List of programs broadcast by Comedy Central
Appearance
(Redirected from Food for Thought (TV series))
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
This is a list of television programs formerly or currently broadcast by Comedy Central in the United States and some other countries.[1]
Current programming
[edit]Original programming
[edit]Animation
[edit]- South Park (1997)
- Digman! (2023)
- Everybody Still Hates Chris (2024)
Talk show
[edit]- The Daily Show (1996)
Syndicated programming
[edit]- Futurama (2013)
- The Office (2018)
- Seinfeld (2021)[2]
- Reno 911! (2022)[3][a]
- Beavis and Butt-Head (2001–2005; 2012; 2022–23, 2024)
- Family Guy (2024)[4]
Upcoming programming
[edit]Original programming
[edit]Animation
[edit]- Beavis and Butt-Head (2025; moved from Paramount+)[5]
- Golden Axe (TBA)[6]
- The Ren & Stimpy Show (TBA)[7][8]
Live-action
[edit]- The New Kings & Queens of Comedy (TBA)[9]
Former programming
[edit]Original programming
[edit]Scripted programming
[edit]Animation
[edit]- Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist (1995–99, 2002)
- Bob and Margaret (1998–2001)
- Clerks: The Animated Series (2002)
- Kid Notorious (2003)
- Shorties Watchin' Shorties (2004)
- Drawn Together (2004–07)
- Freak Show (2006)
- Lil' Bush (2007–08)
- Futurama (2008–13)
- Ugly Americans (2010–12)
- Brickleberry (2012–15)
- TripTank (2014–16)
- Moonbeam City (2015)
- Legends of Chamberlain Heights (2016–17)
- Jeff & Some Aliens (2017)
- Fairview (2022)
- Tooning Out the News (2022–23; moved from Paramount+)
Live action
[edit]- The Sweet Life (1989–90)
- Comedy Express (1990)
- The Higgins Boys and Gruber (1991)
- Mystery Science Theater 3000 (1991–96)
- Short Attention Span Theater (1991–94)
- The Big Room (1991–92)
- Random Acts of Variety (1991–94)
- Access America (1991–92)
- Afterdrive (1991)
- Sports Monster (1991)
- Limboland (1994)
- Offsides with Dom Irrera (1994–97)
- The Vacant Lot (1994)
- The Clinic (1995)
- Exit 57 (1995–96)
- Canned Ham (1996–2002)
- Pulp Comics (1996–2000)
- Viva Variety (1997–98)
- Upright Citizens Brigade (1998–2000)
- Frank Leaves for the Orient (1999)
- The Man Show (1999–2004)
- Strangers with Candy (1999–2000)
- Strip Mall (2000–01)
- TV Funhouse (2000–01)
- The Chris Wylde Show Starring Chris Wylde (2001)
- Insomniac with Dave Attell (2001–04)
- That's My Bush! (2001)
- Crank Yankers (2002–2005, 2019–2022)
- Contest Searchlight (2002)
- Heroes of Black Comedy (2002)
- Heroes of Jewish Comedy (2002)
- The Sweet Spot (2002)
- Chappelle's Show (2003–06)
- Gerhard Reinke's Wanderlust (2003)
- I'm with Busey (2003)
- Reno 911! (2003–09)[b]
- Trigger Happy TV (U.S. version) (2003)
- Crossballs (2004)
- Jump Cuts (2004)
- Last Laugh (2004–07) (specials)
- Wanda Does It (2004)
- The Comedians of Comedy (2005)
- The Hollow Men (2005)
- Mind of Mencia (2005–08)
- Stella (2005)
- Dog Bites Man (2006)
- American Body Shop (2007)
- Halfway Home (2007)
- The Naked Trucker and T-Bones Show (2007)
- The Sarah Silverman Program (2007–10)
- Atom TV (2008–2010)
- Chocolate News (2008)
- Lewis Black's Root of All Evil (2008)
- Important Things with Demetri Martin (2009–10)
- The Jeff Dunham Show (2009)
- Kröd Mändoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire (2009)
- Michael & Michael Have Issues (2009)
- Secret Girlfriend (2009)
- The Benson Interruption (2010)
- Big Lake (2010)
- This Show Will Get You High (2010)
- Nick Swardson's Pretend Time (2010–11)
- Jon Benjamin Has a Van (2011)
- Workaholics (2011–2017)
- The Burn with Jeff Ross (2012–13)
