kapital Entertainment |
The Thundermans | 2013–2018 | co-produced by Cross Hoge Productions and Dworkingham Productions |
Wallykazam! | 2014–2017 | |
Every Witch Way | 2014–2015 | co-produced by Cinemat |
Breadwinners | 2014–2016 | |
Webheads | 2014–2015 | co-production with Ryan Seacrest Productions |
Dora and Friends: Into the City! | 2014–2017 | |
Henry Danger | 2014–2020 | co-production with Schneider's Bakery |
Nicky, Ricky, Dicky & Dawn | 2014–2018 | co-production with November 13th |
Blaze and the Monster Machines | 2014–present | co-production with DHX Media |
100 Things to Do Before High School | 2014–2016 | co-production with Jack Mackie Pictures |
Bella and the Bulldogs | ||
Harvey Beaks | 2015–2017 | |
Fresh Beat Band of Spies | 2015–2016 | co-production with 6 Point Harness |
Mutt & Stuff | 2015–2017 | co-production with Sid and Marty Krofft Pictures and Cesar's Way |
Talia in the Kitchen | 2015 | co-production with Cinemat |
Make It Pop | 2015–2016 | |
Pig Goat Banana Cricket | 2015–2018 | |
Shimmer and Shine | 2015–2020 | |
Game Shakers | 2015–2019 | co-production with Schneider's Bakery |
WITS Academy | 2015 | co-production with Cinemat |
The Loud House | 2016–present | |
School of Rock | 2016–2018 | co-produced by Armogida Brothers Productions and Passable Entertainment |
The HALO Effect | 2016 | |
Paradise Run | 2016–2018 | |
Crashletes | 2016–2019 | co-production with Superjacket Productions |
Legendary Dudas | 2016 | co-production with Stumper Bridgett Productions |
All In with Cam Newton | ||
Jagger Eaton's Mega Life | 2016–2017 | co-production with Superjacket Productions |
Rusty Rivets | 2016–2020 | co-production with Spin Master and Jam Filled Entertainment |
Lip Sync Battle Shorties | 2016–2019 | co-production with Eight Million Plus Productions |
Bunsen Is a Beast | 2017–2018 | co-production with Billionfold Inc. |
Nella the Princess Knight | 2017–2019 | co-production with Brown Bag Films |
Top Wing | 2017–2020 | co-production with Industrial Brothers and 9 Story Media Group |
Hunter Street | 2017–present | co-production with Blooming Media |
The Dude Perfect Show | 2017–2019 | |
Welcome to the Wayne | co-production with Yowza! Animation | |
Sunny Day | co-production with Silvergate Media | |
I Am Frankie | 2017–2018 | co-production with Paradiso Pictures |
The Adventures of Kid Danger | 2018 | co-production with Powerhouse Animation Studios and Schneider's Bakery |
Zoofari | ||
Knight Squad | 2018–2019 | co-produced by Dworkingham Productions |
Keep It Spotless | 2018 | |
Double Dare (revival) | 2018–2019 | co-production with FremantleMedia North America |
Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles | 2018–2020 | co-production with Mirage Studios and Flying Bark Productions |
Butterbean's Café | 2018–present | co-production with Brown Bag Films |
Cousins for Life | 2018–2019 | co-produced with Kevin & Heath Productions |
Abby Hatcher | 2018–present | co-production with Spin Master and Guru Studio |
Pinky Malinky | 2019 | |
Tot Cop | ||
Nick Cannon Presents: Fresh Artist | ||
Rainbow Butterfly Unicorn Kitty | co-production with Funrise Toys and Bardel Entertainment Distributed outside of the US by Jetpack Distribution | |
The Substitute | 2019–present | |
Ryan's Mystery Playdate | co-production with PocketWatch and Sunlight Entertainment Rights owned by PocketWatch | |
Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader? | 2019 | |
All That (revival) | 2019–present | co-produced by DJKay Entertainment and Kevin & Heath Productions |
Are You Afraid of the Dark? | miniseries; co-production with DHX Media | |
The Casagrandes | ||
America's Most Musical Family | 2019–2020 | |
Blue's Clues & You! | 2019–present | co-production with 9 Story Media Group and Brown Bag Films |
Top Elf | ||
It's Pony | 2020–present | co-production with Blue Zoo |
The Crystal Maze | 2020 | co-production with Banijay Group |
Glitch Techs | co-distributed by Netflix Streaming Services and airs exclusively on Netflix | |
Tyler Perry's Young Dylan | 2020–present | co-production with Tyler Perry Studios |
Danger Force | ||
Santiago of the Seas | co-production with Walsh Valdés Productions | |
Unleashed | co-production with Fremantle | |
Side Hustle | co-production with Eyebrow-Bird Productions | |
The Astronauts | co-production with Unmovies and Imagine Kids & Family | |
Kinderwood | co-production with Titmouse, Inc. | |
Baby Shark's Big Show! | co-production with SmartStudy/Pinkfong | |
Tooned In | 2021–present | |
Kamp Koral: SpongeBob's Under Years | co-production with United Plankton Pictures | |
Drama Club | co-production with Awesomeness | |
The Barbarian and the Troll | co-production with Mike Mitchell Productions and Bright Light Pictures | |
Rugrats (revival) | co-production with Klasky Csupo | |
iCarly (revival) | co-production with Museum Visit | |
The Patrick Star Show | co-production with United Plankton Pictures | |
Middlemost Post | ||
NFL Slimetime | co-production with CBS Sports[98] |
BET[]
Note: Formerly known as Black Entertainment Television
Title | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|
Soul Train | 1971–2006 | produced by Don Cornelius Productions Acquired by BET Networks in 2016 |
Bobby Jones Gospel | 1980–2016 | |
Video Soul | 1981–1996 | |
Karen's Kitchen | 1982 | |
Video Vibrations | 1984–1997 | |
Midnight Love | 1985–2005 | |
Video LP | 1986–1993 | |
Softnotes | 1987–1991 | |
Rap City | 1989–2008 | |
Video Gospel | 1989, 2000–2005, 2010–2011 |
|
Teen Summit | 1989–2002 | |
Screen Scene | 1990–1997 | |
Story Porch | 1992–1996 | |
ComicView | 1992–2008 2014 |
|
Planet Groove | 1996–1999 | |
ABL on BET | 1996–1998 | |
Jam Zone/Cita's World | 1997–2003 | |
Videolink | 1997–2000, 2001–2002 |
|
BET's MAAD Sports | 1998–2000 | |
Hits from the Streets | 1999–2003 | |
Lift Every Voice | 1999–2017 | |
AM @ BET | 2000–2001 | |
106 & Park | 2000–2014 | |
BET Next | 2000–2006 | |
BET:iNY | 2000–2002 | |
Access Granted | 2001–2010 | |
BET Uncut | 2001–2006 | |
BET.COM Countdown | ||
BET's Top 25 | 2001–2008 | |
BET Awards | 2001 | |
Celebration of Gospel | ||
BET Start | 2002–2005 2014 |
|
BET Nightly News | 2002–2005 | |
106 & Park Prime | 2003–2004 | |
BET Music | 2003–2008 | |
BET Now | ||
Hey Monie! | 2003 | co-produced by Soup2Nuts |
The Center | 2003–2007 | |
BET After Dark | 2004–2007 | |
College Hill | 2004–2009 | |
BET Style | 2004–2006 | |
Top 50 | 2005–2006 | |
Remixed! | ||
Rip the Runway | 2005–2013 | |
Top 20 Countdown | ||
BET Hip Hop Awards | 2006 | |
Hotwyred | 2006–2007 | |
The Black Carpet | 2006–2008 | |
Keyshia Cole: The Way It Is | ||
Baldwin Hills | 2007–2009 | co-production with C4 Pictures |
Sunday Best | 2007–2015 2019–present |
|
The 5ive | 2007 | |
Hell Date | 2007–2008 | |
Iron Ring | 2008 | co-production with Zilo Live, Inc. |
The BET Honors | ||
Brothers to Brutha | ||
Iron Ring | ||
The Deal | 2008–2010 | |
Frankie & Neffe | 2009 | |
Harlem Heights | ||
106 & Gospel | ||
Tiny and Toya | 2009–2010 | co-production with DuBose Entertainment |
The Family Crews | 2010–2011 | co-production with Strange Fruit Media |
Black Girls Rock! | 2010 | |
The Michael Vick Project | ||
Trey Songz: My Moment | ||
Black Panther | 2011 | co-produced with Marvel Knights Animation, Hudlin Entertainment and Titmouse, Inc. |
Reed Between the Lines | co-produced by Georgia Entertainment Industries | |
Let's Stay Together | 2011–2014 | co-production with Curiously Bright Entertainment and Five & Dime Productions |
Don't Sleep! | 2012 | |
Keyshia & Daniel: Family First | co-production with DuBose Entertainment | |
Second Generation Wayans | 2013 | |
Real Husbands of Hollywood | 2013–2016 | co-production with HartBeat Productions, JSR Productions, and 3 Arts Entertainment |
Being Mary Jane | 2013-2019 | co-produced with Akil Productions, Breakdown Productions, Schoolcraft Productions (season 4–5) and Will Packer Productions (season 4–5) |
Just Keke | 2014 | co-produced by Mathis Productions and Telepictures |
Nellyville | 2014–2015 | co-production with Entertainment One |
DeSean Jackson: Home Team | 2015 | |
Keyshia Cole: All In | co-production with DuBose Entertainment and Keyshia Cole Productions | |
It's A Mann's World | 2015–2016 | |
The BET Life Of... | 2015–present | |
About The Business | 2016 | |
Criminals at Work | ||
Chasing Destiny | ||
Ink, Paper, Scissors | ||
Zoe Ever After | co-production with Scooter Braun Projects and Martin Chase Productions | |
Joyful Noise | 2016–2017 | |
From the Bottom Up | 2016–present | |
The Comedy Get Down | 2017–present | |
The Quad | 2017–2018 | co-production with Rainforest Entertainment, WaterWalk Productions, and Capital Arts Entertainment |
Rebel | 2017 | co-production with New Deal Productions, 8 Mile Scomi Productions, MarVista Entertainment and Silver Screen Pictures Entertainment |
