28 TV Shows That Changed Networks During Their Runs

28 TV Shows That Changed Networks During Their Runs

Posted: April 18, 2024 | Last updated: April 18, 2024

<p>                     The cozy comfort that is <em>The Great British Baking Show </em>switched channels in both the UK and the US, though not as often as its swapped co-hosts. In its home nation (where it’s still allowed to be called <em>The Great British Bake Off</em>), the program started at the BBC in 2010 and eventually moved to Channel 4 after seven seasons. Meanwhile, the rights to that show in the US were first with PBS in 2014 but are now scattered between The Roku Channel and Netflix.                   </p>
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<p>                     One of, if not the first network series revived through the powers of streaming, <em>Arrested Development</em> seemed to constantly struggle through its three seasons at Fox. And then, the good folks at Netflix revived what seemed to be one of the Internet’s favorite shows for two additional seasons. They were even nice enough to recut Season 4 into traditional episodes, once the initial character-centric installments were met with a less than stellar reception.                   </p>
<p>                     From 1997 to 2003, Alyson Hannigan played Buffy’s best friend Willow. She assists Buffy in her vampire hunting before realizing she’s a witch with powers she must learn to control. In the early seasons, Willow has two major relationships with men, including Seth Green’s Oz and Nicholas Brendon’s Xander, but the series really broke some ground for the queer community when she finds a love story with Amber Benson’s Tara Maclay. And we cannot forget the “Dark Willow” plot line, which was Willow from an alternate universe who gives off super bi vampire energy.                    </p>
<p>                     It took decades for Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio) and Johnny Lawrence's (William Zabka) fierce rivalry in the <em>Karate Kid</em> movies to end. The third season of the acclaimed sequel series, <em>Cobrai Kai</em> saw the martial artists’ common foe, John Kreese (Martin Kove) join the titular dojo, which eventually led them to become partners and even friends.                   </p>
<p>                     A married sporting goods store marketing director (former <em>Home Improvement</em> cast lead Tim Allen) with three daughters struggles to maintain his manhood at home.                   </p>                                      <p>                     <strong>Why it is one of Kaitlyn Dever’s best:</strong> Following guest appearances on shows like <em>Modern Family</em> and <em>The Mentalist</em>, Dever made a breakthrough when she landed a part in the <em>Last Man Standing</em> cast as the tomboyish Eve Baxter. This was a main role that became a recurring part after the first six seasons of the long-running sitcom.                   </p>
<p>                     Just how long was <em>Supernatural</em> on TV? Well… it started in 2006, as a show on The WB; and then became a flagship title of its next parent, The CW, once WB merged with fellow fledgling network UPN. So while you’d know the Winchester brothers’ adventures for playing on The CW for 14 of its 15 seasons, that first aired under the house that Michigan J. Frog built. How’s <em>that</em> for magic?                   </p>
<p>                     It’s more than an implication that <em>It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia </em>star Glenn Howerton was almost cast as Star-Lord. It’s been pretty much confirmed by James Gunn that Howerton would have been his next choice, had Chris Pratt not signed on. The only thing more interesting is how “the Golden God” himself wasn’t considered to play Adam Warlock.                   </p>
<p>                     One of TV’s most memorable neighbors, Jaleel White’s Steve Urkel was so popular early in <em>Family Matter</em>s’ run that the creative focus changed to devote more stories and screentime to the bespectacled nerdling and alter egos like the smooth-talking Stefan, Urkelbot, and Bruce Lee Urkel. Not to mention the fact that Steve Urkel sparked the ubiquitous and oft-impersonated pop culture catchphrase “Did I do that?” “Got any cheese?” didn't quite get there.                   </p>
<p>                     <em>Archer’s</em> 14-season run was both a hilarious parody of the James Bond movies, while also being funny and bittersweet in its own ways. While it was never canceled, and blew past the original plans to end in Season 10, a network shift did come after Season 7 aired in 2016. And that was thanks to FX Networks creating a new imprint for comedy and soccer programming, FXX.                   </p>