- Mash Up (2012)
- Key & Peele (2012–15)
- The Ben Show (2013)
- Inside Amy Schumer (2013–16)[c]
- Brody Stevens: Enjoy It! (2013–14)
- Drunk History (2013–19)
- Kroll Show (2013–15)
- Nathan for You (2013–17)
- Broad City (2014–19)
- Meet the Creeps (2014)
- Review (2014–17)
- Another Period (2015–18)
- Big Time in Hollywood, FL (2015)
- Idiotsitter (2016–17)
- Time Traveling Bong (2016)
- Not Safe with Nikki Glaser (2016)
- Typical Rick (2016–17)
- Detroiters (2017–18)
- The High Court with Doug Benson (2017)
- The Jim Jefferies Show (2017–19)
- Corporate (2018–20)
- Best of The Comedy Central Roast (2019)
- Alternatino with Arturo Castro (2019)[d]
- The Other Two (2019)[e]
- South Side (2019)[e]
- Awkwafina Is Nora from Queens (2020–23)
- Hall of Flame: Top 100 Comedy Central Roast Moments (2021)
- Doing the Most with Phoebe Robinson (2021)
Stand-up programming
[edit]- Stand-Up Stand-Up (1991–95)
- London Underground (1991–96)
- Two Drink Minimum (1991–96)
- Women Aloud (1992–94)
- Out There (1993–94)
- Tompkins Square (1996)
- Premium Blend (1997–2006)
- Lounge Lizards (1997)
- Comedy Central Presents (1998–2011)
- The World Stands Up (2004)
- Friday Night Stand-Up with Greg Giraldo (2005–06)
- Live at Gotham (2006–09)
- John Oliver's New York Stand-Up Show (2010–13)
- Russell Simmons Presents: Stand-Up at the El Rey (2010)
- Gabriel Iglesias Presents Stand Up Revolution (2011–14)
- Russell Simmons Presents: The Ruckus (2011)
- Comedy Central Stand-Up Presents (2012–19)
- Adam Devine's House Party (2013–16)
- Comedy Underground with Dave Attell (2014)
- The Meltdown with Jonah and Kumail (2014–16)
- This Is Not Happening (2015–19)
- Kevin Hart Presents: Hart of the City (2016–19)
- The Comedy Jam (2017)
- Hood Adjacent with James Davis (2017)
- Kevin Hart Presents: The Next Level (2017–18)
- This Week at the Comedy Cellar (2018–20)
- The New Negroes with Baron Vaughn and Open Mike Eagle (2019)
- Good Talk with Anthony Jeselnik (2019)
- Bill Burr Presents: The Ringers (2020)
Competitive/game shows
[edit]- Clash! (1991)
- Make Me Laugh (1997–98)
- Win Ben Stein's Money (1997–2003)
- Vs. (1999)
- Don't Forget Your Toothbrush (U.S. version) (2000)
- Beat the Geeks (2001–02)
- Let's Bowl (2001–02)
- Distraction (U.S. version) (2005–06)
- The Gong Show with Dave Attell (2008)
Late night/talk shows
[edit]- Night After Night with Allan Havey (1991–92)
- Alan King: Inside the Comedy Mind (1991–95)
- Politically Incorrect (1994–97)
- Turn Ben Stein On (1999–2001)
- Primetime Glick (2001–03)
- Tough Crowd with Colin Quinn (2003–04)
- The Graham Norton Effect (U.S. version) (2004)
- The Colbert Report (2005–14)
- The Showbiz Show with David Spade (2005–07)
- Too Late with Adam Carolla (2005)
- Weekends at the D.L. (2005)
- Tosh.0 (2009–20)
- Sports Show with Norm Macdonald (2011)
- @midnight with Chris Hardwick (2013–17)
- The Jeselnik Offensive (2013)
- The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore (2015–16)
- Why? with Hannibal Buress (2015)
- The Gorburger Show (2017)
- The Opposition with Jordan Klepper (2017–2018)
- The President Show (2017)
- Problematic with Moshe Kasher (2017)
- Taskmaster (2018)
- Getting Closure with Sydnee Washington (2019–20)
- Klepper (2019)
- Lights Out with David Spade (2019–20)
- Hell of a Week with Charlamagne tha God (2021–22)[f]
Sports programming
[edit]- BattleBots (2000–02)
Other programming
[edit]- Comics Only (1991–95) (hosted by Paul Provenza)
- Comic Justice (1993–94)
- Out There (1993–94)
- Travel Sick (2001–02)
