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Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County entered off-network syndication in fall 2009, when Trifecta Entertainment & Media put the series into barter syndication and aired it on affiliates of Fox, MyNetworkTV, The CW and Independent stations. However, as of fall 2012, the show has left local syndication, along with Punk'd and The Hills.
Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County is an American reality television series that originally aired on MTV from September 28, 2004 until November 15, 2006. The series aired three seasons and focused on the personal lives of several students attending Laguna Beach High School.
Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County was initially developed as a documentary of teens living in the wealthy, beachside community of the same name. The first two seasons were successful, which led to the creation of the spin-off, The Hills, though the third season's ratings took a massive dip after the original cast left the series and was replaced by a set of current high school students.
One year after the success of Fox's The O.C., MTV took a look at the actual town, launching Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County in 2004. The reality show focused on the personal lives of then ...
The MTV reality series "Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County" aired from 2004 to 2006 for three seasons, and led to the six-season-long spin-off show, "The Hills," which followed Conrad and other ...
The cast of Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County got back together! Lauren “LC” Conrad, Stephen Colletti, Dieter Schmitz and more of the hit MTV show’s stars gathered on Saturday, Nov. 30 ...
Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County, better known as simply Laguna Beach is a reality TV teen drama show that premiered and showed the lives of a cast of teenagers that consisted of mostly seniors, and some juniors, in September 2004 on MTV in the United States. After gaining popularity, the show returned for a second season.
The O.C. popularized its setting, Orange County, and led to copycats like MTV's reality show Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County and the Bravo documentary series The Real Housewives of Orange County, [182] [39] [30] and its success as a prime-time soap opera helped Marc Cherry get Desperate Housewives on the air.