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The 1986 Coca-Cola 600 was the 11th stock car race of the 1986 NASCAR Winston Cup Series and the 27th iteration of the event. The race was held on Sunday, May 25, 1986, before an audience of 158,000 in Concord, North Carolina, at Charlotte Motor Speedway, a 1.5 miles (2.4 km) permanent quad-oval. The race took the scheduled 400 laps to complete.
Coca-Cola also sold Embassy Home Entertainment to Nelson Entertainment. Coca-Cola, however, retained the Embassy Pictures name, logo, and trademark. HBO was the last partner to drop out of the Tri-Star venture and sold its shares to Columbia [58] Tri-Star later expanded into the television business with its new Tri-Star Television division.
Thus, they made a syndication deal with Coca-Cola Telecommunications to co-produce two more seasons of episodes, plus U.S. syndication rights to the NBC-era episodes. Although Coca-Cola held onto the deal during the next two seasons of Punky Brewster , production was moved over to Columbia in the second syndicated season, whereupon they became ...
co-production with Lightkeeper Productions; produced by NBC Productions for seasons 1 and 2; Coca-Cola Telecommunications distributed season 3, then Columbia Pictures Television took over for season 4. [N 5] Crazy Like a Fox: 1984–1986: CBS: co-production with Cardea-Schenk-Baskin-Shulman Productions Hunter: 1984–1991: NBC
Pages in category "1986 NASCAR Winston Cup Series" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total. ... 1986 Coca-Cola 600; 1986 Daytona 500; 1986 ...
The concept for Tri-Star Pictures can be traced to Victor Kaufman, a senior executive of Columbia Pictures (then a subsidiary of the Coca-Cola Company), [18] who convinced Columbia, HBO, and CBS to share resources and split the ever-growing costs of making movies, leading to the creation of a new joint venture on March 2, 1982.
2016: Martin Truex Jr. started on the pole and led an event record 392 of 400 laps and a series record 588 of 600 miles en route to his first win at the Coca-Cola 600. Additionally, the race was the fastest-ran Coca-Cola 600 in history at an average speed of 160.655, clocking in at 3 hours, 44 minutes, and 5 seconds.
1986–87: Syndication : American Greetings: Co-owned with Hasbro: Dennis the Menace [5] 1986–88: Syndication: General Mills, Crawleys Animation (Season 2) The Real Ghostbusters: 1986–91: ABC: Columbia Pictures Television, Coca-Cola Telecommunications: Owned by Sony Pictures Television: The Adventures of Teddy Ruxpin: 1986–87: Syndication ...