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Wonder Woman (Lynda Carter) in the 1975–1979 television series, Wonder Woman. For four years, from 1967 to 1971, the company's lone output was the existing television series The F.B.I., by 1970, several of the former talent from 20th Century-Fox Television as well as former agent writers was defected to Warner Bros., such as Paul Monash, Rod Amateau, Bill Idelson and Harvey Miller, Saul ...
The Celebrity Look-Alike Show (Special that aired on May 16, 2003) Pepsi Smash (2003–04) B.M.O.C: Big Man on Campus (2004–05) Studio 7 (2004) The WB's Superstar USA (2004) Drew Carey's Green Screen Show (2004; moved to Comedy Central in 2005) Beauty and the Geek (2005–06; moved to The CW from 2007–08) The Starlet (2005) Survival of the ...
This is a list of television series that were produced, distributed, or owned by Warner Bros. Discovery's brands, including Warner Bros. Television Studios, Warner Bros. Animation, Hanna-Barbera, Warner Horizon Television, Warner Horizon Unscripted Television, Telepictures, HBO, TBS, TNT Originals, TruTV, CNN, Cartoon Network, Discovery Channel, and several predecessor companies.
On Wednesday, Warner Bros. unveiled its special “100 Years of Storytelling” version of the classic logo, which now incorporates the studio’s iconic WB water tower.
The Choir (TV series) Chuck (TV series) Citizen Baines; The Class (TV series) Claws (TV series) The Cleaning Lady (American TV series) The Client (TV series) Close to Home (2005 TV series) The Closer (1998 TV series) The Closer; Clue Club; Clutter Nutters; Co-Ed Confidential; Code Name: Eternity; Code R; Cold Case; Colt .45 (TV series) Coma ...
This article details the history of The WB tracing to its founding by Time Warner in November 1993, and its operational history from the network's January 1995 launch until its closure in September 2006, when Time Warner and CBS Corporation (then-owner of rival UPN) launched The CW, a new broadcast network formed by the two companies as a 50/50 ...
At first, Warner Bros., like most other Hollywood studios, had seen television as a threat that it wished would disappear. Jack L. Warner, stung by the failure of Milton Berle's expensive film Always Leave Them Laughing, [5] tried to dismiss it as a mere passing fad, but by 1955, this apparently was hardly the case.
The WB Television Network (shortened to The WB, stylized as "THE WB", and nicknamed the "Frog Network" and/or "The Frog" for its former mascot Michigan J. Frog [3]) was an American television network launched on broadcast television on January 11, 1995, [4] as a joint venture between the Warner Bros. Entertainment division of Time Warner and the Tribune Broadcasting subsidiary of the Tribune ...