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Revolution is an American post-apocalyptic science fiction television series that ran from September 17, 2012, until May 21, 2014, when it was cancelled by NBC. [1] [2] The show takes place in the post-apocalyptic near-future of the year 2027, 15 years after the start of a worldwide, permanent electrical-power blackout in 2012.
[2] [3] On April 26, 2013, the series was renewed by NBC for a second season of 22 episodes to air in a new time slot of Wednesdays at 8PM. The second season premiered on September 25, 2013. [4] On May 9, 2014, NBC announced that Revolution had been canceled before the remaining two episodes aired. In total, 42 episodes aired over two seasons.
She then landed a lead role on the NBC television series Revolution as Charlotte "Charlie" Matheson, a survivalist in a dystopian future civilization. [4] She auditioned for the role while attending her first pilot season in Los Angeles. Spiridakos shot the pilot in Atlanta, and filmed the first season in Wilmington, North Carolina. [15]
College Football on NBC Sports and high school football, including: Notre Dame Football on NBC; Big Ten football. The Big Ten Championship Game (2026) The Bayou Classic; The All-American Bowl; US Olympic Trials; Tennis on NBC, which includes the French Open; Boxing on NBC, which includes Premier Boxing Champions bouts; World Athletics Championships
Title Premiere date Finale Notes Seasons Kraft Television Theatre: May 7, 1947: October 1, 1958: 11 Barney Blake, Police Reporter: April 22, 1948: July 8, 1948
The show was originally called NBC's Saturday Night because Saturday Night Live was in use by a program on the rival network ABC that was hosted by its sportscaster Howard Cosell. NBC purchased the rights to the name in 1976 and officially adopted the new title on March 26, 1977. Saturday Night Live remains on the air to this day. Fred Silverman
The Saturn Award for Best Network Television Series was presented annually by the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films, honoring the best network television series.
NBC cancelled Voyagers! [3] and replaced it with the news magazine program Monitor, which averaged only a 7 share. [2] David Letterman poked fun at NBC's cancellation of the series by airing a sketch on his Late Night program titled "They Took My Show Away", a parody of an after-school special in which the host comforts a boy who was a Voyagers ...