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Showing posts with label Television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Television. Show all posts

Top 10 Longest Running Television Shows

We have been watching The Simpsons for what seems to be like forever. Those born the year the show first aired have now graduated from college. And Bart is still being punished after school, Homer is still bungling up at the nuclear plant and Maggie remains to be the adorable quiet baby. The show has been with us for 24 years that they, along with Marge and Lisa, have become important parts of the American cultural landscape.

Despite being with us for almost a quarter of a century, it is far from being the longest running show in television. While it is the longest running scripted show today, it does not hold a candle to the ones on top of the overall list. Here are the top ten longest running television shows.

10. The Open Mind (Syndicated) 
56 years (1956 – present)
The Open Mind is a public affairs interview show that lasts for half an hour. Since its start in 1956, the host has been Richard Heffner, a professor of Rutgers University. The American Public Television distributes the show.

9. It is Written (Syndicated) 
56 years (1956 – present)
This is a Christian program founded by George Vandeman and produced by the Seventh Day Adventist Church Ministry. The title comes from the Bible, specifically from the Gospel of Matthew. It is also shown in more than 140 countries around the world. It is also the first religious program to air in color and also the first to use satellite technology.

8. Guiding Light (CBS) 
57 years (1952 – 2009)
Guiding Light had 15,762 episodes under its belt before it shut down in 2009. While it began showing on television in 1952, it actually started on radio way back in 1937. If those radio episodes are included, the show had more than 18,000 episodes produced. Guiding Light was an American soap opera that has the distinction of being the longest running drama show in the history of television.

7. Face the Nation (CBS) 
58 years (1954 – present)
Face the Nation is a Sunday morning show on CBS that is hosted by Bob Schieffer. It features interviews with political personalities and government officials. it was originally aired as a 30-minute show, the shortest of all the Sunday morning talk shows on the four major networks. It eventually became a one-hour show in April 2012.

6. The Tonight Show (NBC) 
58 years (1954 – present)
This late-night talk show on NBC is the longest currently running entertainment show on television with a regular schedule. `The show is so popular and lucrative that there have been two instances of prominent personalities quarreling over its hosting duties. The first one was in the early 90s after Johnny Carson left, when Jay Leno and David Letterman both wanted the position. Leno won out, before briefly retiring from the show in 2009 in favor of Conan O’Brien. Declining ratings however forced NBC to bring back Leno, much to the chagrin of O’Brien, who then left NBC to host his own show on TBS.

5. ABC World News (ABC) 
59 years (1953 – present)
This is the flagship evening news program of ABC News. Diane Sawyer anchors it during weekdays, with David Muir taking over on the weekends. It was also known as the ABC Evening News from 1970 to 1978 and as the World News Tonight from 1978 to 2006. The program has already aired more than 15,700 episodes.

4. The Today Show (NBC) 
60 years (1952 – present)
The show that we wake up to every morning has been around for 60 years now. Except for the monkey that was a part of the show in its early years, it has remained the same since its first showing in 1952. The show is one of NBC’s cash cows, earning for the network hundreds of millions of dollars in advertising revenues. It had a stranglehold on the number one spot in the survey rankings from 1985 to the middle of 2012, a period of 852 consecutive weeks. The show has become so successful that it has evolved from a morning show during weekdays that lasted a couple of hours to become a three-hour show in 2000 and later, to a four-hour show in 2007. It also started airing every Saturday for two hours in 1992 and every Sunday for one hour in 1987.

3. Music and the Spoken Word (Syndicated) 
63 years (1949 – present)
The show is a syndicated program aired on both radio and television. It lasts 30 minutes and features inspirational messages produced by Bonneville Communications, as well as music performed by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, the Salt Lake Tabernacle Organ, and the Orchestra at Temple Square. CBS Radio Network originally created it for its radio affiliate that was owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Days Saints. It then switched to ABC Radio, now known as Citadel Media, in 2005. The show airs in more than 2,000 stations all over the world.