50 Central | co-production with G-Unit Films and Television Inc. and Black Roads Entertainment | |
Tales | co-production with Visionary Ideas | |
The Comedy Get Down | co-produced by 3 Arts Entertainment and Free 90 Media | |
The Rundown with Robin Thede | 2017–2018 | co-production with For Better or Words Inc. Enterprises Inc. and Jax Media |
Black Card Revoked | 2018–present | |
Mancave | ||
The Family Business | 2018 | produced by Tri Destinated Studios and Urban Books Media |
In Contempt | co-produced by Blue Ice Pictures | |
The Grand Hustle | 2018–present | |
Hustle in Brooklyn | ||
American Soul | 2019–2020 | produced by Once A Frog Entertainment, Imphiniti Entertainment, Philoment Media and Jesse Collins Entertainment |
Boomerang | 2019–present | co-production with 606 Television, DeEtte Productions, Hillman Grad Productions, and Paramount Television Studios |
Games People Play | 2019–present | co-production with Edmonds Entertainment and STX Entertainment |
The Oval | 2019–present | co-production with Tyler Perry Studios |
Sistas | 2019–present | co-production with Tyler Perry Studios |
Twenties | 2020–present | |
Tyler Perry's Assisted Living | 2020–present | co-production with Tyler Perry Studios |
Tyler Perry's House of Payne | 2020–present | co-production with Tyler Perry Studios |
Comedy Partners[]
Title | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|
Mystery Science Theater 3000 | 1989–1996 | co-production with Best Brains and HBO Downtown Productions Rights owned by Shout! Factory |
Afterdrive | 1990–1991 | |
Access America | co-production with Reeves Entertainment | |
Comics Only | 1991–1992 | co-production with I'm Right No I'm Right Productions |
Women Aloud | 1992–1993 | co-production with HBO Downtown Productions |
Two Drink Minimum | 1993–1994 | |
Politically Incorrect | 1993–2002 | |
Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist | 1995–2002 | co-production with HBO Downtown Productions, Popular Arts Entertainment and Soup2Nuts |
The Daily Show | 1996–present | co-production with Mad Cow Productions, Busboy Productions and Ark Angel |
Pulp Comics | 1996–2000 | |
Canned Ham | 1996–2002 | |
Viva Variety | 1997–1999 | |
South Park | 1997–present | co-production with Braniff Productions, Parker-Stone Productions and South Park Studios |
Make Me Laugh | 1997–1998 | co-production with Dove Four Point Productions |
Premium Blend | 1997–2005 | |
Upright Citizens Brigade | 1998–2000 | |
Comedy Central Presents | 1998–2011 | co-production with RickMill Productions |
The Man Show | 1999–2004 | co-production with Stone Stanley Entertainment Rights owned by Stone & Company Entertainment |
Strangers with Candy | 1999–2000 | |
Turn Ben Stein On | 1999–2001 | |
Vs. | 1999 | co-production with First Television |
BattleBots | 2000–2002 | later aired on the ABC and Discovery Channel; co-production with Whalerock Industries and BattleBots Productions |
Strip Mall | 2000–2001 | |
TV Funhouse | co-production with Poochie Doochie Productions | |
The Chris Wylde Show Starring Chris Wylde | 2001 | |
Insomniac with Dave Attell | 2001–2004 | |
Let's Bowl | 2001–2002 | co-production with The Scott–Kronfeld Experience |
Primetime Glick | 2001–2003 | |
That's My Bush! | 2001 | co-production with Important Television |
Beat the Geeks | 2001–2002 | co-production with Mindless Entertainment and Fox 21 Television Studios |
Comic Groove | 2002 | |
Contest Searchlight | co-production with Apostle | |
Crank Yankers | 2002–2005; 2007 | |
Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn | 2002–2004 | |
Chappelle's Show | 2003–2006 | co-production with Pilot Boys Productions and Marobru Productions |
Comedy Central Roast | 2003–present | |
I'm With Busey | 2003 | |
Reno 911! | 2003–2009 | |
Kid Notorious | 2003 | co-production with Alan & Alan Productions, Brett Morgen Productions and Woodland Productions |
Crossballs | 2004 | |
The Graham Norton Effect | U.S. version | |
Jump Cuts | ||
Shorties Watchin' Shorties | ||
Wanda Does It | ||
The World Stands Up | ||
Drawn Together | 2004–2007 | |
Con | 2005 | |
The Hollow Men | ||
Stella | ||
Too Late with Adam Carolla | ||
Weekends at the D.L. | ||
Distraction | 2005–2006 | U.S. version |
The Showbiz Show with David Spade | 2005��2007 | |
Mind of Mencia | 2005–2008 | |
The Colbert Report | 2005–2014 | |
Dog Bites Man | 2006 | |
Live at Gotham | 2006–2009 | |
American Body Shop | 2007 | |
Halfway Home | ||
Lil' Bush | 2007–2008 | |
The Sarah Silverman Program | 2007–2010 | |
Chocolate News | 2008 | |
The Gong Show with Dave Attell | co-production with Happy Madison Productions and Sony Pictures Television | |
Lewis Black's Root of All Evil | ||
Reality Bites Back | ||
Atom TV | 2008–2010 | |
The Jeff Dunham Show | 2009 | |
Kröd Mändoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire | ||
Michael & Michael Have Issues | ||
Important Things with Demetri Martin | 2009–2010 | |
Secret Girlfriend | 2009 | |
Tosh.0 | 2009–present | |
Russell Simmons Presents: Stand-Up at the El Rey | 2010 | |
Nick Swardson's Pretend Time | 2010–2011 | co-production with Culver Entertainment, Happy Madison Productions, and Sony Pictures Television |
Ugly Americans | 2010–2012 | |
John Oliver's New York Stand Up Show | 2010–2013 | |
Jon Benjamin Has a Van | 2011 | |
Onion SportsDome | ||
Russell Simmons Presents: The Ruckus | ||
Sports Show with Norm Macdonald | ||
Workaholics | 2011–2017 | |
Mash Up | 2012 | |
The Burn with Jeff Ross | 2012–2013 | |
Brickleberry | 2012–2015 | |
Key & Peele | ||
The Ben Show | 2013 | |
The Jeselnik Offensive | ||
Brody Stevens: Enjoy It! | 2013–2014 | |
Kroll Show | 2013–2015 | |
Adam DeVine's House Party | 2013–2016 | |
Inside Amy Schumer | ||
@midnight with Chris Hardwick | 2013–2017 | |
Nathan for You | ||
Drunk History | 2013–present | |
Comedy Underground with Dave Attell | 2014 | |
The Meltdown with Jonah and Kumail | 2014–2016 | |
TripTank | ||
Review | 2014–2017 | |
Broad City | 2014–2019 | |
Big Time in Hollywood, FL | 2015 | |
Moonbeam City | co-production with Titmouse, Inc., Oilver Bridge Entertainment and Alphapnel Industries | |
Why? with Hannibal Buress | ||
Another Period | 2015–2018 | |
This Is Not Happening | 2015–present | |
Not Safe with Nikki Glaser | 2016 | |
Legends of Chamberlain Heights | 2016–2017 | |
Idiotsitter | ||
The Comedy Jam | 2017 | |
The High Court with Doug Benson | ||
Jeff & Some Aliens | ||
Detroiters | 2017–2018 | |
Hood Adjacent with James Davis | 2017 | |
The Jim Jefferies Show | 2017–2019 | |
The Opposition with Jordan Klepper | 2017 | |
The President Show | ||
Corporate | 2018–present | |
This Week at the Comedy Cellar | 2018–present | |
The Other Two | 2019–present | |
Alternatino with Arturo Castro | 2019–present | co-production with Avalon Television |
South Side | 2019–present |
Paramount Network (Spike Cable Networks Inc.)[]
Title | Years | Co-production with |
---|---|---|
Gary the Rat | 2003 | |
Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon" | ||
Stripperella | 2003–2004 | |
The Joe Schmo Show | 2003–2004 2013 |
Reese Wernick Productions, Stone Stanley Entertainment/Zoo Productions |
Spike TV's 52 Favorite Cars | 2004 | |
This Just In! | ||
GameTrailers TV with Geoff Keighley | 2005–2013 | |
Pros vs. Joes | 2006–2010 | |
The Kill Point | 2007 | Lionsgate Television, Mandeville Films |
Murder | ||
I Bet You Will | 2008 | |
DEA | 2008–2009 | |
1000 Ways to Die | 2008–2012 | |
4th and Long | 2009 | |
Jesse James Is a Dead Man | ||
Surviving Disaster | ||
Deadliest Warrior | 2009–2011 | |
Permanent Mark | 2010 | |
Scrappers | ||
Auction Hunters | 2010–2015 | |
Coal | 2011 | |
Phowned! | ||
Flip Men | 2011–2012 | |
Repo Games | ||
Bar Rescue | 2011–present | |
Big Easy Justice | 2012 | |
Diamond Divers | ||
Rat Bastards | ||
Undercover Stings | ||
American Digger/Savage Family Diggers | 2012–2013 | |
World's Worst Tenants | ||
Tattoo Nightmares | 2012–2015 | |
Ink Master | 2012–2020 | |
Car Lot Rescue | 2013 | |
Criss Angel BeLIEve | ||
Tattoo Rescue | ||
Urban Tarzan | ||
COPS (season 26–32) | 2013–2020 | Langley Productions |
10 Million Dollar Bigfoot Bounty | 2014 | Original Media |
Frankenfood | ||
Gym Rescue | ||
Hungry Investors | ||
Tattoo Nightmares: Miami | ||
Catch a Contractor | 2014–2015 | |
Coaching Bad | 2015 | |
Framework | ||
Sweat Inc. | ||
Lip Sync Battle | 2015–present | |
Waco | 2018 | |
It Was Him: The Many Murders of Ed Edwards | ||
American Woman | ||
Yellowstone | 2018–present | |
Heathers | 2018 | |
The Last Cowboy | 2019–present | |
Battle of the Fittest Couples | 2019–present |
Country Music Television[]
Title | Years | Co-production with |
---|---|---|
CMT Crossroads | 2002–present | |
Cowboy U | 2003–2007 | |
