Logo used since 2023 | |
Warner Bros. Television headquarters at the Warner Bros. studio lot | |
| Warner Bros. Television | |
| Formerly |
|
| Company type | Division |
| Industry | Television |
| Founded | March 21, 1955; 70 years ago (1955-03-21) |
| Founder | William T. Orr |
| Headquarters | 4000 Warner Boulevard,, |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
|
| Products | Television programs |
| Services |
|
| Revenue | |
| Parent | Warner Bros. Entertainment |
| Divisions | |
| Subsidiaries |
|
| Website | www |
| Footnotes / references [1][2] | |
Warner Bros. Television Studios,[3] operating under the nameWarner Bros. Television (abbreviated asWBTV; formerly known asWarner Bros. Television Division), is an Americantelevisionproduction and distribution studio and the flagship studio of the Warner Bros. Television Group division ofWarner Bros. Entertainment, a flagship studio ofWarner Bros. Discovery (WBD). Launched on March 21, 1955 byWilliam T. Orr, it serves as a television production arm ofDC Comics productions byDC Studios and ofThe CW, alongsideParamount Skydance Corporation'sCBS Studios and CW Studios (the network's recently-launched production arm) -- Paramount and WBD each own 12.5% of The CW, whileNexstar Media Group owns the remaining 75%. It also serves as the distribution arm of WBD unitsHBO,Cartoon Network andAdult Swim, while currently partnering in that role withCBS Media Ventures forThe CW.
As of 2015, it is one of the world's two largest television production companies measured by revenue and library along withSony Pictures Television.[4][5]
As of May 2024, Warner Bros. Television is producing nearly 40 scripted series for Warner Bros. Discovery'sHBO Max, external streaming platforms, cable, and the five American broadcast networks.
The end of World War II led to the rise of television in the late 1940s and early 1950s which saw the eclipse of the Hollywood film studio system, upon the rise of television programming in the wake of the war, many of the film studio executives were in doubt, as they saw the rise of television destroying their film studio business, one of the first major American film studios to move into television was Columbia Pictures in 1947, soon other Hollywood studios such as Paramount Pictures, and Walt Disney Studios started following suit capitalising on the rise of television.[citation needed]
Warner Bros. originally planned to move into television back in 1949 as requested by the other Warners, but Jack L. Warner declined and turned down many proposals as he refused to give into the capitalization of TV thus the path to TV was slow, eventually the executives finally gave in and started establishing their television division.[citation needed]
The division was started on March 21, 1955,[1] with its first head beingJack L. Warner's son-in-lawWilliam T. Orr.ABC had approachedWarner Bros. initially with the idea of purchasing the studio's film library (Warner Bros. eventually sold the rights to the negatives of pre-1950 films and pre-1948 cartoons and shorts toAssociated Artists Productions, or a.a.p., in 1956[6][7]). WB formally entered television production with the premiere of its self-titled anthology seriesWarner Bros. Presents on ABC. The one-hour weekly show featured rotating episodes of television series based on the WB filmsCasablanca andKings Row, as well as an original series titledCheyenne withClint Walker. The first one-hour television western,Cheyenne became a big hit for the network and the studio with the added advantage of featuring promotions for upcoming Warner Bros. cinema releases in the show's last ten minutes. One such segment forRebel Without a Cause featuredGig Young notably talking about road safety withJames Dean.
With onlyCheyenne being a success, WB ended the ten-minute promotions of new films and replacedWarner Bros. Presents with ananthology series titledConflict. It was felt that "Conflict" was what the previous series lacked.Conflict showed the pilots forMaverick and77 Sunset Strip.[citation needed]
The success ofCheyenne led WBTV to produce many series for ABC such as Westerns(Maverick,Lawman,Colt .45,Bronco, aspin off ofCheyenne,Sugarfoot, andThe Alaskans),crime dramas (77 Sunset Strip,Hawaiian Eye,Bourbon Street Beat, andSurfside 6), and other shows such asThe Gallant Men andThe Roaring Twenties using stock footage from WBwar films and gangster films respectively. The company also producedJack Webb'sRed Nightmare starringJack Kelly for theU.S. Department of Defense that was later shown on American television onJack Webb'sGeneral Electric True.
