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For anime programming which were suspended/delayed but later resumed production, see Category:Anime postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic; For the television programs which aired in response for the pandemic, see Category:Television shows about the COVID-19 pandemic.
The show returned to (an albeit empty) studio recording for its twelfth season, which premiered on September 21, 2020. Due to a COVID-19 infection and other health issues being faced by Williams, its thirteenth season premiere was delayed to October 2021, and has featured an indefinite rotation of guest hosts. [213] [175] [214] [215]
Global television programming affected by the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020–2021, which had production suspended for that period and filming could resume at a later date when a country's government advice allowed for it. For anime programming affected by the pandemic, see Category:Anime postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic
The first cases of COVID-19 reached Argentine television in June. [79] Producers from Telefe's game show El Precio Justo were diagnosed, making the show to enter on hiatus and schedule reruns to air instead. [80] El Precio Justo's hostess Lizy Tagliani later reported that she was diagnosed
The CDC estimates between 47,000 and 53,000 flu deaths each year in the U.S., with anywhere between 9 million and 41 million people getting sick. It also estimates that there are anywhere from 2.1 ...
These are events that were postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic; not for general articles on recurrent events for which only the 2020 and/or 2021 occurrence was postponed (for this case, consider making a redirect or writing an article instead).
ABC announces changes to its late night lineup that will take effect in January 2013: the network's long-running newsmagazine Nightline will leave the 11:35 p.m. timeslot that the program has held since it debuted in March 1980 (being bumped one hour later to 12:35 a.m. ET), while talk show Jimmy Kimmel Live! will move up 25 minutes to the 11: ...
While the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) attributed 41 of these deaths to COVID-19, USA Today reported that doctors believed additional COVID-19 deaths may not have been accounted for due to limited testing early in the pandemic. [8] In one specific case, Bastrop County judge Paul Pape reported symptoms starting February 9. [9]