CMT Insider | 2004–2012 | |
Trick My Truck | 2005–2009 | Varuna Entertainment |
Country Fried Home Videos | 2006–2009 | |
Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders: Making the Team | 2006–present | |
CMT Comedy Stage | 2007 | |
My Big Redneck Wedding | 2008–2011 | |
Can You Duet | 2008–2009 | |
The World's Strictest Parents | 2009–2010 | |
Working Class | 2011 | |
Redneck Island | 2012–2016 | |
Chainsaw Gang | ||
CMT Hot 20 Countdown | 2013–present | |
Dog and Beth: On the Hunt | 2013–2015 | |
Guntucky | 2013–2014 | |
Party Down South | 2014–2016 | |
Steve Austin's Broken Skull Challenge | 2014–2017 | |
The Josh Wolf Show | 2015 | |
I Love Kellie Pickler | 2015–2017 | |
Sun Records | 2017 | |
Music City | 2018–present | |
Racing Wives | 2019–present |
Showtime Networks[]
Title | Years | Co-production with |
---|---|---|
Hollywood Top Ten | 1982–1986 | |
Celebrity Lifestyles | 1983 | |
Hollywood Close-Up with Bill Harris | ||
That's Stupid! | 1983–1984 | |
Showtime Championship Boxing | 1986–present | |
Linc's | 1998–2000 | Tim Reid Productions and Viacom Productions |
Beggars and Choosers | 1999–2000 | |
Queer as Folk | 2000–2005 | Warner Bros. Television and Cowlip Productions |
Queer Duck | 2002–2004 | |
Family Business | 2003–2006 | Maxwell Productions |
Free for All | 2003 | |
The Opposite Sex | Hensel Krasnow Productions | |
Penn & Teller: Bullshit! | 2003-2010 | |
The L Word | 2004–2009 | |
Fat Actress | 2005 | |
Sleeper Cell | 2005–2006 | |
Brotherhood | 2006–2008 | |
Dexter | 2006–2013 | |
Californication | 2007–2014 | |
This American Life | 2007–2009 | |
Lock 'N Load | 2009 | Authentic Entertainment |
Nurse Jackie | 2009–2015 | Lionsgate Television |
United States of Tara | 2009–2011 | DreamWorks Television |
The Green Room with Paul Provenza | 2010–2011 | |
The Real L Word | 2010–2012 | |
Gigolos | 2011–2016 | RelativityREAL |
House of Lies | ||
Polyamory: Married & Dating | 2012–2013 | |
Ray Donovan | 2013–2020 | |
Masters of Sex | 2013–2016 | Sony Pictures Television |
Penny Dreadful | 2014–2016 | |
The Affair | 2014–2019 | |
Happyish | 2015 | |
Billions | 2016–present | |
I'm Dying Up Here | 2017–2018 | Some Kind of Garden, Assembly Entertainment, Endemol Shine North America and Plymouth Street Productions |
White Famous | 2017 | Aggressive Mediocrity, Inc., Foxxhole Productions, Lionsgate Television |
SMILF | 2017–2019 | Supahsmaht Productions, Quantity Entertainment, Groundswell Productions, and ABC Signature |
Kidding | 2018–2020 | |
Escape at Dannemora | 2018 | Michael De Luca Productions and Red Hour Productions |
Black Monday | 2019–present | |
City on a Hill | 2019–present | |
The Loudest Voice | 2019 | 3dot Productions, Slow Pony and Blumhouse Television |
Shangri-La | 2019 | Tremolo Productions |
On Becoming a God in Central Florida | 2019 | TriStar Television and Smoke House Pictures |
Murder in the Bayou | 2019–present |
Awesomeness[]
Title | Years | Co-production with |
---|---|---|
AwesomenessTV | 2013–2015 | Nickelodeon Productions |
Richie Rich | 2015 | DreamWorks Animation (via Harvey Entertainment) |
Project Mc2 | 2015–2017 | MGA Entertainment |
Guidance | 2015–2018 | |
Foursome | 2016–2018 | |
T@gged | ||
Freakish | 2016–2017 | |
My Dead Ex | 2018 | |
Light as a Feather | 2018–present | Grammnet Productions and Wattpad Studios |
All Night | 2018 | |
Overthinking with Kat & June | ||
PEN15 | 2018–present | Lonely Island Classics, Odenkirk Provissiero, and Party Over Here |
Niki and Gabi Take Bahamas | 2020 | |
iCarly | 2021–present | Nickelodeon Productions |
CBS Media Ventures[]
Note: Formerly known as CBS Television Distribution.
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Entertainment Tonight | 1981–present | Syndication | Continued from Paramount Domestic Television |
Wheel of Fortune | 1983–present | produced by Sony Pictures Television previously distributed by King World | |
Jeopardy! | 1984–present | produced by Sony Pictures Television previously distributed by King World | |
The Oprah Winfrey Show | 1986–2011 | produced and owned by Harpo Productions previously distributed by King World | |
Inside Edition | 1989–present | Continued from King World Productions | |
The Montel Williams Show | 1991–2008 | Continued from Viacom and Paramount Domestic Television; produced by Mountain Movers Productions | |
Judge Judy | 1996–2021 | Continued from Worldvision Enterprises and Paramount Domestic Television; produced by Big Ticket Television | |
Judge Joe Brown | 1998–2013 | Continued from Worldvision Enterprises and Paramount Domestic Television; produced by Big Ticket Television | |
Dr. Phil | 2002–present | Continued from Paramount Domestic Television; produced by Harpo Productions (2002–10), Stage 29 Productions (2010–present) and Peteski Productions previously distributed by King World | |
America's Next Top Model | 2003–2018 | UPN/The CW/VH1 | produced by 10x10 Productions and Bankable Productions previously distributed by King World |
The Insider | 2004–2017 | Syndication | Continued from Paramount Domestic Television; known as omg! Insider from January 2013 to January 2014 |
Rachael Ray | 2006–present | produced by Watch Entertainment, Scripps Networks (2006–2018) (seasons 1–12), Discovery Productions (2018–present) (season 13–present), Harpo Productions (2006–2010) (sesasons 1–4) and Harpo Studios previously distributed by King World | |
The Doctors | 2008–present | produced by Stage 29 Productions | |
Smash Cuts | 2009–2011 | ||
Hot Bench | 2014–present | produced by Big Ticket Entertainment and Queen Bee Productions | |
Daily Mail TV | 2017–present | produced by Stage 29 Productions | |
The Drew Barrymore Show | 2020–present | produced by Big Ticket Entertainment, Stage 29 Productions and Flower Films |
Ad sales
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Divorce Court | 1999–present | Syndication | produced by Lincolnwood Drive, Inc.; syndicated by Fox First Run |
Family Feud | 1999–present | produced by Fremantle; syndicated by Debmar-Mercury | |
Tyler Perry's House of Payne | 2006–2012 | TBS | produced by Tyler Perry Studios; syndicated by Debmar-Mercury |
The Wendy Williams Show | 2008–present | Syndication | produced by Wendy Williams Productions and Perler Productions; syndicated by Debmar-Mercury |
Tyler Perry's Meet the Browns | 2009–2011 | TBS | produced by Tyler Perry Studios; syndicated by Debmar-Mercury |
Are We There Yet? | 2010–2013 | produced by Revolution Television, 5914 Entertainment, Ltd., Cube Vision, and Debmar-Mercury | |
Anger Management | 2012–2014 | FX | produced by Revolution Studios, Mohawk Productions, Twisted Pictures, and Lionsgate Television; syndicated by Debmar-Mercury |
Dish Nation | 2012–present | Syndication | produced by Fox Television Stations; syndicated by Fox First Run |
BoJack Horseman | 2014–present | Netflix | produced by ShadowMachine and Boxer vs. Raptor for The Tornante Company; syndicated by Debmar-Mercury |
Schitt's Creek | 2015–present | CBC | produced by Not a Real Company Productions; distributed in the U.S. by Debmar-Mercury |
25 Words or Less | 2018–present | Syndication | produced by Dino Bones Productions; syndicated by Fox First Run |
Caught in Providence | 2018–present | produced by Debmar-Mercury | |
Ambitions | 2019–present | OWN | produced by Will Packer Productions, Lionsgate Television, and Debmar-Mercury |
King World Productions[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Little Rascals | 1929–1938 | Syndication | distribution only |
Topper | 1953–1955 | CBS | distribution only from 1986 |
Branded | 1965–1966 | NBC | distribution only from 1985; produced by Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions and Sentinel Productions |
The Abbott and Costello Cartoon Show | 1967–1968 | Syndication | distribution only; produced by Hanna-Barbera and RKO General[N 4] |
The Guns of Will Sonnett | 1967–1969 | ABC | distribution only from 1985; produced by Thomas/Spelling Productions |
The Little Rascals Christmas Special | 1979 | NBC | television special |
The Little Rascals (animated TV series) | 1982–1984 | ABC | |
The Merv Griffin Show | 1983–1986 | Syndication | distribution only Currently distributed by Reelin' In the Years Productions on behalf of The Griffin Group |
Headline Chasers | 1985–1986 | produced by Merv Griffin Enterprises and Wink Martindale Enterprises Inc.[N 3] | |
Nightlife | 1986–1987 | ||
The Rock 'n Roll Evening News[99] | with Andy Friendly Productions and A&M Records[100] | ||
True Confessions | produced by The Landsburg Company Currently owned by the estate of Alan Landsburg | ||
Women of the World | 1986–1988 | ||
Geraldo/The Geraldo Rivera Show | 1987–1998 | distribution from 1996 to 1998; produced by Investigative News Group and Tribune Entertainment | |
