List of longest running U.S. television series
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This is a list of the longest running United States television series, ordered by number of broadcast seasons. This list includes only first-run series originating in North America and available throughout the U.S. via national broadcast networks, U.S. cable networks, or syndication. Series continuations (with name changes and/or changes in network) are noted, but series' revivals are treated as separate from the originals (see The People's Court and Jeopardy!).
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Contents |
[edit] 40+ seasons
[edit] 35-39 seasons
[edit] 30-34 seasons
| Number of seasons | Series | Network | First broadcast | Last broadcast | Number of episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 34 | NOVA | PBS | March 3, 1974 | present | 631 |
| 33 | Mister Rogers' Neighborhood | NET | February 19 1968 | October 1970 | 895 |
| PBS | October 1970 | August 31 2001 | |||
| 33 | Firing Line | Syndicated | 1966[19] | 1971 | 240 |
| PBS | 1971 | December 26 1999 | |||
| 33 | The Victory Garden[20] | PBS | April 16 1975 | present | |
| 32 | American Bandstand[21] | ABC | August 5 1957 | November 5 1987 | 4,134 |
| Syndicated | 1987 | 1988 | |||
| USA | April 8 1989 | October 7 1989 | |||
| 32 | Saturday Night Live[22] | NBC | October 11 1975 | present | 623 |
| 32 | Good Morning America | ABC | September 1 1975 | present | |
| 32 | The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer[23] | PBS | October 20 1975 | present | |
| 31 | Faith for Today[24] | ABC | May 21 1950 | 1955 | |
| Syndicated | 1955 | 1981 | |||
| 31 | Creative Living with Sheryl Borden | PBS | 1976 | present | |
| 31 | Austin City Limits | PBS | 1976 | present | |
| 31 | Live from Lincoln Center | PBS | January 30 1976 | present[25] | |
| 30 | Inside the NFL | HBO | 1977 | present | |
| 30 | America's Black Forum | Syndicated | 1977 | present | |
| 30 | Live from the Met[26] | PBS | 1977 | present[27] |
[edit] 25-29 seasons
[edit] 20-24 seasons
[edit] 16-19 seasons
[edit] 12-15 seasons
[edit] 10-11 seasons
[edit] See also
- List of television series cancelled after one episode
- List of television series cancelled before airing an episode
- List of longest running U.S. cable television series
- List of longest running U.S. broadcast network television series
- List of longest running U.S. primetime television series
- List of longest running U.S. syndicated television series
- Longest running TV shows by category- international list
- List of longest running Australian television series
- List of animated television series
[edit] Notes
- ^ Only its time on television is counted here; it began on radio (as American Mercury Presents: Meet the Press) in 1945
- ^ CBS Television News 1948-1951, Douglas Edwards with the News 1951-1963
- ^ Originally The Guiding Light. Only its time on television is counted here; it began on radio January 25, 1937.
- ^ Originally Hallmark Playhouse radio series, was Hallmark Television Playhouse (1952-1954)
- ^ ABC Evening News 1953-1965 and 1967-1978; Peter Jennings and the News 1965-1967; World News Tonight 1978-2006; World News with Charles Gibson 2006-present
- ^ Originally Huntley-Brinkley Report, 1956-1970
- ^ Disney anthology television series aired under a variety of titles, including Disneyland, Disney's Wonderful World of Color and The Magical World of Disney. The current title is The Wonderful World of Disney. See the main article for a complete broadcast history
- ^ Regularly scheduled broadcasts ended September 2005; currently airs periodically
- ^ Name often altered to reflect primary sponsor. Name on current broadcasts: Denny's PBA Tour
- ^ In addition, NBC televised the fall tour, 1984-1991
- ^ 1998-2000 broadcast seasons were shared by CBS and ESPN
- ^ Weekly broadcasts ended January 1, 1997; irregular airings afterward; officially ended with the absorption of ABC Sports into ESPN
- ^ Originally Washington Week in Review
- ^ Date of airing of last first-run episode. Since then, reruns have been syndicated as Best of Soul Train
- ^ Became Wall Street Week with Fortune after original host was fired in 2002
- ^ Aired locally on WYAH-TV Portsmouth, Virginia, 1966-1977; evolved from locally-broadcast telethons 1962-1966
- ^ Simulcast with cable network transmission
- ^ Originally The New Price Is Right; longest running game show in American television history.