2. CBS Evening News (CBS) 
64 years (1948 – present)
CBS Evening News is the flagship nightly news program on television of the CBS network. The show was originally entitled CBS News when it was first shown in 1948. It became the CBS Evening News in 1963. The show is broadcasted from New York City and anchored by Scott Pelley, with Jeff Glor taking over on Sundays. Different reporters take the anchor spot on Saturdays. CBS Evening News have had more than 16,400 episodes since its first showing.

1. Meet the Press (NBC) 
65 years (1947 – present)
The program is an American television news show produced by NBC. There have been 11 different moderators who have hosted the show. The current show, however, shares very little similarities to the original format presented in 1947. David Gregory has been hosting the program since 2008. Meet the Press have had more than 4.800 episodes already.

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Top 10 Smartest HDTVs of 2012

It's the year of the smart TV: 3D capabilities, voice and gesture control, new display technologies, and apps, apps, apps. Let's take a look at some of more intelligent screens.

10. Talkative TV: RCA Mobile TV (MIT700)
The Android-based device doesn't have Android Market access, but does have a web browser. RCA says this device will launch later this year, presumably alongside the Dyle rollout, and will cost about $200.
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9. Talkative TV: Dragon TV
You can use Dragon TV to change the channel, search for content, and interact with apps for updating social networking statuses, email, and Skype. No manufacturing partnerships have been announced.
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8. Dual-Core TV: Samsung LCD-LED TV (UNES8000 Series)
Samsung's flagship HDTV line for 2012, ES8000 series, includes screen sizes up to 75 inches, a wide range of apps, and a dual-core processor for app multitasking. You can also use voice and motion control gestures for changing channels, adjusting the volume and navigating app menus. Samsung claims the new TVs are 20 percent brighter than previous sets thanks to a new feature called Micro Dimming Ultimate.
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7. Plasma TV: Panasonic
Panasonic's flagship VT50 Plasma impressed the crowds at CES during a year when OLED and other display technologies dominated the annual tradeshow.
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6. Linux TV: Ubuntu TV
Canonical, makers of the popular Linux distribution Ubuntu, has announced Ubuntu TV, a software platform for HDTVs. There are no specific TVs yet, but Canonical says it is in talks with several manufacturers. The company is also talking to content partners to bolster Ubuntu TV's content offerings.
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5. Google TV: Vizio
Google TV is making a big splash at CES after Google pulled the web TV platform from CES 2011 at the last minute. Vizio is getting into Google TV with several HDTVs, one Blu-ray Player, and one set-top box.
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4. Giant TV: Lenovo K91 Smart TV
LG's smart TV offering this year is its 84-inch 4K 3D television. The giant television not only features a resolution four times that of 1080p, it is also sporting LG's new Magic Remote that features voice and motion control. No word on pricing yet, but some reports are saying the 4K monster will ship later this year.
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3. Giant TV: Sharp 80-Inch 3D LED LCD TV
Big screen HDTVs are a predominant theme at CES 2012 including this 80-inch monster from Sharp that includes access to Sharp's SmartCentral interface featuring apps from Facebook, Hulu, Netflix and YouTube. This set is slated to debut in April for $6,500.
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2. Giant TV: LG 4K 3D TV
LG's smart TV offering this year is its 84-inch 4K 3D television. The giant television not only features a resolution four times that of 1080p, it is also sporting LG's new Magic Remote that features voice and motion control. No word on pricing yet, but some reports are saying the 4K monster will ship later this year. The problem is there's not a whole lot of video out there shot at 4K resolution-- an emerging standard for resolution in digital film and computer graphics--so how often you'll be able to be dazzled by 4K in 2012 remains to be seen.
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1. Giant TV: LG's 55-inch 55EM9600 OLED TV
It's a TV. And its organic light-emitting diode display technology is the future of flat-panel tech. OLED promises better picture quality than either plasma or LCD/LED--thanks to effectively infinite contrast (for realzies this time!), wide viewing angles and lightning-fast response times--combined with an unbelievable form factor. The winning LG measures just 4mm in depth, "three credit cards thick" as LG's Tim Alessi cooed accepting the award, and boasts a bezel around the screen just 1mm wide. It's basically all gorgeous picture.
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Top 10 Ultimate Big Brother Girls

Ultimate Big Brother was the final series of the UK reality television programme Big Brother to air on Channel 4. The series was broadcast for 18 days, from 24 August 2010 to 10 September 2010 and was produced by Remarkable Pictures, a division of Endemol. It featured memorable housemates from previous series of Big Brother, and a smaller section of housemates from Celebrity Big Brother. A 24-hour live streaming service was also available via the Big Brother website as a fee-based service. The series ended with Brian Dowling winning the title of the "Ultimate Housemate" and the words "Big Brother will get back to you".

