FOX
Inside Entertainment 1970
Inside Entertainment is an entertainment news program. The show airs on Fox and features national acts. The show is hosted by AFTRA actor Robert Savage. Inside Entertainment tapes at various locations throughout Connecticut, New York and Massachusetts. Each episode consists of interviews with people involved in the entertainment industry as well as discussions about the industry and runs for approximately 28 minutes with commercials.
The X Factor Digital Experience 1970
The X Factor Digital Experience is an award-winning live digital pre-show produced by SYCOtv, FOX, Sony and FremantleMedia North America. In addition to watching the program live on television, the audience was now able to participate on multiple platforms in real-time. Participants could start online with the streaming Pepsi-sponsored digital pre-show one hour prior to each live televised broadcast. Hosts Taryn Southern, Jim Cantiello and Dan Levy along with special guests, vlogger, and participants from around the country discussed everything from their favorite performances to contestant’s fashion and song choices. Participants could tweet questions live to the hosts and their guests and some fans were selected to join the live-stream via Skype. As the pre-show ended, participants continued the discussion via content available through the Xtra-Factor App. They could read contestants’ and judges’ live tweets, tweet back their support and opinions, get access to backstage cameras, read song lyrics during performances, view galleries from past performances, learn about contestants’ hometowns and download contestants song choices as they were being performed.
The Complex: Malibu 2004
Big Deal 1970
Big Deal is a television game show that aired in the United States for six weeks in 1996 on FOX. It was hosted by Mark DeCarlo and packaged by Stone-Stanley Productions, with swing group Big Bad Voodoo Daddy as the house band. Due to low ratings, it only lasted six episodes; the series was originally scheduled to return in the spring of 1997, shortened to a half-hour and with Heidi Mark joining DeCarlo as co-host, but these plans were ultimately scrapped.
Security 1970
Fox After Breakfast 1970
Who's Your Daddy? 2005
Who's Your Daddy? is a Fox reality television program hosted by soap opera actress Finola Hughes. The first of six planned episodes aired in January 2005 to low ratings and a torrent of hostile press attention, prompting Fox to shelve the remaining shows indefinitely. They have since appeared on Fox Reality. For the show's premise, an adult who had been put up for adoption as an infant was placed in a room with 25 men, one of whom was their biological father. If the contestant could correctly pick out who was their father, the contestant would win $100,000. If they chose incorrectly, the person that they incorrectly selected would get the $100,000, although the contestant would still be reunited with his or her father. This show drew controversy from adoption rights organizations, leading to one Fox affiliate declining to air the series pilot, a 90-minute special. The first adoption contestant was actress T. J. Myers. After the pilot finished fourth in the Nielsen ratings for its time slot, Fox decided not to broadcast the other five episodes that had been produced. However, the pilot aired as a 'special' and not as a 'series premiere' so technically the series was canceled before airing an episode. United Press International reported that Myers "guessed which of eight men was her father. She guessed correctly and won $100,000."
The Wilton North Report 1970
The Wilton North Report is a late-night combined newsmagazine, talk show, and variety show that aired on Fox in December 1987 and January 1988. It was Fox's second attempt at a regular late-night show, replacing The Late Show. The series premiered on December 11, 1987 and ended four weeks later, on January 8, 1988. Hosted by Phil Cowan and Paul Robins, the show sought to combine comedy with newsmagazine-style features and serious interviews. Michael Hanks initially served as the show's announcer, with Don Morrow filling that role for its final two weeks.
Don't Ask 1970
Women in Prison 1970
The Reporters 1970
The Reporters is a newsmagazine show aired by FOX Television in the 1988-89 and 1989-90 seasons. The Reporters is much in the style of the syndicated show A Current Affair, except that there was no regular "host" role. As A Current Affair was produced for syndication by Fox, there was a considerable overlap in subject matter and even some reporters appeared on both programs. Some segments from the program have since been seen in the present day in a historical context on Fox News Channel as part of their compilation series, From the Fox Files.