- Comic Groove (2002)
- Comic Remix (2002)
- Straight Plan for the Gay Man (2004)
- Con (2005)
- Reality Bites Back (2008)
- Onion SportsDome (2011)
Syndicated programming
[edit]- 30 Rock (2011–14)
- 1000 Ways to Die (2016–17)
- The Abbott and Costello Show (1991; 1993–95)
- All Is Forgiven (June 1991)
- Absolutely Fabulous (1994–2003)
- Almost Live! (1992–94)
- Archer (2015–19)
- The Associates (1991)
- The Bad News Bears (1991)
- The Ben Stiller Show (1995–96)
- The Benny Hill Show (1993–96)
- The Best of Groucho (1991–92)
- Best of the West (1991)
- Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (April/October 1991)
- BoJack Horseman (2018–19; 2020)
- Brooklyn Nine-Nine (2022–23)[10]
- Bridget Loves Bernie (December 1991)
- Camp Runamuck (1991–92)
- Candid Camera (1991–93)
- Captain Nice (1991)
- Car 54, Where Are You? (1991–92)
- The Charmings (1991)
- The Cleveland Show (2018–24)
- Community (2013–15)
- C.P.O. Sharkey (1991–92)
- Creature Comforts (2004–05)
- The Critic (1996–2005)
- Dilbert (2001–05)
- Drive–In Reviews (1993)
- Dream On (1996–99)
- Duckman (2000–06)[11]
- The Duck Factory (1991–96)
- Entourage (2011–14)
- Fractured Flickers (1991)
- Fresno (June 1991)
- Friends (2019; 2021–22)
- Gary & Mike (2002–03)[12]
- Glenn Martin, DDS (2009–10)
- The Goode Family (2010–11)
- The Harper House (2021)
- How I Met Your Mother (2016–17)
- It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia (2010–17)
- The Jack Benny Program (1991–93)
- Just Shoot Me! (2009)
- Kenny vs. Spenny (2007)
- The Kids in the Hall (1991–2005)
- King of the Hill (2018–19)
- Lancelot Link, Secret Chimp (1991–92)
- The Late Late Show with James Corden (2020)
- Late Night with Conan O'Brien
- Laurel and Hardy (1991–92)
- The League of Gentlemen (2000)
- Love, American Style (1991–93)
- The Lucy Show (1991)
- MADtv (2004–10)
- Married... with Children (2010–11)
- McHale's Navy (1991–93)
- Monty Python's Flying Circus (1991–96)
- Mr. Show with Bob and David (2005–07)
- The New Candid Camera (1992)
- Occasional Wife (1992)
- The Odd Couple (1998–1999)
- One Night Stand (1991–2000)
- Parks and Recreation (2019–24)
- The Phil Silvers Show (1991–92)
- Phyllis (1991–93; 1995)
- Police Squad! (1993–2000)
- Quark (1991–92)
- Rhoda (1991–93; 1995)
- Saturday Night Live (1991–2003; 2015–16)
- Schitt's Creek (2020–22)[13]
- Scrubs (2006–13, 2017–19)[14]
- SCTV (1991–94)
- Sit Down, Shut Up (2010)
- Soap (1994–2001)
- Sports Night (2000–02)
- Star Trek: Lower Decks (2021)
- The State (2010)
- The Steve Allen Show (1991–93)
- Tabitha (1991)
- The Texas Wheelers (1991)
- That '70s Show (2017–20)
- That Girl (1991–92)
- The Tick (1996–99)
- The Tony Randall Show (1991; 1993)
- The Tracey Ullman Show (1995–97)
- TV's Bloopers & Practical Jokes (1991–92)
- Undergrads (2002–03)[12]
- When Things Were Rotten (1991)
- Whose Line Is It Anyway? (1991–98; 2000–05)
- Wonder Showzen (2005)
- Working Stiffs (1991)
- The Young Ones (1994)
- Your Show of Shows (1991–92)
Events and specials
[edit]- Comedy Central Roast (2003–19)
- The Comedy Awards (2011–12)
- South Park The 25th Anniversary Concert (2022)
Films
[edit]Comedy Central original movies
[edit]- Porn 'n Chicken (2002)
- Windy City Heat (2003)
- Knee High P.I. (2003)
- A Clüsterfünke Christmas (2021)
- Hot Mess Holiday (2021)
- Out of Office (2022)
- Cursed Friends (2022)
- Reno 911! It's a Wonderful Heist (2022)
- Office Race (2023)
Comedy Central films
[edit]These are films that were theatrically released and based on Comedy Central properties.