All shows were made in the manner of WB'sB pictures in the 1930s and 1940s;[8] fast-paced, muchstock footage from other films, stock music from the Warner Bros. music library and contracted stars working long hours for comparatively small salaries with restrictions on their career.
During the1960 Writers Guild of America strike, WB reused many plots from its films and other television shows under the nom de plume of "W. Hermanos".[9] This was another example of imitating Warner Bros.' B pictures who would remake an "A" film and switch the setting.[10]
Two of the most popular stars,James Garner andClint Walker, quit over their conditions. Garner never returned to the Warners fold during this period, instead moving forward into a major theatrical film career. Successful Warner Bros. television stars found themselves in leading roles of many of the studio's theatrical films with no increase in salary.Efrem Zimbalist Jr. was simultaneously the lead of77 Sunset Strip briefly overlapping with a recurring role as "Dandy Jim Buckley" onMaverick, and also headlined several films until exhaustion forced the studio to give him a rest. Many other actors under contract to Warner Bros. at the time, who despite their work conditions, did see their stars rise over time, albeit for most only briefly, includedJack Kelly,Will Hutchins,Peter Brown,Ty Hardin,Wayde Preston,John Russell,Donald May,Rex Reason,Richard Long,Van Williams,Roger Smith,Mike Road,Anthony Eisley,Robert Conrad,Robert McQueeney,Dorothy Provine,Diane McBain andConnie Stevens.Edd Byrnes andTroy Donahue would become teen heartthrobs. Another contract player, EnglishmanRoger Moore (Maverick andThe Alaskans), was growing displeased with Warner as his contract was expiring and would relocate to Europe from Hollywood, becoming an international star on television, and eventually, in theatrical films, playingJames Bond among other roles. Warner Bros. also contracted established stars such asRay Danton,Peter Breck,Jeanne Cooper andGrant Williams. These stars often appeared as guest stars, sometimes reprising their series role in another TV series.
The stars appeared in WB cinema releases with no additional salary, with some such as Zimbalist, Walker, Garner (replacingCharlton Heston inDarby's Rangers), and Danton (replacingRobert Evans inThe Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond[11]) playing the lead roles; many of the stars appeared in ensemble casts in such films asThe Chapman Report andMerill's Marauders. Some stars such as Connie Stevens, Edd Byrnes, Robert Conrad and Roger Smith made albums forWarner Bros. Records. One particular recording, a novelty tune titledKookie, Kookie (Lend Me Your Comb) became a big hit for Edd Byrnes and Connie Stevens (1959). The following year, Connie Stevens had her own hit, withSixteen Reasons.
It was during this period that series, particularly Westerns likeCheyenne andMaverick, and the crime dramas like77 Sunset Strip,Hawaiian Eye andSurfside 6 featured catchy theme songs that became just as much a part of the American pop culture landscape as the shows themselves. Depending on the particular series (in this case, the Westerns),William Lava orDavid Buttolph would compose the music, with lyrics byStan Jones orPaul Francis Webster, among others. For the crime shows, it was up to the songwriting team ofJerry Livingston andMack David, who also scored the themes for the sitcomRoom for One More, andThe Bugs Bunny Show.
In 1960, Warner Bros. Television turned its attentions to younger audiences as they broughtBugs Bunny and the other Warner Bros. cartoon characters to prime time, withThe Bugs Bunny Show, which featured cartoons released after July 31, 1948 (which had not been sold toAssociated Artists Productions), combined with newly animated introductory material. Also, that year saw the debut ofThe Roaring Twenties, which was thought to be a more benign alternative toDesilu'sThe Untouchables. Whether or not that was actually the case, it was, in fact, much less successful.