Offshore Television | 1988–1989 | with Saban Entertainment CBS co-owns the series with Disney-ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Monopoly | 1990 | ABC | with Merv Griffin Enterprises Currently owned by Allspark |
Instant Recall | 1990–1992 | Syndication | |
Bob Vila's Home Again/Bob Villa | 1990–2007 | distribution from 2000 to 2007; previously distributed by Group W/Eyemark Entertainment Currently owned by Bob Vila | |
The All-New Candid Camera | 1991–1992 | ||
Wild West C.O.W.-Boys of Moo Mesa | 1992–1994 | ABC | co-production with Greengrass Productions and Gunther-Wahl Productions[N 2] |
The Les Brown Show | 1993–1994 | Syndication | |
American Journal | 1993–1998 | ||
Martha Stewart Living | 1993–2004[101] | Previously distributed by Group W/Eyemark Entertainment Currently owned by Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia | |
Rolonda | 1994–1997 | produced by Watts Works Productions | |
The Howard Stern Radio Show | 1998–2001 | Previously distributed by Eyemark Entertainment | |
Hollywood Squares | 1998–2004 | with Columbia TriStar Television/Sony Pictures Television | |
The Roseanne Show | 1998–2000 | with Full Moon & High Tide Productions | |
The Martin Short Show | 1999–2000 | ||
18 Wheels of Justice | 2000–2001 | TNN | Currently owned by Stu Segall Productions |
The Cindy Margolis Show | 2000 | Syndication | |
Curtis Court | 2000–2001 | ||
The Ananda Lewis Show | 2001–2002 | [102] | |
Living It Up! with Ali & Jack | 2003–2004 |
Group W/Eyemark Entertainment[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
PM East/PM West | 1961–1962 | Syndication | |
The Mike Douglas Show | 1961–1981 | ||
The Steve Allen Show (aka “Steve Allen Westinghouse Show”) | 1962–1964 | [103] Currently distributed by Retro Video | |
That Regis Philbin Show![citation needed] | 1964–1965 | ||
The Merv Griffin Show | 1965–1969 | distribution only Currently distributed by Reelin' In the Years Productions on behalf of The Griffin Group | |
The David Frost Show[104] | 1969–1972 | ||
Fight Back! with David Horowitz | 1976–1992 | distribution only; produced by Consuming Media, Ltd. | |
PM Magazine[16] | 1976–1989 | ||
Evening Magazine | 1976–1989 | Same show as PM Magazine, but only shown on stations owned by Group W | |
The John Davidson Show | 1980–1982 | [105] | |
Hour Magazine | 1980–1989[citation needed] | ||
Every Second Counts | 1984–1985 | Co-produced by Charles Colarusso Productions | |
The George Michael Sports Machine | 1984–2007 | distribution only; produced by NBC affiliate WRC-TV Currently owned by NBCUniversal Television Distribution | |
The Wil Shriner Show | 1987–1988 | NBC, Syndication[106] | with Charles Colarusso Productions & Bonnie Burns Productions |
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles | 1987–1996 | Syndication, CBS | Co-production with Murakami-Wolf-Swenson/Murakami Wolf Dublin/Fred Wolf Films Currently owned by Fred Wolf Films and Lionsgate Home Entertainment |
Missing/Reward | 1988–1992 | Syndication | with Four Point Entertainment and Dave Bell Associates |
Couch Potatoes | 1989 | with Saban Entertainment | |
House Party[107] | 1990 | with NBC Productions | |
That's Amore | 1992–1993 | co-produced with Four Point Entertainment[citation needed] | |
Vicki! | 1992–1994 | Co-produced with Lawrence-Schultz Productions[108] | |
Jones & Jury | 1994–1995 | with Lighthearted Entertainment | |
Marilu | 1994–1995[109] | with Perpetual Motion Pictures and California Communications, Inc.[109] | |
Day and Date | 1995–1997 | Later distributed by Eyemark Entertainment | |
Psi Factor | 1996–2000 | distribution only; produced by Alliance Atlantis Currently owned by Echo Bridge Entertainment and Content Media Corp. | |
Everybody Loves Raymond | 1996–2005 | CBS | U.S. distribution only;[110] produced by Where's Lunch, Worldwide Pants and HBO Independent Productions Warner Bros. handles home media and international television distribution |
The Gayle King Show[111] | 1997–1998 | Syndication | |
Pensacola: Wings of Gold | 1997–2000 | produced by Partners Station Network and Dauphine Productions Currently owned by Stu Segall Productions | |
The Dr. Joy Browne Show[112] | 1999–2000 | [112] |
Spelling Television[]
Note: Formerly known as Aaron Spelling Productions and Spelling Entertainment Inc.
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Danny Thomas Hour | 1967-1968 | NBC | previously distributed by William Morris Agency and NBC Films |
Rango | 1967 | ABC | with Timkel Productions previously distributed by William Morris Agency and ABC Films |
The Guns of Will Sonnett | 1967–1969 | with Bremco Productions previously distributed by William Morris Agency, NBC Films, Leo A. Gutman, Inc. and King World | |
The Mod Squad | 1968–1973 | previously distributed by ABC Films | |
The New People | 1969–1970 | ||
The Most Deadly Game | 1970–1971 | ||
The Silent Force | |||
The San Pedro Beach Bums | 1977 | ||
The Love Boat | 1977–1986 | with Douglas S. Cramer Productions | |
Vega$ | 1978–1981 | previously distributed by 20th Century Fox Television | |
Friends | 1979 | ||
B.A.D. Cats | 1980 | ||
Aloha Paradise | 1981 | ||
Dynasty | 1981–1989 | with Fox-Cat Productions (pilot) Richard and Esther Shapiro Productions previously distributed by 20th Century Fox Television | |
Strike Force | 1981–1982 | ||
Matt Houston | 1982–1985 | with Largo Productions previously distributed by Warner Bros. Television | |
At Ease | 1983 | ||
Hotel | 1983–1988 | previously distributed by Warner Bros. Television | |
Finder of Lost Loves | 1984–1985 | ||
Glitter | |||
MacGruder and Loud | 1985 | ||
Hollywood Beat | |||
The Colbys | 1985–1987 | with Richard and Esther Shapiro Productions previously distributed by Warner Bros. Television | |
Life with Lucy | 1986 | with Lucille Ball Productions CBS co-owns the series with Desilu Too, LLC. | |
HeartBeat | 1988–1989 | with Richard and Esther Shapiro Productions | |
Nightingales | 1989 | NBC | |
Beverly Hills, 90210 | 1990–2000 | Fox | with 90210 Productions Inc., Propaganda Films (1990-1992) {seasons 1-2) and Torand Productions |
Twin Peaks | 1990–1991 | ABC | with Lynch/Frost Productions and Propaganda Films |
2000 Malibu Road | 1992 | CBS | with Fisher Entertainment and Joel Schumacher Productions |
The Heights | Fox | ||
The Round Table | NBC | ||
Melrose Place | 1992–1999 | Fox | with Darren Star Productions |
Burke's Law | 1994–1995 | CBS | Based on the 1963 TV series by Four Star Television |
Winnetka Road | 1994 | NBC | |
Models Inc. | 1994–1995 | Fox | |
Madman of the People | NBC | with Kreiscluesco Industries | |
Robin's Hoods[113] | Syndication | ||
Heaven Help Us | 1994 | with Echo Cove Productions | |
University Hospital | 1995 | ||
Kindred: The Embraced | 1996 | Fox | with John Leekley Productions |
Malibu Shores | NBC | ||
Savannah | 1996–1997 | The WB | |
7th Heaven | 1996–2007 | The WB/The CW | CBS Paramount Network Television co-produced the final season. |
Pacific Palisades | 1997 | Fox | |
Sunset Beach | 1997–1999 | NBC | with NBC Studios and Spelling Daytime Television |
Love Boat: The Next Wave | 1998–1999 | UPN | |
Any Day Now | 1998–2002 | Lifetime | with Finnegan/Pinchuk Productions and Paid Our Dues Productions |
Buddy Faro | 1998 | CBS | with Uncle Monkey Productions |
Rescue 77 | 1999 | The WB | |
Titans | 2000 | NBC | with NBC Studios |
All Souls | 2001 | UPN | with Uncle Monkey Productions |
Kingpin | 2003 | NBC | with Knee Deep Productions and NBC Studios |
Queens Supreme | CBS | with Shoelace Productions, Revolution Television, Red Om Films, Shadowland Productions and CBS Productions | |
10-8: Officers on Duty | 2003–2004 | ABC | with Spine Films, Touchstone Television and Badlands Entertainment |
Summerland | 2004–2005 | The WB | with Baby Owl Works Productions, The Lion and the Rose Productions (season 1) |
Clubhouse | CBS | with Icon Productions | |
Wanted | 2005 | TNT | with Badlands Entertainment |
Laurel Entertainment[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Tales from the Darkside | 1983–1988 | Syndication | with Tribune Broadcasting and Jaygee Productions distributed by Paramount Domestic Television & LBS Communications |
Monsters | 1988–1991 | co-produced and distributed by Tribune Entertainment Company | |
Golden Years | 1991 | CBS | mini-series |
The Stand | 1994 | ABC | mini-series; co-produced by Greengrass Productions |
The Langoliers | 1995 | mini-series |
Worldvision Enterprises[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Dark Shadows | 1966-1971 | ABC | Distribution only; produced by Dan Curtis Productions |
That Girl | 1966–1971 | ABC | Distribution only; produced by Daisy Productions |
The Adventures of Gulliver | 1968–1969 | ABC | Distribution only; produced by Hanna-Barbera |
