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The Chicago franchise (also called One Chicago [1]) is a media franchise of American television programs created by Derek Haas, Michael Brandt, and Dick Wolf, produced by Wolf Entertainment, and broadcast on NBC, all of which deal with different public services in Chicago, Illinois. [2]
Chicago Fire switched timeslots with Chicago Med for the evening with Fire airing an hour earlier than usual. [9] The first part of the crossover was watched live by 8.23 million viewers, the second part rose to 8.93 million, the final part dropped back down to 8.62 million. [10]
In its original American broadcast on November 12, 2014, "Chicago Crossover" was viewed by 10.01 million viewers and acquired a 2.4 rating/7% share in the age 18–49 demographic. "Chicago Crossover" was the second watched program on NBC that night, retaining more than 95% viewership of its lead-in for the night, The Voice.
April 2014 Chicago crossover event; B. Michael Brandt; C. Chicago Fire (TV series) Chicago Justice; Chicago Med; Chicago P.D. (TV series) F. February 2020 Chicago ...
The April 2014 Chicago crossover event is a two-part fictional crossover that exists within the Chicago franchise. The event aired on NBC in two one-hour timeslots on consecutive weeknights. It began with "A Dark Day" of Chicago Fire on April 29, 2014, and concluded with "8:30 PM" of Chicago P.D. on April 30, 2014. Both episodes followed a ...
The Chicago Fire episode began filming the week of January 5, 2020, followed by filming on the Chicago P.D. episode beginning the week of January 12, 2020. [5] The air date for the crossover event was later announced to be February 29, 2020. [6] Chicago Med was not included in the crossover despite also airing a new episode the same week. [6]
A three-way crossover between Chicago Fire, Chicago Med and Chicago P.D. aired on January 5 and 6, 2016. [23] A crossover with Law & Order: Special Victims Unit aired on February 10, 2016, where Intelligence helps SVU track down Greg Yates after he escapes from prison in New York. [24]
The character was initially introduced in Chicago Fire as a dirty cop who tries to cover up a crime by his son Justin and uses all means necessary to do so, including threatening Fire Lieutenant Matthew Casey, one of the protagonists of Chicago Fire. Voight's circumstances were eventually clarified with the creation of the spin-off Chicago P.D.