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This page provides a partial list of television shows shooting in New York City. In 2011, 23 TV shows were shot in New York while only nine shows were a decade before ...
The Bachelor (American TV series) season 21; The Bachelor (American TV series) season 27; The Bachelorette (American TV series) season 6; The Bachelorette (American TV series) season 11; Bethenny (talk show) The Better Sister; Beulah (radio and TV series) Big Dogs; Black Rabbit; Blue Bloods (TV series) The Bob Newhart Show (1961 TV series)
Asset TV, 570 Lexington Avenue, full service live broadcasting studio Axa Equitable Center , 787 Seventh Avenue, includes AXA Equitable Production Group Auditorium, Atrium, and Media Studio Cine Magic East River Studios - 11, 29, 33 Kent Street and 8, 10, 12, 18, 28, and 38 Java Street, Brooklyn, NY 11101 - www .eastriverstudios .com
"The New York Underground!" Doki "The Sky's the Limit" World of Winx "The Legend of the Crocodile Man" Planet Earth II "Cities" Planet Earth III "Human" Liberty's Kids "New York, New York" "The Turtle" "Going Home" Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! "Worst in Show" Heathcliff. The New York City Sewer System; DMZ; Full Circle; The Continental: From the World ...
Television shows filmed in New York City (297 P) Pages in category "Television shows filmed in New York (state)" The following 152 pages are in this category, out of 152 total.
Netflix's "The Watcher" was filmed at a house in Rye, New York. The fictional home is much bigger than its real-life counterpart at 657 Boulevard in New Jersey.
Westchester County was the backdrop for many award-winning and nominated shows this year, including Amazon Prime's "The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel," which includes scenes filmed at Wykagyl Country Club ...
Live in Front of a Studio Audience [2] is a series of live television specials that was first broadcast by ABC on May 22, 2019. Conceptualized and hosted by Jimmy Kimmel, the specials feature all-star casting for live recreations of sitcom episodes of various television shows created by companies run by the renowned producer, Norman Lear, that originally aired in the 1970s and 1980s.