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CBS: The First 50 Years: May 20, 1998 The Snowden, Raggedy Ann & Andy Holiday Show: November 27, 1998 The Year Without a Santa Claus: December 12, 1998 Surprise Surprise Surprise: May 14, 1999 Sports Illustrated 20th Century Awards: December 2, 1999 Snowden's Christmas: December 3, 1999 The Nuttiest Nutcracker: December 3, 1999
As for CBS Films, Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions has the U.S. home entertainment distribution rights and the foreign theatrical and home entertainment distribution rights in 2010 until expire, Paramount now rights to CBS Films for all pre-2015 films after the re-merger of CBS and Viacom in 2019, [1] while Lionsgate owns the distribution ...
This is a list of U.S. weekly (or smallest available unit for time period) television ratings archives from 1948 through 1997. (Primarily Nielsen ratings) . National Nielsen ratings for United States television viewing began in March 1950.
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The union catalog is managed with the database management system CBS (Controlled Bibliographic Service) originally developed in the 1980s in the Netherlands and acquired by OCLC in 2002. CBS and K10plus use a custom internal data format called PICA+ but extensions of CBS exist to support MARC21 . [ 4 ]
CBS Broadcasting Inc., commonly shortened to CBS (an abbreviation of its original name, Columbia Broadcasting System), is an American commercial broadcast television and radio network serving as the flagship property of the CBS Entertainment Group division of Paramount Global and is one of the company's three flagship subsidiaries, along with namesake Paramount Pictures and MTV.
In 1979 CBS launched a new theatrical films division, which was officially named CBS Theatrical Films the following year. While this was in operation, CBS entered into a joint venture with Columbia Pictures and HBO called Tri-Star Pictures. CBS eventually dropped out of the venture in 1985, and CBS Theatrical Films came to an end that same year.