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In 2007, House placed #62 on Entertainment Weekly 's "New TV Classics" list. [197] The show was declared the second-highest-rated show for the first ten years of IMDb.com Pro (2002–2012). [198] The show was ranked the 74th best-written television series in a 2013 survey of Writers Guild of America West members. [199]
Shameless is an American comedy drama television series developed by John Wells that aired on Showtime from January 9, 2011, to April 11, 2021. It is an adaptation of Paul Abbott's British series of the same name and features an ensemble cast led by William H. Macy and Emmy Rossum.
For All Mankind is an American science fiction drama television series created by Ronald D. Moore, Matt Wolpert, and Ben Nedivi and produced for Apple TV+.The series dramatizes an alternate history depicting "what would have happened if the global space race had never ended" after the Soviet Union succeeds in the first crewed Moon landing ahead of the United States. [1]
On June 1, 2020, the network announced that Bill O'Reilly was joining the network with his show No Spin News. [11] [12] He began the online show in 2017 after being fired from Fox News Channel , in the wake of The New York Times publishing details of six sexual misconduct lawsuits O'Reilly had settled.
Death in Paradise is a British-French crime comedy drama television series created by Robert Thorogood, starring Ben Miller (Series 1–3), Kris Marshall (Series 3–6), Ardal O'Hanlon (Series 6–9), Ralf Little (Series 9–13) and Don Gilet (Christmas Special 2024−).
Castle is an American crime mystery/comedy-drama television series [1] that aired on ABC for a total of eight seasons from March 9, 2009, to May 16, 2016. The series was produced jointly by Beacon Pictures and ABC Studios.
Mom consistently received high ratings in its genre, with an average viewership of 11.79 million, making it the third-highest rated comedy on broadcast television in the US; [clarification needed] the show is among the top five comedies with adults aged 25–54 and adults aged 18–49.
In its first week under the Kids' WB umbrella, Pokémon would manage to hit a 3.9 rating (a percentage of how much a specific demographic of people is watching), reaching 3.1 million viewers by September, and Nielsen stating that "half the boys (ages 6-11) watching TV (at 10 a.m.) are seeing Pokémon" by that November. [16] [17] [18] [19]