Much appreciated KM. This stuff fascinates me.
Pretty much the rest of the other examples given are not cases of packaging (the story about Universal vs. Garner is legendary but I don't believe Quincy/Rockford was ever officially promoted as a package in the trades ... please prove me wrong if I missed an ad for it anywhere!) but just individual stations' programmers coming to identical conclusions about what shows play well scheduled next to each other.
While reading some TV listings from my home area (Eastern Washington), it brought back some interesting memories of shows that always aired together. Obviously they must been sold as package deals to local stations. For example, "Branded" and "Guns of Will Sonnett" always aired as an hour block on weekends.
I don't know about WKRP and Newhart, although it's entirely possible they were sold as a package since both came from MTM. But there have also been lots of cases where a station purchased multiple programs from the same company even if not packaged together, so it could also have been a really good sales effort by MTM's salespeople at NATPE (the annual convention at which most syndicated fare is officially offered for sale to stations).
All In The Family (208 episodes, originally airing from 1973 to 1979...
-All In The Family (208 episodes, originally airing from 1973 to 1979 ...
Actually, All In The Family began in 1971, during the second half of the 1970-71 season (midseason).
You try transcribing data from IMdB without making the occasional mistake.![]()
All In The Family (208 episodes, originally airing from 1973 to 1979, plus 97 episodes of Archie Bunker's Place from 1979 to 1983), Good Times (133, '74-'79), Maude (141, '72-'78), The Jeffersons (253, '75-'85), Mary Hartman/Fernwood 2Night (366, '76-'77), Sanford and Son (135, '72-'77), and One Day At A Time (209, '75-'84)
Why are you bringing up those later shows? They aren't part of the answer to the question I was answering, and it takes us even further away from the original topic. Or is there some connection to the original topic that I'm not seeing?
Could we please go back on topic now, if we haven't all lost interest during this trip down a side track?
Here's something for you to consider the next time something like that occurs to you ... once any sitcom has 100 episodes "in the can" it is probably going to go to syndication. By that measure, I could tie up page after page on this board with lists of shows that have been in syndication at some point.
Could we please go back on topic now, if we haven't all lost interest during this trip down a side track?
And of course I want this topic to keep going on if you wish, in fact, I got another packaged shows to discuss later.
So when Star Trek: The Next Generation and Deep Space Nine were both running in first run syndication, would they have been packaged together?