- South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999) (with Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Scott Rudin Productions and Braniff Productions)
- The Hebrew Hammer (2003) (with ContentFilm and Strand Releasing)
- Strangers with Candy (2006) (with THINKFilm)
- Reno 911!: Miami (2007) (with 20th Century Fox, Paramount Pictures, and Jersey Films)
- New Kids Turbo (2010) (United States)
- The Drawn Together Movie: The Movie! (2010)
- New Kids Nitro (2011) (United States)
Notes
[edit]- ^ Seasons 1–6 originally aired on Comedy Central. Season 7 originally premiered on Quibi, and season 8 originally premiered on The Roku Channel.
- ^ Moved to Quibi for season 7 and The Roku Channel for season 8.
- ^ Moved to Paramount+ for season 5
- ^ Moved to Quibi for season 2
- ^ a b Moved to HBO Max for season 2
- ^ Formerly titled Tha God's Honest Truth
References
[edit]- ^ Boone, Brian (12 January 2012). "The Origin and Early Programs of Comedy Central". Splitsider. Archived from the original on 13 January 2012. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (September 15, 2021). "'Seinfeld': Comedy Central To Be Series' Exclusive New Cable Home; Jerry Seinfeld Stars In Promo Touting Lunch". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 15, 2021.
- ^ ""Reno 911" – New Episodes Premiering October 19th on Comedy Central". Comedy Central. September 30, 2022. Retrieved September 30, 2022 – via The Futon Critic.
- ^ White, Peter (August 14, 2024). "Family Guy Heads To Comedy Central In Licensing Deal". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 14, 2024.
- ^ Petski, Denise (June 5, 2024). "'Mike Judge's Beavis And Butt-Head' Renewed For Season 3 At Comedy Central". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on June 5, 2024.
- ^ Otterson, Joe (April 17, 2024). "'Golden Axe' Animated Series From Mike McMahan Set at Comedy Central; Matthew Rhys and Danny Pudi Among Voice Cast". Variety. Retrieved April 17, 2024.
- ^ Goldberg, Lesley (August 5, 2020). "'Ren & Stimpy Show' Revived at Comedy Central". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
- ^ Alexa, Laurén (September 15, 2022). "Snipple Animation Teases Involvement with 'Ren & Stimpy' Reboot". Animation World Network. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
- ^ Petski, Danielle (May 18, 2022). "'Jersey Shore' & 'Teen Mom' Follow-Ups At MTV, Andy Samberg Animated Show On Comedy Central Among Series Greenlights For MTV Entertainment Studios". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved June 21, 2022.
- ^ Del Rosario, Alexandra (February 7, 2022). "'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' Heads To Comedy Central; All-Day Marathon Set". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved February 7, 2022.[dead link ]
- ^ "The Rugrats Timeline – 2000". rugratonline.free.fr. May 9, 2007.
- ^ a b "Comedy Central Picks up Clerks the Cartoon". The View Askewniverse. Archived from the original on October 21, 2002.
- ^ Andreeva, Nellie (September 21, 2020). "'Schitt's Creek' Heads To Comedy Central Following Emmy Wins". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 22, 2020.
- ^ "Zach Braff "Scrubs" into Comedy Central" (Press release). Comedy Central Press. July 11, 2005. Archived from the original on November 26, 2021.