<p>                     In the beginning, <em>Babylon 5</em> was a syndicated TV show that, much like <em>Star Trek: The Next Generation</em> before it, had no singular network home. Distributed through the Prime Time Entertainment Network for its first four seasons, creator J. Michael Strazynski didn’t think the show would get a fifth season. With a series finale already filmed, TNT stepped in to grant one last round of episodes (and a new Season 4 finale), for 1998. And according to <a href="http://www.jmsnews.com/messages/message?id=9221">Strazynski’s blog post</a> from when it all happened, “Sleeping In Light” would have played just as fine at the end of Season 4.                   </p>
<p>                     Starting life as a Fox network original, <em>Futurama’s</em> shiny metal lifespan was initially cut short due to being canceled after four seasons. Years down the road, Comedy Central would revive Matt Groening’s irreverent fan favorite, and Hulu would later save it from cancelation as well. As a result, Planet Express’ doors were kept open… with some gaps of time, and a couple of direct to DVD movies in between.                   </p>
<p>                     You knew it would be on here. This iconic comedy is one of the best out there. <em>Brooklyn Nine-Nine, </em>starring Andy Samberg, tells the story of Jake Peralta, a detective in a fictitious police precinct known for his immaturity, and follows his daily life alongside his coworkers, as well as his no-nonsense leader, Captain Holt.                    </p>                                      <p>                     The <em>Brooklyn Nine-Nine </em>cast is phenomenal, but man, Andy Samberg is just something special on this show. This series combines his comedic timing from <em>Saturday Night Live </em>with brilliant storytelling. The jokes hit, the couples make you smile, the character development is fantastic, and there’s so much more than that to love. If, for some reason, you <em>haven’t </em>seen this show, please, check it out now.                    </p>
<p>                     After <em>Manifest’s</em> wild Season 3 cliffhanger, the series’ cancellation by NBC left creator Jeff Rake, as well as the show’s fandom, all hoping for closure. While it wasn’t the full second half that Rake took to <a href="https://twitter.com/jeff_rake/status/1404674082675724288?">Twitter </a>to mourn in 2021, streaming provider Netflix did step in for one final season, after finding great success with past seasons being available on its platform.                   </p>
<p>                     Detective Colombo (Peter Falk) ran through two pilots and seven seasons on NBC, between 1968 and 1978, looking to solve his cases with “just one more thing” he needed to ask about. But when it came to his eponymous series’ own fate, it received “just” three more seasons on ABC, from 1989 to 2003.                   </p>
<p>                     If it was up to NBC, Dan Harmon’s <em>Community</em> would have never gotten to the six seasons it called out for in its own universe. With that final, prophecy-fulfilling season airing on the now defunct Yahoo! Screen platform, part of a prophecy, that involves "a movie," has been fulfilled.                   </p>
<p>                     <em>Everybody Hates Chris </em>is a sitcom that is based on the life of comedian and actor Chris Rock and his life as a teenager in the 1980s in New York, chronicling how he feels that “everybody” hates him, and trying to survive in his crazy family.                    </p>                                      <p>                     While the show didn’t run for super long compared to some of the others on this list - it only ran from 2005-2009 - I have a special place in my heart for <em>Everybody Hates Chris, </em>and that’s mainly because of the great acting from Tyler James Williams. While he’s gone on to do other impressive things, I loved him in this show and sitcom is truly where he shines.                   </p>
<p>                     <em>The Expanse</em> came to an end after six seasons, with the first three airing on Syfy and the last batch going to Amazon’s Prime Video platform. But apparently, in an interview with <a href="https://www.polygon.com/2020/12/10/22167489/the-expanse-season-6-canceled-or-season-7-beyond-plans">Polygon</a>, authors Daniel Abraham and Ty Franck (collectively known as James S.A. Corey), said  they don’t even see the show as cancelled, but rather “paused” after Season 6. If a show can be renewed after a fan campaign draws in the likes of Wil Wheaton, George R.R. Martin, and Patton Oswalt, who are we to doubt there’s still gas in the tank?                    </p>