The Doris Day Show | 1968–1973 | CBS | Distribution only;[16] produced by Arwin Productions Currently distributed by Paul Brownstein Productions |
The Bugaloos | 1970–1972 | NBC | Distribution only; produced and currently owned by Sid and Marty Krofft Pictures |
Lidsville | 1971–1973 | ABC | Distribution only; produced and currently owned by Sid and Marty Krofft Pictures |
Let's Make a Deal | 1971–1977 | Syndication | [N 1] |
The Hilarious House of Frightenstein | 1971 | CHCH-TV | formerly distributed by Worldvision Enterprises |
The Wonderful Stories of Professor Kitzel | 1972–1973 | Syndication | Distribution only; produced by Krantz Films |
Land of the Lost | 1974–1976 | NBC | Distribution only (continued from Viacom); produced and currently owned by Sid and Marty Krofft Pictures |
Little House on the Prairie | 1974–1983 | Distribution only;[16] produced by NBC Productions and Ed Friendly Productions Currently distributed by NBCUniversal Television Distribution (MGM Worldwide Television Distribution outside the U.S.) | |
The Lost Saucer | 1975-1976 | ABC | Distribution only; produced and currently owned by Sid and Marty Krofft Pictures |
The McLean Stevenson Show | 1976–1977 | NBC | Distribution only; produced by McLean Stevenson Enterprises, Inc. and Monty Hall Enterprises, Inc. |
Hunter | 1977 | CBS | international distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions[N 4] |
Eight Is Enough | 1977–1981 | ABC | international distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions[N 4] |
The Love Boat | 1977–1986 | distribution only[16] produced by Douglas S. Cramer Productions and Aaron Spelling Productions | |
Dallas | 1978–1991 | CBS | international distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions[N 4] |
Sam | 1978 | with Mark VII Limited | |
Project U.F.O. | 1978–1979 | NBC | with Mark VII Limited |
The Next Step Beyond | Syndication | produced by Factor-Newland Productions | |
Kaz | 1978–1979 | CBS | international distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions[N 4] |
Highway to Heaven | 1984–1989 | NBC | distribution only; produced by Michael Landon Productions Currently distributed by Genesis International |
Night Heat | 1985–1989 | CTV Television Network | distribution only; produced by Alliance Communications and Grosso-Jacobson Productions CBS co-owns the series with Echo Bridge Home Entertainment |
Starring the Actors | 1986 | Syndication | |
Camp Candy | 1989–1992 | NBC, Syndication | distribution only; produced by DIC Entertainment and Saban Entertainment Currently owned by Disney–ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution |
American Chronicles | 1990–1991 | FOX | distribution only; produced by Lynch/Frost Productions |
Pictionary | 1997–1998 | Syndication | with Kline & Friends and Pictionary Incorporated |
ABC Films (pre-1973)[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Annie Oakley | 1954–1957 | Syndication | produced by Flying A Productions Currently owned by Gail Davis Enterprises |
The Adventures of Champion | 1955–1956 | CBS | Distribution only; produced by Flying A Productions In the public domain |
Buffalo Bill, Jr. | Syndication | produced by Flying A Productions In the public domain | |
Man with a Camera | 1958–1960 | ABC | produced by MWC Productions, Inc. |
John Gunther's High Road | 1959–1960 | produced by Blue J Productions | |
Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond | 1959–1961 | with Joseph L. Schenck Enterprises | |
The Rebel | produced by Celestial Productions, Fen-Ker-Ada Productions and Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions Currently distributed by Shout! Factory[114] | ||
The New Breed | 1961–1962 | with Quinn Martin Productions and Selmur Productions | |
Ben Casey | 1961–1966 | produced by Bing Crosby Productions | |
Combat! | 1962–1967 | with Selmur Productions North American distribution only | |
Discovery | 1962–1971 | ||
I'm Dickens, He's Fenster | 1962–1963 | produced by Heyday Productions | |
General Hospital | 1963–present | with Selmur Productions (1963–1967); distribution of pre-1973 episodes only Currently owned by Disney–ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Breaking Point | 1963–1964 | produced by Bing Crosby Productions | |
The New Casper Cartoon Show | produced by Famous Studios Currently owned by DreamWorks Animation | ||
The Fugitive | 1963–1967 | produced by Quinn Martin Productions and United Artists Television | |
The Hollywood Palace | 1964–1970 | ||
Wendy and Me | 1964–1965 | distribution only; produced by Natwill Productions and Warner Bros. Television[N 4] | |
Mickey | 1964–1965 | with Selmur Productions North American distribution only | |
Shindig! | 1964–1966 | with Selmur Productions North American distribution only | |
Milton the Monster | 1965–1968 | with Hal Seeger Productions Currently distributed by Foothill Entertainment | |
Branded | 1965-1966 | NBC | with Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions and Sentinel Productions; later distributed by King World Productions |
The King Kong Show | 1966–1969 | ABC | produced by Videocraft International Currently owned by DreamWorks Animation |
Dark Shadows | 1966–1971 | produced by Dan Curtis Productions | |
The Pruitts of Southampton/The Phyllis Diller Show | 1966–1967 | distribution only; produced by Filmways Television and PhilDil Productions Currently owned by MGM Television | |
Cowboy in Africa | 1967–1968 | produced by Ivan Tors Films | |
Garrison's Gorillas | with Selmur Productions North American distribution only | ||
The Invaders | co-produced by Quinn Martin Productions | ||
N.Y.P.D. | 1967–1969 | with Talent Associates | |
George of the Jungle | 1967 | produced by Jay Ward Productions | |
One Life to Live | 1968–2012 | distribution of pre-1973 episodes only Currently owned by Disney–ABC Home Entertainment and Television Distribution | |
Operation: Entertainment | 1968–1969 | produced by Chuck Barris Productions | |
The Mod Squad | 1968–1973 | produced by Thomas-Spelling Productions | |
The New People | 1969-1970 | ||
The Smokey Bear Show | 1969–1971[115][116] | produced by Rankin/Bass Animated Entertainment Currently owned by DreamWorks Animation | |
Hot Wheels | produced by Pantomime Pictures Corporation and Ken Snyder Properties | ||
Skyhawks | produced by Pantomime Pictures Corporation | ||
Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp | 1970–1971 | co-produced by Sandler-Burns-Marmer Productions[117] | |
The Most Deadly Game | |||
The Silent Force | |||
The Reluctant Dragon and Mr. Toad Show | 1970–1972[118] | produced by Rankin/Bass Productions Currently owned by DreamWorks Animation | |
Will the Real Jerry Lewis Please Sit Down | produced by Filmation | ||
The Smith Family | 1971–1973 | produced by Don Fedderson Productions | |
Curiosity Shop | |||
The Jackson 5ive | produced by Rankin/Bass Productions, Halas and Batchelor, Motown Productions and Topcraft Currently owned by DreamWorks Animation |
Taft Entertainment Television[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams | 1977–1978 | NBC | formerly distributed by Viacom; produced by Sunn Classic Pictures |
Holocaust | 1978 | mini-series; produced by Titus Productions | |
Greatest Heroes of the Bible | 1978–1979 | formerly distributed by Viacom; produced by Sunn Classic Pictures | |
Laugh Trax | 1982–83 | Syndication | produced by Sunn Classic Pictures |
The Lucie Arnaz Show | 1985 | CBS | with Sam Denoff Productions |
You Again? | 1986–1987 | NBC | with Sweater Productions |
Throb | 1986–1988 | Syndication | with Swany, Inc. and Procter & Gamble Productions |
Sable | 1987–1988 | ABC | with Sherman-Rosetti Productions |
Starting from Scratch | 1988–1989 | Syndication | with Ohlmeyer Communications and Flying Unicorn Productions |
Internal Affairs | 1988 | CBS | mini-series; produced by Titus Productions |
QM Productions[]
Note: Formerly known as Quinn Martin Productions
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The New Breed | 1961-1962 | ABC | with Selmur Productions; formerly distributed by ABC Films |
The Fugitive | 1963–1967 | with United Artists Television | |
The Invaders | 1967–1968 | formerly distributed by ABC Films | |
Dan August | 1970–1971 | ||
Cannon | 1971–1976 | CBS | with CBS formerly distributed by Viacom[16] |
The Streets of San Francisco | 1972–1977 | ABC | with Warner Bros. Television (pilot and season 1 only) |
Barnaby Jones | 1973–1980 | CBS | with Woodruff Productions (seasons 7–8) |
The Manhunter | 1974–1975 | ||
Caribe | 1975 | ABC | |
Bert D'Angelo/Superstar | 1976 | formerly distributed by Viacom | |
Most Wanted | 1976–1977 | ||
Quinn Martin's Tales of the Unexpected | 1977 | NBC | |
The Runaways | 1978–1979 | with New Vistas Productions | |
