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The Daily Show correspondent Stephen Colbert received his own show The Colbert Report, a parody of shows like The O'Reilly Factor. Family Guy supporting character Cleveland Brown was given his own show called The Cleveland Show. The Andy Griffith Show is an example of several different types of spin-offs.
Pages in category "Television shows based on works by P. G. Wodehouse" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
THE 10 WORST TV SHOWS BASED ON MOVIES; 12 Of The Worst TV Shows Based On Movies; The 10 Worst TV Shows Inspired By Movies; Worst of the Worst: TV Shows Based On Movies; Best and Worst TV Shows Based on Movies; Five Best TV Series Based on Movies; 10 Movies You Had No Idea Were Turned Into TV Shows (VIDEO) 9 Stinkers That Prove ‘Romancing The ...
This is a list of satirical television news programs with a satirical bent, or parodies of news broadcasts, with either real or fake stories for mainly humorous purposes. . The list does not include sitcoms or other programs set in a news-broadcast work environment, such as the US Mary Tyler Moore, the UK's Drop The Dead Donkey, the Australian Frontline, or the Canadian The Newsr
MacGruber (TV series) The Magnificent Seven (TV series) M*A*S*H (TV series) The Mask: Animated Series; Megamind Rules! Men in Black: The Series; Minority Report (TV series) The Mist (TV series) Monsters at Work
National Report is a fake news website that posts fictional articles related to world events. [1] [2] It is described by Snopes.com as a fake news site, [3] by FactCheck.org as a satirical site, [4] and by The Washington Post as part of a fake-news industry, making profits from "duping gullible Internet users with deceptively newsy headlines."
The Real World Movie: The Lost Season: Television film August 6, 2002 Regal Shocker: GMA Network TV5: 1985 November 5, 2011 (revival) 1991 April 28, 2012 (revival) Regal Shocker: The Movie: Theatrical December 24, 1989 Red Dwarf: BBC Two Dave: February 15, 1988 April 10, 2009 April 5, 1999 November 16, 2017 Red Dwarf: The Promised Land ...
Because of the parody's transformativeness, the Supreme Court found the derivative work a fair use. Trivia books based on TV shows, such as Seinfeld, are considered derivative works, for purposes of infringement liability, at least if they incorporate a substantial amount of copyright-protected content from the TV episodes. [39]