WBTV expanded on its existing genre of Westerns and crime dramas, and in January 1962, produced its first sitcom,Room For One More. Based on the memoirs ofAnna Rose, which in 1952 WB made into a movie starringCary Grant and his then-wifeBetsy Drake (the only movie that they worked together in) about a married couple with two children of their own who went on to adopt at least two more. The TV series starredAndrew Duggan andPeggy McCay as George and Anna Rose. Acting legendMickey Rooney's sonTim, andAhna Capri, who would continue to do episodic TV roles and feature films (arguably, her best-known movie wasEnter the Dragon starringBruce Lee) were cast as the Rose's natural children. The show only lasted for half a season. In the fall of that year, a WWII dramaThe Gallant Men debuted, but lasted for only one season.
WBTV exclusively produced shows for the ABC network until 1962, whenGE True premiered onCBS.
In 1964, WBTV once again tried to turn a classic film comedy of its own into a sitcom, withNo Time for Sergeants. Both the sitcom and the 1958 movie were based on the 1955 Broadway play, which starredAndy Griffith (TV'sThe United States Steel Hour also adapted the stage play for TV in 1956). The sitcom starredSammy Jackson as Will Stockdale, a naive Georgia farm boy drafted into the military. 1965 saw the debut ofF Troop, a Western spoof taking place at a U.S. Army post after the Civil War. Despite lasting only two seasons, it is still considered a classic of its type.Forrest Tucker,Larry Storch, andKen Berry led an ensemble cast featuring military misfits, and an Indian tribe, who, among other things, forgot how to do a rain dance.
The streak of identifiable series subsided in 1963 with a halt of usingstock company contract players andJack Webb taking over WBTV and not being particularly successful. However, many series were still filmed at Warner Bros. such asF Troop andThe F.B.I.[12]

For four years, from 1967 to 1971, the company's lone output was the existing television seriesThe F.B.I., by 1970, several of the former talent from20th Century-Fox Television as well as former agent writers was defected to Warner Bros., such asPaul Monash,Rod Amateau,Bill Idelson and Harvey Miller,Saul Turteltaub andBernie Orenstein, Jerry Gardner andDee Caruso,Hal Kanter andA.J. Carothers.[13] By 1971, the company returned to prime-time shows after producing one show for four years. One of the first shows upon returning were the NBC showsNichols andThe Jimmy Stewart Show and the CBS showThe Chicago Teddy Bears.[14] Also that year, animation studioFilmation and Warner Bros. entered a deal to produce cartoons for film and television, with its television subsidiary having global distribution rights.[15]
In 1975, the stars ofLynda Carter, Warner Bros. andDC Comics produced the television seriesWonder Woman. National was purchased byKinney National Company in 1967 and remained the part of the company until Kinney bought Warner Bros. in 1969. Also that year, the company secured a deal withBill Carruthers and his production company to develop its game shows and other videotaped programming.[16]
In 1976, the company acquired The Wolper Organization, producer ofChico and the Man andWelcome Back, Kotter. In 1978, Stan Margulies, who producedRoots, signed a three-year exclusive contract with the studio.[17] The following week, Warner had acquired contracts with big names likeJames Komack,Danny Arnold, the trio ofDon Nicholl,Michael Ross andBernie West (NRW) and the duo of Alan Blye andBob Einstein to distribute programs worldwide.[18]
In 1979, WBTV produced the television seriesThe Dukes of Hazzard.