A Man Called Sloane | 1979 | with Woodruff Productions |
Republic Pictures Television[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Stories of the Century | 1954–1955 | Syndication | |
Frontier Doctor | 1958–1959 | ||
Press Your Luck | 1985 | CBS | distribution only[N 1] |
Beauty and the Beast | 1987–1990 | Co-production with Ron Koslow Films and Witt/Thomas Productions | |
On Trial | 1988–1989 | Syndication | Co-production with Woody Fraser Productions and Reeves Entertainment Group |
Son of the Morning Star | 1991 | ABC | miniseries; Co-production with Preston Stephen Fischer Company and The Mount Company |
Love, Lies and Murder | NBC | mini-series; Co-production with Two Shots Productions |
National Telefilm Associates[]
- China Smith (1952–1955) (Currently owned by Richard Duryea and Bernard Tabakin)
- /U.S. Marshall (1956–1958)
- How to Marry a Millionaire (1957–1959)
- Man Without a Gun (1957–1959)
- Official Detective (1957–1958)
- The Walter Winchell File (1957–1958)
- George Jessel's Show Business (1958)
- The Adventures of William Tell (1958–1959) (produced by ITC Entertainment)
- African Patrol (1958–1959)
- This is Alice (1958–1959)
- Mantovani (1959)
- Grand Jury (1959)
- The Third Man (1959–1965) (co-production with British Broadcasting Prestige Productions)
- Assignment: Underwater (1960–1962)
- Q. T. Hush (1960–1961)
- The Crime Reporter
- A Day with Doodles (1964)
NBC Films (pre-1973)[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Fireside Theatre | 1949–1958 | NBC | with General Television Enterprises, Hal Roach Studios and Lewman Productions/Revue Studios |
Cameo Theatre | 1950–1955 | ||
Big Town | 1950–1956 | CBS, NBC | |
Victory at Sea | 1952–1953 | NBC | In the public domain |
The Loretta Young Show | 1953–1961 | with Lewislor Films and Toreto Enterprises | |
Inner Sanctum | 1954–1955 | ||
People are Funny | 1954–1960 | ||
The Great Gildersleeve | 1955–1956 | ||
The Real McCoys | 1957–1963 | ABC, CBS | Produced by Brennan-Westgate and Marterto Productions Currently distributed by SFM Entertainment |
Continental Classroom | 1958–1963 | NBC | |
Concentration | 1958–1973 | first two seasons produced by Barry, Enright & Friendly Productions | |
Fibber McGee and Molly | 1959–1960 | ||
Bonanza | 1959–1973 | ||
The Tab Hunter Show | 1960–1961 | with Shunto Productions | |
The Americans | 1961 | ||
Car 54, Where Are You? | 1961–1963 | with Eupolis Productions | |
The Funny Manns | NBC, Syndication | ||
Astro Boy | 1963-1965 | Syndication | English dub production, originally produced in Japan by Mushi Production Currently licensed by Right Stuf Inc. |
Temple Houston | 1963–1964 | NBC | with Warner Bros. Television and Apollo Productions[N 4] |
Kentucky Jones | |||
I Spy | 1965–1968 | Produced by Three F Productions Currently distributed by the Peter Rodgers Organization | |
Get Smart | 1965–1970 | NBC, CBS | with Talent Associates and CBS Productions (season 5) HBO/Warner Bros. Television owns home entertainment and international distribution rights |
Kimba the White Lion | 1965-1966 | NBC | English dub production, originally produced in Japan by Mushi Production Currently licensed by Right Stuf Inc. |
Animal Secrets | 1966–1967 | ||
T.H.E. Cat | |||
Captain Nice | 1967 | ||
Accidental Family | 1967–1968 | with Sheldon Leonard Productions | |
The Danny Thomas Hour | with Thomas-Spelling Productions | ||
The High Chaparral | 1967–1971 | with Xanadu Productions | |
My Friend Tony | 1969 | with Sheldon Leonard Productions | |
My World and Welcome to It | 1969–1970 | with Sheldon Leonard Productions | |
The Bill Cosby Show | 1969–1971 | with Jemmin Inc. Currently distributed by the Peter Rodgers Organization | |
Hot Dog | 1970–1971 | ||
Make Your Own Kind of Music | 1971 | with Tomka Productions |
California National Productions[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Frontier | 1955–1956 | NBC | |
The Adventures of Hiram Holliday | 1956–1957 | In the public domain | |
Boots and Saddles | 1957–1958 | Syndication | |
The Silent Service | with Twin Dolphin Productions, Inc. | ||
Flight | 1958–1959 | ||
Union Pacific | |||
Philip Marlowe | 1959–1960 | ABC | with Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Productions |
Pony Express | Syndication | ||
The Lawless Years | 1959–1961 | NBC | with Jack Chertok Television Productions |
The Blue Angels | 1960–1961 | Syndication | |
The Jim Backus Show |
Rysher Entertainment[]
CBS Media Ventures owns the distribution rights to the Rysher Entertainment television library, which is currently owned by Vine Alternative Investments.
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
The Hitchhiker | 1983–87, 1989–91 | HBO/USA Network | distribution only since 1995 |
Saved by the Bell | 1989–1993 | NBC | Produced by Peter Engel Productions in association with NBC Productions Currently distributed by NBCUniversal Television Distribution (outside the U.S.) |
Uptown Comedy Club | 1992–1994[citation needed] | Syndication,[119] BET | with Bob Banner Productions and Don Weiner Productions[citation needed] |
Prime Suspect[120] | 1992–1995 | Syndication | Co-production with Byrne Enterprises |
Highlander: The Series[121] | 1992–1998 | season 1 distributed by Gaumont Television co-produced with Reteitalia and Gaumont Television[121] | |
Return to Lonesome Dove | 1993 | CBS | mini-series; distribution only |
Thunder in Paradise | 1994 | Syndication | with Berk/Schwartz/Bonann Productions and Trimark Pictures Certain episodes of the series are co-owned with Lionsgate |
Lonesome Dove: The Series | 1994–1996 | with Telegenic Pictures and RHI Entertainment[122] | |
One West Waikiki | CBS, Syndication | with Larson Entertainment | |
VR.5 | 1995 | FOX | with Samoset Productions |
Live Shot | 1995–1996 | UPN | with Occasionally Brilliant and Steve Marshall Productions |
George & Alana | Syndication | with George Hamilton Productions and Lighthearted Entertainment | |
F/X: The Series | 1996–1998 | CTV Television Network, Syndication | with Fireworks Entertainment |
Strange Universe | Syndication | with Chris-Craft Television | |
Nash Bridges | 1996–2001 | CBS | with The Don Johnson Company, Carlton Cuse Productions and Paramount Network Television |
Arli$$ [123] | 1996–2002 | HBO | International distribution only; produced by Tollin/Robbins Productions (1996–1998), Marquee/Tollin/Robbins (1998–2002) and HBO Original Programming |
Dellaventura | 1997–1998 | CBS | with Hallmark Entertainment Copyrights owned by Sonar Entertainment |
Soldier of Fortune, Inc. | 1997–1999 | Syndication | with Don Simpson-Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
Oz | 1997–2003 | HBO | with The Levinson/Fontana Company, Viacom Productions (seasons 4–5) and HBO Original Programming Distributed in the U.S. by HBO |
Judge Mills Lane | 1998–2001 | Syndication | co-produced by Tomlin-Young Productions and Hurricane Entertainment Group Later distributed by Paramount Domestic Television |
Sex and the City [123] | 1998–2004 | HBO | with Darren Star Productions Distributed in the U.S. by HBO |
Bing Crosby Productions[]
Title | Original run | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Ben Casey | 1961–1966 | ABC | previously distributed by ABC Films/Worldvision Enterprises[16] |
Breaking Point | 1963–1964 | ||
The Bing Crosby Show | 1964–1965 | ||
Slattery's People | CBS | co-produced with Pendick Enterprises[citation needed] previously distributed by CBS Enterprises/Viacom | |
Hogan's Heroes | 1965–1971 | co-produced with Alfran Productions and The CBS Television Network previously distributed by CBS Enterprises/Viacom | |
The Queen & I | 1969 | previously distributed by CBS Enterprises/Viacom | |
Bright Promise | 1969–1972 | NBC | with Frandor Productions |
Television Program Enterprises[]
Title | Original run | Network | Co-production with |
---|---|---|---|
Star Search | 1983–1995 | Syndication | Bob Banner Associates (1983–88), Metromedia Television (1983–86) |
Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous | 1984–1995 | Leach Entertainment Features and Al Masini Productions | |
The Start of Something Big[124] | 1985–1986 | Leach Entertainment Features | |
You Write The Songs | 1986 | [125] | |
Fame, Fortune and Romance | 1986–1987 | ABC | Leach Entertainment Features |
Runaway with the Rich and Famous[126] | 1987–1993 | Syndication | [125] |
Triple Threat | 1988–1989 1992–1993 |
Syndication BET |
|
Preview the Best of the New | 1990 | Syndication | [125] |
Home Videos of the Stars[127] | 1992 |
Television movies and specials[]
Paramount Television[]
Airdate | Title | Network |
---|---|---|
September 23, 1969 | Seven in Darkness | ABC |
December 16, 1969 | ||
February 24, 1970 | Quarantined | |
December 8, 1970 | Weekend of Terror | |
January 12, 1971 | Assault on the Wayne | |
