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The show premiered on Easter Sunday 2015 on NBC to 9.7 million viewers. [6] It averaged 6.5 million viewers across 12 episodes on NBC. [19] Although the series has a strong viewership for the Easter Sunday premiere, ratings dropped significantly over the 12-week broadcast. NBC would cancel the series after one season
College Football on NBC Sports and high school football, including: Notre Dame Football on NBC; Big Ten football. The Big Ten Championship Game (2026) The Bayou Classic; The All-American Bowl; US Olympic Trials; Tennis on NBC, which includes the French Open; Boxing on NBC, which includes Premier Boxing Champions bouts; World Athletics Championships
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: 1992–2014: NBC: continued from NBC Studios co-production with Big Dog Productions: Family Dog: 1993: CBS: co-production with Amblin Television, Tim Burton Productions, Nelvana and Warner Bros. Television Distributed outside of the U.S. by Warner Bros. Television Distribution: Johnny Bago
Mark Marshall has been given a lot of time to prepare for NBC Universal’s annual presentation to advertisers. Last year, he only had 72 hours. Marshall, a longtime second-in-command at NBCU’s ...
When the original program launched, built around star Harry Anderson as a non-traditional metropolitan judge, NBC sold ads against […] NBC Hopes ‘Night Court’ Ad Model Will Preside Over ...
It will be a less spirited Super Bowl. Sales of non-alcoholic beer, wine and spirits surged 26% over the past year to top $800 million in the US, market research firm NIQ told NBC. Non-alcoholic ...
Must See TV was an American advertising slogan that was used by NBC to brand its primetime blocks during the 1990s, and most often applied to the network's Thursday night lineup, which featured some of its most popular sitcoms and drama series of the period, allowing the network to dominate prime time ratings on Thursday nights in the 1980s and 1990s.
A.D. (1985) is an American/Italian miniseries in six parts that adapts the narrative in the Acts of the Apostles.Considered as the third and final installment in a TV miniseries trilogy that began with Moses the Lawgiver (1974) and Franco Zeffirelli's Jesus of Nazareth (1977), [1] it was adapted from Anthony Burgess's 1985 novel The Kingdom of the Wicked, which was itself a sequel to Burgess's ...