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The TV channel Freeform (dating back to when it was known as Fox Family) annually presented their special "13 Nights of Halloween" with specialized Halloween episodes of regularly scheduled programs, as well as specified Halloween specials and movies to play for the 13 nights leading up to October 31. This was expanded to the entire 31 nights ...
31 Nights of Halloween (formerly 13 Days of Halloween and 13 Nights of Halloween) is an American seasonal programming block on Freeform. It originally began airing in 1998, after the Family Channel became Fox Family, and was continued through the channel's change into ABC Family, and later, Freeform. The 13 Days of Halloween block was created ...
Family-friendly comedies, which featured families with children as major characters, were a staple of ABC's programming dating back to the network's earlier sitcoms from the 1950s onward, such as The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (which premiered in 1952), Leave It to Beaver (which moved to ABC in 1958, after spending its first season on CBS), The Donna Reed Show (which premiered in 1958 ...
October will be here before you know it, and there's no better way to get in the spooky spirit than by watching these best Halloween TV episodes of your favorite shows.
Whether you're squeamish or just craving shorter snippets of creepy content, don't worry—we've rounded up the 31 best Halloween episodes from your favorite TV sitcoms, cartoons, dramas and more ...
All That Glitters (April 18–July 15, 1977) – soap opera parody produced by Norman Lear. Fernwood 2 Night (July 4–September 30, 1977) – talk show parody starring Martin Mull and Fred Willard; spinoff of Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. America 2-Night (April 10–July 7, 1978) – continuation series/spinoff of Fernwood 2 Night.
Here's where to stream 'Parks and Rec,' 'Friends,' 'The Office,' 'New Girl' and 'Modern Family' Halloween episodes. Plus a not-so-scary watchlist. Not-so-scary watchlist: Here's where to stream ...
The shows that premiered under the Jetix brand with Toon Disney but weren't produced by the network. Note: The Walt Disney Company owned Saban Entertainment which held the Power Rangers franchise before being sold in 2010 after the closure of Jetix. Dragon Booster (premiered 2004, from Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [11] [2] <! -- TBD ...