In 1980, Phillip Saltzman and his Woodruff Productions company signed a deal with the studio.[19]
In 1982,Aaron Spelling andhis production company had struck a deal with the studio to distribute the shows. The pact would continue until 1988.[20]
On March 25, 1986,Ted Turner and hisTurner Broadcasting System purchasedMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) fromKirk Kerkorian for $1.5 billion, and renamedMGM Entertainment Company, Inc.[21][22][23] Turner immediately sold MGM'sUnited Artists (UA) subsidiary back to Kerkorian for roughly $480 million.[22][23] However, Turner was unable to find financing for the rest of the deal because of concerns in the financial community over the debt-load of his companies; thus, on August 26, 1986, Turner was forced to sell MGM's production and distribution assets to UA for $300 million.[22][23][24][25] The MGM lot and lab facilities were sold toLorimar-Telepictures.[24] Turner kept the pre-May 1986 MGM film and television library, along with theAssociated Artists Productions library, and the RKO Pictures films that United Artists had previously purchased.[24] Warner Bros. Television has produced new productions based onTurner Entertainment's properties.
On June 1, 1986,Alan Shayne has left as president of the studio after 10 years, to start out a new production company, Alan Shayne Productions, which will be affiliated in association with the studio, in order to develop four made-for-TV movies and miniseries projects, which was developed for the 1987–88 season.[26]
Prior to the merge withTime Inc.,Warner Communications acquiredLorimar-Telepictures. The acquisition completed on January 12, 1989.Lorimar Television folded into WBTV in July 1993.Telepictures later became a television production company.
In 1992,Witt/Thomas Productions signed a television contract with Warner Bros. after the previous contract with Disney was not renewed.[27] In 1993, twoTime Warner-affiliated production companiesQuincy Jones Entertainment andDavid Salzman Entertainment had merged their companies to formQuincy Jones-David Salzman Entertainment, which was affiliated with Warner Bros. and Time Warner.[28] Not too long after that,Lorimar Television was folded into WBTV, taking some key members with them.[29] In 1993,Tom Arnold andRoseanne Barr via Wapello County Productions struck a deal with the studio.[30] Later that year, Warner Bros. Television partnered with Bud Grant Productions, a company led byCBS executiveBud Grant, and formerly of Grant/Tribune Productions for a two-year, non-exclusive deal.[31]
In 1994, writers-producers ofFriends,Kevin Bright,Martha Kauffman andDavid Crane, and associated with the studio since 1992 had struck its exclusive deal with the studio.[32] In 1996, Warner Bros. Television collaborated withUniversal Television to develop the seriesSpy Game forABC, with Universal alumnusSam Raimi andRobert Tapert of Renaissance Pictures, and Warner alumnusJohn McNamara producing the series, but it did not last long, as it only lasted one season on the air.[33]
In 2001, WBTV fully took over distribution ofHanna-Barbera related properties produced byWarner Bros. Animation such asScooby-Doo, producing a steady stream of Scooby-Doo direct-to-video films and two new series,What's New, Scooby-Doo? (2002–2006) andShaggy & Scooby-Doo Get a Clue! (2006–2008). In 2006, Warner Bros. Television made some of its vast library of programs available for free viewing on the Internet (through sister companyAOL'sIN2TV service), withWelcome Back, Kotter as its marquee offering. Some of these programs have not been seen publicly since their last syndicated release in the 1980s.

On June 11, 2012, WBTV acquiredAlloy Entertainment.[34][35] On June 2, 2014, Warner Bros. Television Group purchased all ofEyeworks' companies outside of the United States, rebranding asWarner Bros. International Television Production. Eyeworks USA however, will remain independent.[36]
In 2020, Warner Bros. Television was renamed Warner Bros. Television Studios as part of WarnerMedia's restructuring of its television divisions.[citation needed][37] The Warner Bros. Television name continues to be used on-screen, as well as the company's trade name.
