Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-50 of 881
- A blade runner must pursue and terminate four replicants who stole a ship in space and have returned to Earth to find their creator.
- A working class man constantly squabbles with his family over the important issues of the day.
- A poor African-American family make the best of things in the Chicago housing projects.
- The misadventures of suave Park Avenue millionaire Phillip Drummond, his teenage daughter Kimberly, and their current housekeeper Edna Garrett who adopted the two pre-teenage sons of their late African American housekeeper from Harlem.
- The misadventures of a cantankerous junk dealer and his frustrated son.
- "All In The Family" spin-off centered around Edith's cousin, Maude Findlay, a liberal, independent woman living in Tuckahoe, New York.
- The further misadventures of Archie Bunker, now the owner of a local pub, and his regulars.
- Hoping for positive publicity, a tobacco company offers $25 million to any American town that quits smoking for 30 days. Amidst a media frenzy, Eagle Rock, Iowa accepts the challenge while the company's PR man tries to sabotage the effort.
- A naive young Amish woman runs away from her home in Pennsylvania to New York City, where she hopes to act in religious stage plays but ends up performing in Burlesque theatre.
- The further adventures of Fred Sanford, featuring the old cast, except for Lamont; Fred has a new partner and a new girlfriend.
- After leaving his parents' home, young Buddy Baker goes to live with his womanizing older brother in a posh Manhattan apartment where he learns how to be a partying playboy.
- Fifty-something Edith Lambert is thrilled to find out that she's going to have a baby. Her husband Harry, however, is less enthusiastic.
- The 1968 unaired pilot for what would eventually become the iconic TV series All in the Family (1971).
- A widower with two children buys the Sanford Arms rooming house.
- Second unaired pilot (but first to be shown to the public) about a family named Justice that used different actors for the children and their neighbor Lionel.
- This series was a revamped continuation of the Bea Arthur series Maude (1972). In the final three episodes of the sixth season of that series, Maude moves to Washington, D.C. and becomes a congresswoman. After sixth season wrapped, Arthur quit the series. Executive producer Norman Lear decided to retool the concept into "Onward and Upward" starring John Amos about an African-American congressman. Amos had disputes with the show's producers over the script and left the show after the pilot was shot. Lear planned to recast the role with Peter Boyle. But the NAACP asked Lear to keep the character as an African-American. The role was given to Cleavon Little and the series was retitled. Three episodes were taped and set to air on CBS beginning in March 1979. A screening was held for the Congressional Black Caucus but the congresspeople objected to what they perceived to be a negative portrayal of African-Americans in politics. Lear also held a screening at his home with an African-American audience who all disliked the show. Lear halted production and retooled the concept again which finally became Hanging In (1979).
- Carol Channing hosts this musical comedy special with some of her famous friends.
- An all-star tribute to Duke Ellington.
- A trio of friends decide to sell drugs in order to save their boarding school singing club, but soon realize how in over their heads they are.
- Robert Young hosts a series of sketches poking fun at the American family.
- The butcher returns with his fiancee who is the spitting image of Edith who he still seems to have feelings for.
- The Bunkers are shocked when the seemingly happy marriage of Edith's favorite cousin is anything but.
- Archie learns that the canned mushrooms he just ate may have been part of a product recall because of reports of food poisoning. Mike urges Archie to investigate, but Archie decides he's sick and needs hospital treatment.