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Judy Justice came in as the No. 1 original program on IMDb TV for its first season, with more than 25 million streaming hours viewed towards the end of that season. [72] According to the New York Post, the first season generated more than 75 million hours watched between both the US and the UK as a whole. [43]
It did not take long, however, for the court show to pick up momentum as Judge Judy rose to a 2.1 rating by the end of this first season. The series premiered as the 3rd arbitration-based reality style court show, preceded by The People's Court (at the time, in an extended hiatus from cancelation due to low ratings after 12 seasons) and Jones ...
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 Sheindlin is heading back to linear TV — again. Amazon MGM Studios and Sox Entertainment have scored a multi-year broadcast syndication deal with station groups in more than 100 U.S ...
Judge Judy, Reese Witherspoon in LEGALLY BLONDE 2. Gregg DeGuire/Getty Images;Cover Images Judge Judy Sheindlin turned down the chance to make a cameo in one of the most iconic movies of all time.
Judge Judy stands next to a portrait of herself (2005) A little over a year after the 60 Minutes special, Sheindlin accepted an offer in 1995 to preside in a new reality courtroom series, featuring "real cases with real rulings." [17] Her syndicated court show Judge Judy debuted on September 16, 1996 and ran for 25 seasons until July 23, 2021. [18]
Recent research from Resume Genius highlighted that 45% of employers find Gen Z the most difficult generation to work with, with 50% of Gen Z hiring managers agreeing with the sentiment.
The show was created and is executive produced by Judge Judy Sheindlin (of Judge Judy and Judy Justice), who had previously created the similarly formatted Hot Bench for the syndication market; Sheindlin was inspired by witnessing an Irish three-judge tribunal while on vacation in creating both shows. [11]