- ^ Pilot taped April 4, 1966
- ^ Jim Crockett's Victory Garden, 1975-79
- ^ Continuation of Bandstand, which aired on WFIL 1952–1957
- ^ Originally NBC Saturday Night
- ^ Previously The Robert MacNeil Report (1975), The MacNeil/Lehrer Report (1975-1983), The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour 1975-1995
- ^ Also Westbrook Hospital, 1975-1981
- ^ Not currently on a regular schedule
- ^ Also known as The Metropolitain Opera Presents
- ^ Not currently on a regular schedule
- ^ Reruns aired in syndication, 1984-1992
- ^ Evolved from The Iran Crisis - America Held Hostage (1979-80)
- ^ Weekend editions are simulcast on the BBC Parliament channel with the name America This Week
- ^ Became Lou Dobbs Moneyline in 2001, Lou Dobbs Tonight in 2003
- ^ Originally The Dodge Dancing Party; reruns have been airing since 1982 on various PBS stations
- ^ Originally The Phil Donahue Show
- ^ Title through 1986. Subsequent titles: Siskel & Ebert & the Movies (1986–1989), Siskel & Ebert (1989–1999), Roger Ebert & the Movies (1999–2000), Ebert & Roeper and the Movies (2000–2001), Ebert & Roeper (2001-2007), At the Movies with Ebert & Roeper (2007-present)
- ^ Originally Open End; prior to syndication, aired on WNTA-TV 1958-1961
- ^ Originally titled "Noticiero SIN" when the Univision Network was known as SIN (Spanish International Network).
- ^ Broadcast locally only on WPBT, 1979-1981
- ^ Broadcast only in North Carolina, 1979-1981
- ^ Succeeded Issues and Answers; full title throughout its run is This Week With (host's name), beginning with David Brinkley, 1981-1996
- ^ Longest-running game show in prime time network television
- ^ Also syndicated, 1982-present
- ^ Morning 1979-1982
- ^ Previously Georgia Championship Wrestling (1972-1984), World Championship Wrestling (1984-1992)
- ^ Date when WTCG was distributed nationally via cable (WTCG evolved into TBS). Broadcast on WTCG started January 1972.
- ^ Renamed Hee Haw Silver for 1992-1993 season ("greatest hits"); reruns aired on The Nashville Network 1992-1997
- ^ Originated on NBC Radio 1940-1951.
- ^ Hosted by Ralph Edwards
- ^ Hosted by Jack Bailey
- ^ Hosted by Bob Barker; Steve Dunne also hosted a primetime version on NBC, 1958
- ^ Hosted by Bob Barker
- ^ Aired as Toast of the Town until 1955
- ^ Evolved from George Michael's Sports Final, 1980-1984 (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/16/AR2006111600669.html)
- ^ Hosted by Alex Trebek
- ^ Host: Tom Chapin (1985-1988), Robert Urich (1988-1995), Bob Ballard (1988-1995), Boyd Matson (1995-2003), Michael Fay (2001), Lisa Ling (2003-)
- ^ Show renamed National Geographic Ultimate Explorer 2003-2005
- ^ Oldest continuously running radio program, airing on WSM radio, Nashville, Tennessee
- ^ As Grand Ole Opry Live!
- ^ Originated on radio as Major Bowes' Original Amateur Hour, 1934-1946
- ^ Originally GrandStand, then changed name to reflect year; was also NFL Live 1987-1997
- ^ Originally ABC Press Conference; succeeded in time slot by This Week
- ^ Originally Opening Soon at a Theater Near You (1975-1977); Sneak Previes Goes Video 1989-1991
- ^ Original version hosted by Mel Allen (1977-1996), Warner Fusselle (1996), and Ozzie Smith (1997-1998)
- ^ Continuation of series that aired 1962-1985 on Chile's Canal 13
- ^ Longest-running prime time entertainment program with a consistent setting and recurring characters. While other prime-time shows have run longer, they are all news, sports, anthology or variety programs.
- ^ Syndicated title: Lassie and Timmy
- ^ Also known as Showtime in Harlem, Showtime, and Live in Hollywood
- ^ Also called 48 Hours Investigates
- ^ Originated on CBS
- ^ Reran CBS originals, 1984-1987
- ^ Rebroadcast A&E originals, 1999-2006
- ^ Other names: Evans, Novak, Hunt, and Shields (1998-2001), Novak, Hunt, and Shields (2001-2002)
- ^ According to MTV, 19th season began August 8, 2007
- ^ Name changed to Friday Night 1994-2000, Late Friday 2001-2002. In both cases, the name change accompanied a change in program format
- ^ Full title ESPN Magazine's Sport Reporters
- ^ Program rebroadcast later the same day on ESPNEWS
- ^ Moved to NBC in 2006, at which time Monday Night Football moves from ABC to ESPN
- ^ Sunday Night Football shared with TNT, with TNT getting the first half of the season, ESPN the second half, 1990-1997
- ^ Other names: Live With Regis and Kathie Lee (1988-2000), Live With Regis (2000-2001)
- ^ Date of first episode distributed nationally; was aired by WABC locally at The Morning Show, 1983-1988
- ^ Longest running prime time animated program in the United States.
