St. Elsewhere was on Bravo and TVLand (I think) during the '90s, but probably nowhere lately. The show was great, but it, too, probably has quite a bit of "dated" material in it.
flashback said:i have no problem with tv shows being topical.i look at tv shows and movies as video and audio time capsules.if people just appricate them for the time they were made they would enjoy them just fine.you dont have to have been around when they were made to enjoy them that way.
Corky Marlowe said:I wouldn't be surprised to see some popular basic cable shows like "Pawn Stars" or "Man Vs. Food" or even scripted dramas like "Mad Men" or "Breaking Bad" pop up in reruns on broadcast channels eventually, which would further marginalize classic network shows. Speaking of which, the one show I never thought would disappear from view was "Gilligan's Island". That show, after "I Love Lucy" and maybe "Perry Mason", was in reruns longer than any show in TV history, and I don't think any major cable outlet carries it anymore.
Count me in as another who thought that Gilligan would never leave the airwaves. Ditto The Brady Bunch. I remember a local TV station near me would run a block of Gilligan and Brady Bunch reruns every afternoon. It made for great after-school viewing! 8) But I suppose that The Brady Bunch (especially) would seem dated now. As for Gilligan, watching him always meant that you had to "check your reality at the door." ;DCorky Marlowe said:I wouldn't be surprised to see some popular basic cable shows like "Pawn Stars" or "Man Vs. Food" or even scripted dramas like "Mad Men" or "Breaking Bad" pop up in reruns on broadcast channels eventually, which would further marginalize classic network shows. Speaking of which, the one show I never thought would disappear from view was "Gilligan's Island". That show, after "I Love Lucy" and maybe "Perry Mason", was in reruns longer than any show in TV history, and I don't think any major cable outlet carries it anymore.
anotherguy said:WKRP was on WGN America a few years back when they were running their Out of Sight Retro Night, but it only ran a few months.
Part of the reason why we don't see some of the classic shows we'd like to see is because of "bundling" by the syndicators.
firepoint525 said:As for Gilligan, watching him always meant that you had to "check your reality at the door."
therealjm12 said:Part of the reason why we don't see some of the classic shows we'd like to see is because of "bundling" by the syndicators. Let's use Barny Miller for example: if a TV station or cable channel wants to buy it they may forced to acquire other shows with it. In Barney's case it's Columbia (Sony) so they may be forced to buy The Love Boat or Charlies Angels. Twos show they may not want or have room for. Now that's the way it used to be. Maybe with all the outlets things have changed.
ShawnHill1 said:I actually always though that Fox owned the rights to the those shows, since many of the 70s/80s Spelling shows were filmed at 20th Century Fox; Metromedia, before its absortion into Fox, had the distibution rights to Dynasty (another show we can add to the list, since SoapNet dropped the rights a few years ago).
onairb said:About 75% of the jokes in the first episode came from stand-up routines(all of which were included in the performance film, Bill Cosby: Himself). And the final episode was dominated by a lengthy flashback to most of the pilot. A reminder of where the show had come from, I guess...but it still made for a rather weak finale.
therealjm12 said:Part of the reason why we don't see some of the classic shows we'd like to see is because of "bundling" by the syndicators. Let's use Barny Miller for example: if a TV station or cable channel wants to buy it they may forced to acquire other shows with it. In Barney's case it's Columbia (Sony) so they may be forced to buy The Love Boat or Charlies Angels. Twos show they may not want or have room for. Now that's the way it used to be. Maybe with all the outlets things have changed.