Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Judge's Court; Judge David Young; Jury Duty; Judge Faith; Judge for Yourself; Judge Hatchett; Judge Jeanine Pirro; Judge Jerry; Judge Joe Brown; Judge John Deed; Judge Judy; Judge Karen; Judge Karen's Court ; Judge Mathis; Judge Maria Lopez; Judge Mills Lane; Judge Rinder; Judge Romesh; Judge Steve Harvey; Judge Wapner's Animal Court; Judy ...
Swift Justice had a different format from other court shows such as Judge Judy, Judge Mathis, Divorce Court, and Judge Joe Brown.. In the first season when Nancy Grace was the adjudicator, the usual "panel/seal/bench" setting of a traditional court show was not used, as the show used a more modern setting, including an open lectern where Grace stood rather than sat, a large projection display ...
The 3rd season (1998–99) of Judge Judy was the show's first season as the highest-rated program in daytime television, having surpassed the highly rated Jerry Springer Show and even then daytime powerhouse The Oprah Winfrey Show for the first time [144] (King World Productions which launched Oprah was folded into CBS Television Distribution ...
“Judge Judy” has extended her reign in daytime as CBS Media Ventures has renewed its package of vintage “Judge Judy” episodes and the first-run court show “Hot Bench.” Both daytime ...
Judy Sheindlin is back — and audiences may not have had time to miss her. In July of this year, “Judge Judy,” Sheindlin’s durable CBS-produced courtroom reality show, wrapped up. Over its ...
"Judy Justice" is the continuation of the long-running "Judge Judy" daytime show that also starred Sheindlin, a former family court judge in Manhattan. "Judge Judy" ended in 2021.
For the second (and final) season of the court series Swift Justice, Big Ticket became the production company after the series moved from Atlanta to Los Angeles and shared a studio with Judge Judy and Judge Joe Brown. The company's most recent program is The Drew Barrymore Show, which launched on September 14, 2020.
David Letterman said in an interview with GQ magazine that “retirement is nonsense.” The 77-year-old television icon spent 33 years hosting late-night television shows, starting with the 1982 ...