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1-50 of 1,082
- Mrs. Edna Garrett, housemother and dietitian at the Eastland School, teaches a group of girls in her charge how to solve those problems that every teenager has to face.
- The misadventures of a divorced mother, her family and their building superintendent in Indianapolis.
- Wealthy African American dry cleaner George Jefferson, his wife Louise, and son Lionel move into a luxury apartment building and develop occasionally fractious relations with other tenants, including their sassy maid Florence.
- When three automotive factory workers who're struggling financially try to steal from their own labor union, they discover corruption, and reluctantly decide to use this information for blackmail.
- Set in the fictional small town of Fernwood, OH, the show parodies real talk shows, complete with a stage band, as well as the sort of fare one might expect from a small-town locally produced television program.
- An experiment in an American High School where students learn how easy it is to be seduced by the same social forces which led to the horrors of Nazi Germany. Based on a true story.
- Somewhat steamy/racy (for the time) carryings-on in a ruined old hotel; the "E" burned out some time ago and was never repaired.
- Larry Alder is a 44-year-old divorcee in Portland, Oregon, raising his two teenage daughters and hosting a call-in psychology radio show.
- In the second-season version of "Fernwood 2Nite," the small-time talk show from Fernwood, Ohio has moved to Alta Coma, California, where it has taken on a more national flavor. This satire of Merv Griffin, Johnny Carson, and all the other big names in 1970s Talk TV promised that each week it would offend some, if not many, with its unusual brand of humor. In this newer version of the show, many well-known TV and movie stars came on as guests, often joining the cast in making fun of themselves and their media images.
- Greg and Paul are rock musicians who leave their home in Boise, Idaho for Hollywood. They find Frederick J. Hanover, a promoter who has found a lot of famous rock musicians.
- An "interactive" series in which the first half was a standard sitcom and the second was a talk-show-like discussion of the events that happened and how they could be resolved.
- Satirical look at a world where women rule and men are objectified.
- This spin-off of "All in the Family" features the further adventures of Gloria Stivic and her son Joey. She and Mike are separated and she's gotten a job in a veterinarian's office.
- After Mary Hartman left town with her policeman boyfriend, the focus shifted to her heartbroken ex-husband Tom and the rest of the oddball residents of Fernwood, Ohio.
- A babysitter realizes that one of the children she looks after is being physically abused by his mother.
- A middle-aged man and a young woman fall in love amidst the political backdrop of Washington, D.C.
- The misadventures of Florence Johnson, a hotel maid who was previously seen serving the Jeffersons.
- This comedy set in Depression-era Kansas City was based around a single hairdresser's unique approach to curing her loneliness: putting an ad in the newspaper and recruiting the folks who met her criteria to be her new family. Filling the new positions were con-artist husband Eddie, tap-dancing daughter Anna-Marie, a son known only as Junior, and an elderly grandfather.
- Short-lived situation comedy about the owner of a house-painting contracting firm who is trying to support a wife and five children whose ages range from 9 to 23.
- The relationship between a stuffed-shirt priest and a liberal nun that run a Baltimore mission.
- The creepy goings-on at Highcliffe Manor, home of a science institute staffed by bizarre people.
- 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).
- Nancy runs her own talent agency. This kept her busy while her husband Ken was on Naval duty, but things have changed since his retirement. Nearby are daughter Lorraine, son-in-law Glen, and gay housemate Terry.
- Fat married couple Joe and Angela Dumpling own a New York deli.
- Unsold tv-series pilot featuring live actors in dog costumes.