January 19, 1971 | Dr. Cook's Garden | |
April 6, 1971 | ||
September 17, 1971 | Terror in the Sky | CBS |
January 25, 1972 | Women in Chains | ABC |
March 27, 1972 | ||
October 10, 1972 | ||
November 29, 1972 | ||
December 20, 1972 | The Weekend Nun | |
January 9, 1973 | The Devil's Daughter | |
February 14, 1973 | Poor Devil | NBC |
February 27, 1973 | Call to Danger | CBS |
March 3, 1973 | NBC | |
May 21, 1973 | Catch-22 | ABC |
March 16, 1974 | NBC | |
March 27, 1974 | Paramount Presents | ABC |
May 6, 1974 | NBC | |
October 9, 1974 | ABC | |
February 10, 1975 | The Legend of Lizzie Borden | |
February 15, 1975 | NBC[128] | |
April 4, 1976 | The Killer Who Wouldn't Die | ABC |
May 6, 1976 | NBC | |
October 29, 1976 | Look What's Happened to Rosemary's Baby | ABC |
December 27, 1976 | CBS | |
February 3, 1977 | NBC | |
February 20, 1977 | ABC | |
May 18, 1977 | Red Alert | CBS |
May 20, 1977 | Delta County, U.S.A. | ABC |
July 22, 1977 | Dog and Cat | |
October 5, 1977 | Mary Jane Harper Cried Last Night | CBS |
October 7, 1977 | ||
October 28, 1977 | ABC | |
October 31, 1977 | NBC | |
January 23, 1978 | The Defection of Simas Kudirka | CBS |
February 18, 1978 | The Ghost of Flight 401 | NBC |
March 3, 1978 | CBS | |
March 14, 1978 | ||
May 17, 1978 | Getting Married | |
May 19, 1978 | True Grit: A Further Adventure | ABC |
April 9, 1978 | A Family Upside Down | NBC |
October 15, 1979 | CBS | |
October 23, 1979 | Mind Over Murder | |
December 15, 1979 | The Gift | |
January 4, 1980 | Stunts Unlimited | ABC |
February 6, 1980 | Operation Prime Time | |
June 13, 1980 | The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything | |
September 15–19, 1980 | Shōgun | NBC |
September 24, 1980 | Act of Love | |
February 6, 1981 | The Brady Girls Get Married | |
April 26, 1982 | A Woman Called Golda | Operation Prime Time |
August 11, 1982 | ABC | |
July 7, 1983 | The Last Ninja | |
July 9, 1984 | The Jesse Owens Story | Operation Prime Time |
April 8–9, 1985 | Wallenberg: A Hero's Story | NBC |
August 5, 1985 | Command 5 | ABC[129] |
September 23, 1985 | Family Ties Vacation | NBC |
December 28, 1987 | Roman Holiday | |
September 11, 1988 | Shooter | |
December 18, 1988 | A Very Brady Christmas | CBS |
December 14, 1990 | ||
February 12, 1991 | Not of This World | CBS[130] |
November 13, 1991 | Love Kills | USA Network[131] |
July 3, 1992 | Yesterday Today | NBC[132] |
August 11, 1993 | Praying Mantis | Showtime |
September 24, 1993 | The Odd Couple: Together Again | CBS[133] |
May 14, 1994 | ABC | |
November 24, 1994 | MacGyver: Trail to Doomsday | |
March 11, 1996 | Star Command | UPN |
April 14, 1997 | Hollywood Confidential | |
May 25, 1997 | Showtime | |
January 27, 1998 | The Warlord: Battle for the Galaxy | UPN |
February 18, 1999 | The Last Man on Planet Earth | |
April 14, 2000 | Virtual Nightmare | |
May 21, 2000 | Growing Up Brady | NBC |
July 30, 2000 | Showtime | |
December 3, 2000 | Papa's Angels | CBS[134] |
July 4, 2001 | My Horrible Year! | Showtime |
December 9, 2001 | The Day Reagan Was Shot | |
February 11, 2002 | Keep the Faith, Baby | |
June 9, 2002 | Bobbie's Girl | |
November 29, 2002 | The Brady Bunch in the White House | FOX |
March 9, 2003 | The Pentagon Papers | FX |
December 1, 2003 | Comfort and Joy | Lifetime |
May 25, 2005 | CBS | |
October 2, 2005 | Mayday | |
October 16, 2005 | Walker, Texas Ranger: Trial by Fire |
Wilshire Court Productions[]
Airdate | Title | Network |
---|---|---|
September 13, 1989 | Fire and Rain | USA Network |
July 11, 1990 | Wheels of Terror | |
October 31, 1990 | Nightmare on the 13th Floor | |
January 29, 1991 | Deadly Desire | |
March 18, 1992 | Duplicates [135] | |
April 8, 1992 | Treacherous Crossing [136] | |
March 3, 1993 | Tainted Blood | |
May 26, 1993 | Without Warning: Terror in the Woods | NBC |
September 15, 1993 | Rubdown | USA Network |
September 22, 1993 | The Substitute | |
October 8, 1993 | Linda | |
November 20, 1993 | Official Denial | The Sci-Fi Channel |
December 16, 1993 | Jerico Fever | USA Network |
March 17, 1994 | Accidental Meeting | |
October 19, 1994 | Trapped in Space | The Sci-Fi Channel |
January 5, 1995 | A Vow to Kill | USA Network |
January 24, 1995 | Tall, Dark and Deadly | |
May 10, 1995 | As Good as Dead | |
June 11, 1997 | ||
October 19, 1997 | ABC | |
January 14, 1998 | Atomic Dog | USA Network |
January 28, 1999 | Alien Cargo | UPN |
August 15, 1999 | Sweetwater: A True Rock Story | VH1 |
November 19, 1999 | Monster! | UPN |
August 29, 2001 | The Way She Moves | VH1 |
December 19, 2001 | Too Leight: The MC Hammer Story | |
April 21, 2002 | Warning: Parental Advisory | |
August 24, 2003 | Code 11–14 | CBS |
Viacom Pictures/Productions[]
- Evel Knievel (1974)
- A Question of Love (1978)
- A Last Cry for Help (1979)
- She's Dressed to Kill (1979)
- Heaven Only Knows (1979)
- To Race the Wind (1980)
- Nurse (1980)
- All God's Children (1980)
- Angel on My Shoulder (1980)
- Enola Gay: The Men, The Mission, The Atomic Bomb (1980)
- East of Eden (1981)
- For Ladies Only (1981)
- Thursday's Child (1983)
- The Return of the Man from U.N.C.L.E.: The Fifteen Years Later Affair (1983) (with Michael Sloan Productions)
- The Face of Rage (1983)
- Concrete Beat (1984)
- The Ratings Game (1984)
- Kids Don't Tell (1985)
- Suburban Beat (1985)
- Perry Mason Returns (1985)
- Return to Mayberry (1986)
- The Secret Garden (1987)
- Payoff (1991)
- The Fear Inside (1992)
- Paris Trout (1992)
- Nails (1992)
- Scam (1993)
- Children of the Mist (1993)
- Gramps (1995)
- Sabrina the Teenage Witch (1996)
- The Right Connections (1997)
- Sabrina Goes to Rome (1998)
- In the Doghouse (1998)
- Sabrina Down Under (1999)
- Avalon: Beyond the Abyss (1999)
- Two of Us (2000)
- Once Upon a Christmas (2000)
- Warden of Red Rock (2001)
- The Wilde Girls (2001)
- Twice Upon a Christmas (2001)
- Bang Bang You're Dead (2002)
- Finding John Christmas' (2003)
- The Legend of Butch & Sundance (2003)
Paramount Television Studios[]
Title | Airdate | Network | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Grease: Live | January 31, 2016 | Fox | Live TV special based on the 1978 movie by Paramount Pictures. Co-produced with Marc Platt Productions. |
DreamWorks Television[]
- Dear Diary (1996) (pilot)
- Giving Harry the Business (1996) (unaired pilot)
- Fully-Clothed, Non-Dancing Girls (1996) (unaired pilot)
- Twin Cities (1996) (unaired pilot)
- For the People (1996) (unaired pilot)
- 7:08 (1997) (unaired pilot)
- Anna Says (1998) (unaired pilot)
- The Duplex (1999) (unaired pilot)
- Sugar Hill (1999) (unaired pilot)
- We Stand Alone Together: The Men of Easy Company (2001) (co-production with Playtone and Cowen/Richter Productions for HBO)
Miramax Television[]
- Robinson Crusoe (1997) (co-production with RHI Entertainment)
- A Wrinkle in Time (2003) (as Dimension Television; co-production with BLT Productions and Fireworks Entertainment)
- The I Inside (2004) (as Dimension Television)
CBS Productions[]
Note: Alternatively known as CBS Entertainment Productions from 1978 to 1995.
- Rose Parade (1948–2005)
- The Thanksgiving Day Parade on CBS (1948–present)
- 30th Primetime Emmy Awards (September 17, 1978) (co-production for Academy of Television Arts & Sciences)
- Like Mom, Like Me (October 22, 1978)
- You Can't Go Home Again (1979)
- The Wild Wild West Revisited (May 9, 1979)
- More Wild Wild West (October 7–8, 1980)
- 33rd Primetime Emmy Awards (September 13, 1981) (co-production for Academy of Television Arts & Sciences)
- A Tribute to Count Basie (1981)
- Killing at Hell's Gate (1981)
- The Million Dollar Infield (1982)
- Muggable Mary, Street Cop (1982)
- Rascals and Robbers: The Secret Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn (February 27, 1982)
- Napoleon Conquers America (1982)
- The Gift of Life (1982)
- Maid in America (1982)
- Drop-Out Father (September 27, 1982)
- Country Gold (November 23, 1982)
- Games Mother Never Taught You (November 27, 1982)
- Listen to Your Heart (1982)
- Illusions (January 18, 1983)
- Another Woman's Child (January 19, 1983)
- Running Out (January 26, 1983)
- The Other Woman (March 22, 1983)
- First Affair (October 25, 1983)
- Two Kinds of Love (November 8, 1983)
- Quarterback Princess (December 3, 1983)
- Hobson's Choice (December 21, 1983)
- Last of The Great Survivors (1983)
- Calamity Jane (March 6, 1984)
- Getting Physical (March 20, 1984)
- First Steps (March 19, 1985)
- Brotherly Love (May 28, 1985)
- Classified Love (March 8, 1986)
- Blind Justice (March 9, 1986)
- That Secret Sunday (1986)
- One Police Plaza (1986)
- Deadly Deception (1987)
- Gunsmoke: Return to Dodge (1987)
- Body of Evidence (January 24, 1988)
- Case Closed (April 19, 1988) (co-production with Houston Motion Picture Entertainment, Inc.)
