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Certain American television events in 2025 have been scheduled. Events listed include television show debuts, finales, and cancellations; channel launches, closures, and re-brandings; stations changing or adding their network affiliations; information on controversies, business transactions, and carriage disputes; and deaths of those who made various contributions to the medium.
The 2024–25 network television schedule for the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States covers the prime time hours from September 2024 to August 2025. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2023–24 television season .
2025 in television may refer to 2025 in American television for television-related events in the United States.
Timeline of the Anglophone Crisis (2025) Timeline of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 2025; Timeline of the Joe Biden presidency (2024 Q4–January 2025) Timeline of the Syrian civil war (November 2024–present)
Timeline of diving technology (Prehistory–present) Timeline of materials technology (29,000 BCE–present) Women in dentistry (16th century–present) Timeline of female education (1608–present) Timeline of hydrogen technologies (1625–present) Timeline of solar cells (1839–present) Female education in the United States (1639–present)
The elements of a simple broadcast television system are: . An image source. This is the electrical signal that represents a visual image, and may be derived from a professional video camera in the case of live television, a video tape recorder for playback of recorded images, or telecine with a flying spot scanner for the transfer of motion pictures to video).
Date Event Source 1 Rogers Sports & Media's new agreement for Warner Bros. Discovery lifestyle and factual brands, announced in June 2024, takes effect. New versions of five WBD-licensed channel brands previously licensed to Bell Media or Corus Entertainment launched under Rogers ownership, with other affected brands available through Citytv+.
ATSC 3.0 (also known by the moniker NextGen TV) is a new digital television transmission standard which is not backwards compatible with ATSC 1.0, the standard employed in the 2009 digital transition. Transition to ATSC 3.0 is voluntary on both ends: television manufacturers are not required to provide ATSC 3.0 compatible tuners in televisions.