I'm not sure whether I forgot about the FBI shows or the Chicago shows, but I
clearly missed the mark here.
That said, Lear is far from a slouch in this department. A look at Wikipedia
suggests Lear had more than the 6 shows Bob mentioned - "Good Times, " "The
Jeffersons," "Maude," "Sanford and Son", "One Day At A Time" and "Mary Hartman,
Mary Hartman" - on the air during 76-77. "All in the Family" was on the air,
and some shows that were one season and done.
"All's Fair" Richard Crenna and Bernadette Peters as a May-December romance
between a conservative and liberal, and "The Nancy Walker Show"
Most, but not all, of these shows, aired on CBS. And Mary Hartman, Mary
Hartman was a five-nights a week program.
This would appear to give Lear nine programs, matching what Wolf will have once
the Mothership returns to television.
David
On Tuesday, November 30, 2021, 02:44:54 PM PST, Brad Beam
<[email protected]> wrote:
From: 'David Bruggeman' via TVorNotTV [mailto:[email protected]]
>This would mean that Dick Wolf shows would represent two nights worth (6
>hour-long shows) of the NBC lineup. Has any producer had that much
>programming on at once? I'd assume that some of the more prolific sitcom
>showrunners would have produced as many shows as Wolf, but I don't think any
>of them had that many shows on at the same time.
Don’t forget the “FBI” franchise on CBS Tuesdays. That gives him nine hours of
primetime real estate over two broadcast networks.
_ _
|_>|_> Brad Beam- Belle WV
|_>|_> http://www.facebook.com/74bmw
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