- Fifty Years of Television: A Golden Celebration (November 26, 1989)
- Gunsmoke: The Last Apache (1990)
- Shangri-la Plaza (1990) (pilot; co-production with Castle/Safan/Mueller Productions)
- Goodnight, Sweet Wife: A Murder in Boston (1990) (co-production with Arnold Shapiro Productions)
- The Honeymooners Anniversary Special (1990)
- Donor (1990)
- Blood River (1991) (co-production with Little Apple Productions)
- Gunsmoke: To the Last Man (1992)
- The Year of the General (1992)
- Guiding Light: The Primetime Special (1992)
- Secret Lives of Husbands and Wives (1992)
- Moment of Truth (1992)
- Ultimate Revenge (1992 TV pilot) (co-production with Woody Fraser Productions and Reeves Entertainment)
- The President's Child (1992)
- Malcolm X: The Real Story (1992)
- Somalia: A Country is Dying (1992)
- Coming Up Roses (1993–2002)
- The Carol Burnett Show: A Reunion (1993)
- The Man with Three Wives (1993) (co-production with Arnold Shapiro Productions)
- Gunsmoke: The Long Ride (1993)
- Labor of Love: The Arlette Schweitzer Story (1993)
- With Hostile Intent (1993)
- Love, Honor & Obey: The Last Mafia Marriage (1993) (co-production with Reteitalia Productions, SPA)
- The Legend of The Beverly Hillbillies (1993)
- Schwarzkopf in Vietnam: A Soldier Returns (1993)
- Harlan and Merleen (1993; two-part TV pilot)
- For Love and Glory (1993)
- Jack (1993)
- Terror in the Night (1994)
- Gunsmoke: One Man's Justice (1994)
- Search for Grace (1994)
- D-Day (1994)
- Angels Among Us (1994 TV pilot)
- Halloween! (1994)
- In the Shadow of Evil (February 7, 1995)
- Magician's Favorite Magicians (1995) (co-production with Armand Grant DGS., Inc. and Milt Larsen Brookledge Corporation)
- A Streetcar Named Desire (October 29, 1995)
- A Mother's Instinct (March 13, 1996)
- Uncommon Heroes (1996 TV pilot) (co-production with Arnold Shapiro Productions)
- The Story of Santa Claus (1996)
- (1997)
- Heart Full of Rain (1997)
- Monday After the Miracle (1998)
- Murder at 75 Birch (1999)
- 26th Daytime Emmy Awards (1999)
- A Song From the Heart (1999)
- Secret of Giving (1999)
- One Kill (2000)
- The Christmas Secret (2000)
- Blackout (2001)
- Dr Quinn: The Heart Within (2001)
- The Sons of Mistletoe (2001)
CBS News[]
- Cronkite Remembers (May 23, 1996)
- 2007: The Year In Animals (2007)
Nickelodeon[]
- Wild Rides (1982)
- UFO Kidnapped (1983) (co-production with Carleton Productions)
- School Stories From Famous People (1986)
- Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards (1988–present)
- Nick's Thanksgiving Fest (November 22, 1989)
- Nickelodeon Studios Opening Day Celebration (1990)
- Tales From The Whoop: Hot Rod Brown, Class Clown (October 20, 1990)
- Stories from Growing Up (February 23, 1991) (co-production with Think Entertainment)
- Letters to the Earth (1993)
- The Big Help-a-thon (1994–1998)
- Those Nick at Nite Promos: 10 Years of Better Living Through Television (1995)
- Road to the Extreme Arena: Behind the Scenes of Global GUTS (1995)
- "Oh Brother" Starring Stick Stickly (1995)
- Nickelodeon Sports Theater with Shaquille O'Neal (1996–1999)
- "Stuck" Starring Stick Stickly (1997)
- Good Burger: On the Job with Kenan & Kel (1997)
- Nickellennium (2000)
- Cry Baby Lane (2000)
- Blue's Big Musical Movie (2000)
- Rugrats Tales from the Crib: Snow White (2005)
- Rugrats Tales from the Crib: Three Jacks & The Beanstalk (2006)
- SpongeBob's Atlantis SquarePantis (2007)
- Nickelodeon HALO Awards (2009–2017)
- Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Sports (2014–present)
- SpongeBob's Big Birthday Blowout (2019)
- Rocko's Modern Life: Static Cling (2019)
- Invader Zim: Enter the Florpus (2019)
Comedy Partners[]
- This is MST3K (1992)
- The Hebrew Hammer (2003)
- Windy City Heat (2003)
- A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All! (2008)
- 6 Days to Air (2011)
Showtime Networks[]
Sonar Entertainment distributes most Showtime Original Pictures made between 1995 and 2000 outside of the U.S. and Canada.
- Gotham (1988) (co-production with Phoenix Entertainment Group and Keith Addis & Associates)
- Last Light (1993)
- Attack of the 5 Ft. 2 In. Women (1994)
- Next Door (1994) (co-production with TriStar Television)
- End of Summer (1995)
- Zooman (March 19, 1995)
- The Wharf Rat (September 3, 1995)
- Bloodknot (September 7, 1995)
- The Courtyard (September 24, 1995)
- Full Body Massage (November 5, 1995)
- Favorite Deadly Sins (November 12, 1995)
- Out There (November 19, 1995)
- Triplecross (1995)
- Ruby Jean and Joe (1996)
- Conundrum (March 3, 1996)
- Boxing: A Different Look (1996)
- Undertow (March 24, 1996)
- Mr. and Mrs. Loving (March 31, 1996)
- Homecoming (April 14, 1996)
- Moonshine Highway (1996)
- The Legend of Gator Face (1996)
- Robin of Locksley (1996)
- Losing Chase (August 18, 1996)
- Gang in Blue (September 8, 1996)
- Annie O (1996)
- The Halfback of Notre Dame (1996)
- Amanda and the Alien (1996)
- Money Plays (1996)
- Mandela and de Klerk (February 16, 1997)
- Riot (April 27, 1997)
- North Shore Fish (June 29, 1997)
- Elvis Meets Nixon (August 10, 1997)
- Color of Justice (September 7, 1997)
- The Westing Game (September 14, 1997)
- Face Down (1997)
- Woman Undone (1997)
- Tricks (1997)
- Noriega: God's Favorite (2000)
- Rated X (May 13, 2000)
- Harlan County War (2000)
- Possessed (2000)
- Carry Me Home (2003)
- Just Another Story (2003)
- The Mudge Boy (2003)
- Baadasssss! (2004)
- Bereft (2004)
- Dirt (2004)
- Fathers and Sons (2004)
- Sexual Life (2004)
- Speak (2004)
- The Best Thief in the World (2004)
- Paradise (2004)
- Sucker Free City (2004)
- Hate (2004)
- Pryor Offenses (2004; pilot)
- Our Fathers (2005) (co-production with Peace Arch Entertainment Group)
- Laugh Whore (2005)
- Same Sex America (2005) (produced by Corra Films and K2 Pictures)
- After Innocence (2005)
- (2005)
- Home Front (2006)
- Shame (2007)
- Semper Fi: One Man's Journey (2007)
- In Pot We Trust (2007)
- A Game of Honor (2011)
- The Vatican: The Pope's Slippers (2013) (pilot; co-production with Sony Pictures Television)
- Disgraced (2017)
- Queen Fur (2019) (pilot; co-production with Sony Pictures Television)
Group W Productions[]
- Lost in London (1985) (co-production with Emmanuel Lewis Entertainment Enterprises, Inc. and D’Angelo Productions, Inc.)
- Mafia Princess (1986)
- Soldier Boys (1987)
- Fatal Judgement (1988)
- Gangs (1988)
- Taking a Stand (1989)
Spelling Television[]
- The Monk (1969)
- How Awful About Allan (1970)
- River of Gold (1971)
- Two for the Money (1972)
- Rolling Man (1972)
- Kate Bliss and the Ticker Tape Kid (1978)
- The Users (1978)
- The Power Within (1979)
- The Return of The Mod Squad (1979) (with Danny Thomas Productions)
- Massarati and the Brain (1982)
- Velvet (1984)
- International Airport (1985)
- Mr. and Mrs. Ryan (1986)
- Day One (1989) (with World International Network)
- Just Temporary (1989)
- Satan's School for Girls (2000)
QM Productions[]
- The Aliens are Coming! (1980) (with Woodruff Productions)
- September Gun (1983)
Notes[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Currently owned by Fremantle.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Currently owned by WildBrain.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Currently owned by Sony Pictures Television
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m Currently owned by Warner Bros. Television.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d Currently owned by Nelvana.
References[]
- ^ Pena, Jessica. “Young & Hungry...Freeform Series”. TV Series Finale. 11 December 2015. https://tvseriesfinale.com/tv-show/young-hungry-season-three-production-begins-freeform-series/ Archived March 13, 2021, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Petski, Denise. “Frank Biondi & Lauren Zalaznick...Board of Directors”. Deadline. 6 October 2016. https://deadline.com/2016/10/critical-content-frank-biondi-lauren-zalaznick-board-of-directors-1201831853/ Archived July 26, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Littleton, Cynthia. “CBS All Access Sets Premiere Date...”. Variety. 7 December 2016. https://variety.com/2016/tv/news/the-good-fight-february-19-premiere-date-cbs-all-access-1201936012/ Archived December 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie. “‘Star Trek: Discovery’ Gets September Premiere Date...”. Deadline. 19 June 2017. https://deadline.com/2017/06/star-trek-discovery-september-premiere-date-cbs-all-access-rollout-to-follow-1202115723/ Archived June 20, 2017, at WebCite
- ^ Martinelli, Marissa. “Star Trek's Return to the Small Screen...”. Slate. 25 September 2017. https://slate.com/culture/2017/09/review-of-star-trek-discovery-episodes-1-and-2.html Archived September 28, 2017, at WebCite
- ^ “9JKL”. Premiere Date. https://premieredate.news/tv-series/4474-9jkl.html Archived December 31, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie. “CBS Nabs Liz Astrof Multi-cam Comedy...”. Deadline. 14 September 2017. https://deadline.com/2017/09/cbs-the-big-house-liz-astrof-multi-cam-comedy-kapital-entertainment-put-pilot-1202169541/ Archived July 26, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
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