Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The sixth season of Parks and Recreation originally aired in the United States on the NBC television network, from September 26, 2013, with an hour long premiere, and concluded on April 24, 2014, with an hour-long finale. [1] It premiered in its new Thursday 8:00 pm timeslot. [2] This season consisted of 22 episodes. [1]
Schneider left the series after the second season and was replaced by Adam Scott as Ben Wyatt and Rob Lowe as Chris Traeger, state auditors tasked with evaluating the Parks and Recreation department. In the sixth season, Jones and Lowe left while Billy Eichner joined as series regular, Craig Middlebrooks.
For the overall second season, Parks and Recreation had an overall average viewership of 4.6 million viewers, making it the 108th ranked network series for the 2009–10 season. [237] The poor ratings continued into the third season, which ended with an overall average rating of 5.1 million viewers, the 116th ranked network series of the 2010 ...
Players can return back to Chapter 1 Season 1 starting Dec. 6, according to social media posts from Fortnite. "Relive Battle Royale from the start and explore the OG map, collect OG loot, and ...
In the final season, he is shown hosting a children's TV show as the character "Johnny Karate." Andy was originally only meant to appear in the first season, but the Parks and Recreation producers liked Chris Pratt so much that, almost immediately after casting him, they decided to make him a regular cast member. [5]
Jones traveled back in time to the Chapter 1 Island, which had a few differences as Jones' time jump had slightly altered history. Each week, the map updated to reflect the seasonal changes in Chapter 1, starting with Season 5 and then Season 6, 7/8, and 9/X. Some locations from Chapter 1 were however omitted for Season OG, such as Dusty Depot ...
A Paley Center special about Parks and Recreation aired before the episode; it was seen by 3.38 million viewers with a 1.0 rating among adults 18–49. [10] By the next day, the episode had raised $2.8 million for Feeding America's COVID-19 Response Fund, [ 10 ] [ 11 ] and the total reached at least $3 million by May 2.
The first season of Parks and Recreation was released on DVD in the United States on September 8, 2009. [88] The DVD included all six episodes, as well as an "Extended Producer's Cut" of the season finale, "Rock Show". The disc also included cast and crew commentary tracks for each episode, as well as about 30 minutes of deleted scenes. [89]