On November 30, 2022, WBTV head Channing Dungey announced that they were in talks withAmazon to make animated DC content for its streaming serviceAmazon Prime Video.[38]
In addition to the main Warner Bros. Television Studios label, the company also owns and operates the following production companies in the United States:
Logo used since 2023 | |
| Formerly | Warner Horizon Television |
|---|---|
| Company type | Division |
| Founded | April 2006; 19 years ago (2006-04) |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
|
| Parent | Warner Bros. Television Studios |
| Website | www |
Warner Horizon Unscripted Television is Warner Bros. Television Studios' alternative television, cable and streaming production unit; founded in April 2006, it originally operated as a singular label encompassing both scripted and unscripted productions. Notable series and films produced by the Warner Horizon units includeThe Bachelor dating show franchise,The Voice,Pretty Little Liars (and spin-offsRavenswood andPretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists),Ellen's Game of Games,Fuller House,The Masked Dancer,Whose Line Is It Anyway?,You and the first season ofPennyworth.
On August 10, 2020, Warner Bros. Television Group separated the Warner Horizon label into two standalone companies maintaining individualized production focuses:
Alloy Entertainment is a book packaging and production company under Warner Bros. Television Studios. Notable series and films produced by Alloy includeThe Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants,Gossip Girl,The Vampire Diaries,Pretty Little Liars,The 100,The Sun Is Also a Star,Everything, Everything, andYou.
Formed in 2014,Blue Ribbon Content (BRC) is Warner Bros. Television Studios' digital series production unit. The company takes its name from the "Blue Ribbon” reissues ofMerrie Melodies andLooney Tunes animation shorts.
Live-action BRC productions include series such as the horror-comedyCritters: A New Binge forShudder, comedyPlay It Again, Dick and horror-comedyThe Pledge forCW Seed, as well as the following original films:The Banana Splits Movie andCritters Attack! forWarner Bros. Home Entertainment andSyfy, plusGood Girls Get High for AT&T's DirectTV Cinema. BRC also produces the upcoming mixed-media seriesBizarroTV for DC Universe, plus the animated seriesDeathstroke: Knights & Dragons for CW Seed.
Shed Media (formerly known asShed Media US) is an American production company and a division of Warner Bros. Unscripted & Alternative Television, founded in February 2009. Series produced by Shed Media includeWho Do You Think You Are? forNBC,Criminal Confessions andMurder for Hire for Oxygen,Huda Boss forFacebook Watch,Supernanny forLifetime, andThe Real Housewives of New York City forBravo.
Telepictures is an American production company. It was bought by Warner Communications in 1988 and remains a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Television Studios to this day. Programs produced by Telepictures includeThe Ellen DeGeneres Show, as well asExtra,Judge Mathis,The People's Court,The Real, in addition to theNBC primetime seriesEllen's Game of Games andEllen's Greatest Night of Giveaways (both produced in association with Warner Horizon Unscripted Television). Telepictures is also producing the upcoming Elizabeth Smart-led seriesSmart Justice for Lifetime and the newHBO Max competition seriesEllen's Next Great Designer. Telepictures also formerly producedTMZ on TV, which it sold toFox Entertainment in 2021.
Cartoon Network Studios is an American production company and the main animation studio forCartoon Network and its associated channels. It started operating in 1994 as a division ofHanna-Barbera until 2001 when the latter absorbed intoWarner Bros. Animation. Located inBurbank, California, the studio primarily produces and develops animated programs and shorts for Cartoon Network,Adult Swim,Cartoonito andHBO Max. The company has only produced one theatrically released film,The Powerpuff Girls Movie, distributed by its sister company,Warner Bros. Pictures; its commercial failure prompted the company to stop theatrical releases of its films, thoughRegular Show: The Movie was released to theaters at a limited capacity. The studio also produces live-action series for Adult Swim and formerly Cartoon Network under various pseudonyms.
Warner Bros. Animation Inc.[41] is an American animation studio closely associated with theLooney Tunes andMerrie Melodies characters, among others. The studio is the successor toWarner Bros. Cartoons, the studio which producedLooney Tunes andMerrie Melodies cartoon shorts from 1933 to 1963, and from 1967 to 1969. Warner reestablished its animation division in 1980 to produceLooney Tunes–related works, andTurner Broadcasting System (who boughtMGM/UA which owned pre-1950Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies shorts) merged with Time Warner (later calledWarnerMedia) in 1996.[42] It replacesWarner Bros. Cartoons andWarner Bros. Feature Animation; since March 2001, it also replacesHanna-Barbera as well.