- ^ Also on CBS Radio, 1945-1967
- ^ As Make Room for Daddy; NBC used the same name when airing reruns of this series, 1960-1965
- ^ As The Danny Thomas Show
- ^ PBS ran it in the US, CBC (the originator) in Canada - both as first-run series
- ^ Includes Sunday Night Baseball, Wednesday Night Baseball, etc.
- ^ ESPN2 started broadcasting major league baseball games in 2002 in addition to those offered by ESPN
- ^ Local transmission only (WCET), 1972-1996
- ^ New episodes sporadic after 2001
- ^ Previously E! News Daily and E! News Live
- ^ Also known as Dateline (day of week it airs), Dateline With Stone Phillips
- ^ Longest running live-action sitcom.
- ^ First US network series to film all its episodes in color
- ^ Renamed The City (1995-1997)
- ^ Presently, each episode first airs on ESPN2 on Fridays, then is repeated on ESPN two days later
- ^ To end in 2009 as O'Brien succeeds Jay Leno as host of The Tonight Show
- ^ According to CBS.com, has two 14-week seasons per year, similar to The Amazing Race. Survivor:China (the 15th edition) is scheduled for Fall 2007
- ^ Season 14 in progress; the start of Season 15 has been announced for January 2008
- ^ original network series - syndicated version ran 1971-1977; short-lived "revivals" followed
- ^ The 21st Century 1967-1970
- ^ Had 13 week seasons, according to HGTV
- ^ Evolved from Jammin' (1991-1994)
- ^ Originally Extra:The Entertainment Magazine
- ^ Originally Entertainers
- ^ Aired locally on KPIX San Francisco as Evening: The MTWTF Show, 1976-1978
- ^ Includes series of specials, Jan. 1987 to May 1988
- ^ Host: Tom Snyder 1995-1999, Craig Kilborn 1999-2004, Craig Ferguson 2004-
- ^ Syndicated revival prompted by success of syndicated repeats of CBS episodes in 1976
- ^ Ed McMahon's Star Search, 1992-1995
- ^ With Judge Voltaire Perkins
- ^ Originally The Lucille Ball Show; was also Here's Lucy 1968-1974
- ^ With Judge Joseph Wapner
- ^ This Morning 1996-1999
- ^ HGTV continues to present reruns after non-renewal of series
- ^ Also known as Kraft Mystery Theatre (1958); another series of the same name ran concurrently on ABC, 1953-1955
- ^ Emcee: Bud Collyer
- ^ Hosted by Art Fleming
- ^ Also known as G.E. College Bowl; on NBC radio, 1953-1955; pilot shot 1955
- ^ "Special preview" airing, April 16, 1994
- ^ Longest-running family drama on television, per Reuters article about 7th Heaven finale
- ^ Scheduled date of last episode
- ^ Simulcast of live program at WFAN New York
- ^ Originally The O'Reilly Report
- ^ First-run broadcast on Fox; repeated in the afternoon of the same day on Fox News Channel
- ^ According to CBS.com, has two 13-week seasons per year, similar to Survivor
- ^ On CBS radio 1946-1956
- ^ Originated on CBS Radio, 1947
- ^ Originally aired locally in Los Angeles, 1947-1950
- ^ The first series to be shown on four US broadcasting networks
- ^ Began on radio as Ed McConnell and the Buster Brown Gang, 1929-1950; became Andy's Gang in 1954 when Andy Devine became host after McConnell's death
- ^ The Pink Panther Meets the Ant and the Aardvark 1970-1971; The New Pink Panther Show 1971-1974; The Pink Panther Laugh and a Half Hour and a Half Show 1976-1977; Think Pink Panther 1977-1978
- ^ As The All New Pink Panther Show
- ^ Longest-running science fiction series in the United States.
- ^ According to Sci Fi Wire
- ^ Cancellation announced by Sci Fi Channel, August 21, 2006
- ^ The Alfred Hitchcock Hour 1962-1965
- ^ One episode wasn't aired on network TV, but was included in later syndication packages
- ^ One episode made its premiere on USA Network as part of a JAG rerun package. The episode, planned to be the first of a two-part story, never aired on NBC before cancellation.
- ^ Also known as MST3K; first aired locally on KTMA, 1988-1989
- ^ official end of series, although one "unofficial" episode (Merlin's Shop of Mystical Wonders) was shown a month later
- ^ Reruns only (no first-run episodes) in 1994, 1996, and 2001
- ^ Judges: Ed Koch (1997-1999), Jerry Sheindlin (1999-2001), Marilyn Milian (2001-present)
- ^ Originally Politics with Chris Matthews
- ^ First-run syndication 1968-1997
[edit] References used for above
- Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh, The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows 1946-Present ISBN 0-345-45542-8
- TV Guide Guide to TV (2006) ISBN 0-7607-7572-9
- The show's listing on www.tv.com and www.epguides.com
- The show's homepage (if available) and the Internet site of the network that offered the show.