Here's the 10 to 1 countdown of Ultimate Big Brother Girls

10. Sophie Reade
Sophie Victoria Reade (born 18 May 1989) is a glamour model from Nantwich, Cheshire and was the winner of the series. She changed her name by deed poll to Dogface in order to become a housemate. On Day 33, Big Brother told Dogface that she had to remain silent until 2 a.m. as punishment for discussing nominations. She failed to keep quiet and therefore faced the public vote. Dogface had a romantic relationship with Kris in the House. On Day 39, she and Siavash were punished for talking about nominations by Big Brother who told them they were not allowed to swear before 3 pm. They both failed and faced eviction. On Day 72 as a special prize, Halfwit and Dogface legally changed their names back to Freddie and Sophie

9. Michelle Bass
Michelle Bass is an English glamour model and television personality turned singer and columnist. She first came to fame as a contestant on the fifth series of the UK reality television show Big Brother Like Us

8. Vanessa Nimmo
Vanessa Nimmo (born 12 August 1977) is a former double South African archery champion. She was born in Cape Town but moved to Leeds in 1994 to study a BA in Business. After being on Big Brother, she dated Ben Fogle for 6 months. Vanessa now works as a PA and part-time model. She is now a mother of one child.
 

7. Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace
Aisleyne Horgan-Wallace (born 28 December 1978 in London) is a British glamour model, fashion designer, magazine columnist, actress, and television & media personality. She rose to fame in 2006, when she appeared, and finished third, in the seventh series of reality TV show Big Brother.


6. Chanelle Hayes
Chanelle Jade Hayes (née Sinclair, born 11 November 1987) is an English television personality, singer and model. She was a student at NEW College, Pontefract, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, studying Spanish, music and English before becoming well known by appearing on the Channel 4 reality show Big Brother in 2007 when she was 19 years old. She currently runs a cake making business in Wakefield, along with occasional media work.
 

5. Kate Lawler
Kate Louise Lawler (born 7 May 1980) is an English reality TV personality, DJ, and model. She was the first female winner of Big Brother UK, winning the third season (2002) of the reality television show. Since leaving Big Brother, she has worked as a television presenter and personality, a model and as a disc jockey. She was born in Beckenham, Kent. Like Us

4. Orlaith McAllister
Orlaith McAllister (born 28 April 1979) is a model from Belfast, Northern Ireland. She was runner up in the 1999 Miss Northern Ireland competition, losing out to Zöe Salmon. She entered the house on Day 29 and was directed to the Secret Garden with fellow new housemates Eugene and Kinga. Makosi chose Orlaith along with Eugene to enter the main house on Day 32. Orlaith was initially popular with housemates, she became known for allowing them to touch her surgically enhanced breasts, she was also involved in the infamous 'Poolnight' on Day 37

3. Saskia Howard-Clarke
Saskia Rose Howard-Clarke (born March 1982) is a "promotions girl" from London. She was the fifth evictee from the house, on 1 July with 71% of the public vote. Whilst in the house she formed a relationship with Maxwell and friendships with Anthony, Sam, and later on Craig Like Us

2. Imogen Thomas
Imogen Mary Thomas (born 29 November 1982) is a Welsh glamour model, beauty queen and television personality. She rose to fame in 2003, after winning Miss Wales, and achieved further note in 2006, when she lasted three months on the seventh series of reality TV series Big Brother. Like Us

1. Chantelle Houghton
Chantelle Vivien Houghton (born 21 August 1983) is an English glamour model and television personality. She was the first 'non-celebrity' to feature in the Channel 4 reality TV show Celebrity Big Brother in 2006. In October 2007, Houghton was named "TV's latest reality millionaire" and experts reported that her wealth easily exceeds £1 million Like Us


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