<p>                     Fox ran Seth MacFarlane’s topically inclined animated comedy, <em>American Dad!</em>, for 11 seasons, before pulling the plug on the <em>Family Guy</em> originator’s co-creation with Mike Barker and Matt Weitzman in 2013. However, it didn’t take long for cable station TBS, which had been airing reruns for some time, to snag itself a new original program. So just under a month after the series “ended” on Fox, it came roaring back to life in its second healthy home.                   </p>
<p>                     Most people probably remember <em>Friday Night LIghts</em> as an NBC series, and considering its first two seasons aired there, that would make sense. However, if we’re going by season count, you’d technically call Kyle Chandler and Connie Britton’s ensemble drama a 101 Network series; thanks to the last three of its five seasons airing on that platform between 2008 and 2011.                   </p>
<p>                     It actually didn’t feel like <em>The Critic</em> got canceled too soon because reruns ran on Comedy Central <em>forever</em>, but if you are a fan of the show, you know all too well how short its run was. Jon Lovitz starred as Jay Sherman, the snobbiest of movie critics. He hated basically everything, and it was glorious. Sadly, it never really got any respect from its initial network, ABC, and probably should have run on Comedy Central from the beginning. Alas, it last just two seasons and 23 snarky episodes.                   </p>
<p>                     Lawyer Ben Matlock (Andy Griffith) broke a lot of cases over six seasons on NBC, between 1986 and 1992. And before anyone could ask if we’d see Ben again, the fall of that very last year saw <em>Matlock</em> jumping over to ABC, for its final three seasons. While cast members may have changed, the iconic theme song and the public’s love for this series did not.                   </p>
<p>                     Neo-noir/western detective series <em>Longmire</em> began its life as a pretty popular title on the A&E Network back in 2014. Three seasons in, despite being a strong performer, the cable channel axed the Robert Taylor-starring series, with no rhyme or reason. Of course, that didn’t stop Netflix from reviving the series, giving it another three seasons that ran from 2015 until its second and final cancellation in 2017.                   </p>
<p>                     After three seasons, and a finale that was specifically designed to keep the show running, <em>Lucifer</em> was canceled due to a “pretty narrow” audience. That, and the series was made by an outside studio, which only made the decision apparently clearer. It was Fox’s loss though, as Netflix not only brought Tom Ellis’ demonically good time back from the grave, but the streamer gave it three more seasons to finish up.                   </p>
<p>                     Was it ever important for <em>Mystery Science Theater 3000</em> to stay at one network? Not totally, though there <em>were</em> some hiccups in how films were chosen in later seasons because of such switches. Starting life in 1988 as a public access show for KTMA-TV, <em>MST3K </em>would move to Comedy Central for the bulk of its run between 1989 and 1996. One last broadcast move would happen in 1997, giving this show its final TV-bound home… before it went to Netflix for two seasons between 2017 and 2018, and then to its own indie platform, The Gizmoplex, in 2022.                   </p>
<p>                     The reboot of Whitney Blake and Allan Manings’ sitcom, <em>One Day at a Time</em>, gave the world a new perspective on a very familiar formula. This Latinx-flavored version only lasted for four seasons sadly, with three of those seasons streaming on Netflix. After being canceled by the big red streamer in 2019, the series would be revived by Pop TV for one final abbreviated season, which aired in 2020.                   </p>
<p>                     <em>Girls5Eva</em> was a series that had a pedigree that seemed destined to last more than two seasons at Peacock. Yet the Tina Fey co-created/Sara Barellies-led ensemble found itself out the door after Season 2 ended. Though that’s not where the music stopped, as Netflix resurrected the show, proving that the cancellation reaper doesn’t always have the last word.                   </p>

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