In recent years, Warner Bros. Animation has focused primarily on producing television and direct-to-video animation featuring characters ofLooney Tunes,Tom and Jerry, andScooby-Doo created by other properties owned by Warner Bros., includingMGM cartoon studio (viaTurner Entertainment Co.) andHanna-Barbera Productions.

Warner Bros. Kids, Young Adults and Classics (KYAC; often known asWarner Bros. Global Kids, Young Adults and Classics), formerly known asWarner Bros. Global Kids and Young Adults, was a division ofWarner Bros. established on March 4, 2019, as part of a major reorganization of its former parent company,WarnerMedia, an existed until May 11, 2022.
On March 4, 2019,AT&T announced a major reorganization ofWarnerMedia to effectively dissolve theTurner Broadcasting System division, which involvedCartoon Network,Boomerang,Adult Swim,Turner Classic Movies and digital media companyOtter Media being transferred to Warner Bros. Entertainment. Aside from TCM and Otter – which was transferred over toWarnerMedia Entertainment on May 31, 2019, to oversee development on a then-upcoming over-the-top streaming service (which was later given the nameHBO Max) from WarnerMedia – the newly transferred properties came under a newly formed Global Kids & Young Adults division.[43][44][45][46]
The division was responsible for overseeing the parent company's family, kids, animation and young adult properties, its properties include the formerTurner Broadcasting System cable television networksCartoon Network (including the programming blocksAdult Swim,Toonami,Cartoonito andACME Night),Boomerang, andTurner Classic Movies; and the animation studiosWarner Bros. Animation,Cartoon Network Studios andWilliams Street.
On April 7, 2020,Tom Ascheim was named president of the division, now renamed Warner Bros. Global Kids, Young Adults and Classics, overseeing Cartoon Network, Boomerang and Adult Swim, and adding Turner Classic Movies to his oversight.[47]
On May 11, 2022, Tom Ascheim exited as President of KYAC due to Warner Bros. Discovery's leadership restructuring the organization and eliminating his role. The studios were moved under Warner Bros. Television whileKathleen Finch's U.S. Networks Group assumed oversight over the linear networks, effectively dissolving the unit.[48]
Logo used since 2023 | |
| Formerly | Warner Bros. Television Division (1961–1967) Warner Bros. Seven Arts Television (1967–1969) Warner Bros. Television Distribution (1970–1989) |
|---|---|
| Company type | Label |
| Industry | Television distribution Broadcast syndication |
| Predecessor | Sunset Productions (1955–1957) Seven Arts Associated Corp. (1960–1967) Lorimar-Telepictures (1986–1989) |
| Founded | 1961; 64 years ago (1961) inBurbank, California |
Area served | Worldwide |
| Parent | Warner Bros. Television Studios |
Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution (formerlyWarner Bros. Television Distribution) is the television distribution andbroadcast syndication arm of Warner Bros. Television Studios.
Established in 1961, the arm was originally known asWarner Bros. Television Division before taking on its current name in 1989 with the acquisition ofLorimar-Telepictures. In 1991,Keith Samples, who was employee of the studio left Warner Bros., of which the employment staff inherited from Lorimar, who had joined it in 1985, to start out a TV syndication companyRysher Entertainment.[49]
In 1999, it reached a deal withNBC Enterprises to pick up the off-net syndication rights to the sitcomWill & Grace.[50]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding to it.(November 2016) |
Warner Bros. International Television Production Australia (WBITPA) was founded in 2004 asEyeworks Australia before being rebranded in 2014.[51]
As Eyeworks Australia, shows produced includeCelebrity Splash,Being Lara Bingle,Gangs of Oz andTerritory Cops. Following the rebrand, WBITPA began producingThe Bachelor Australia from itsfourth season, spin-offsThe Bachelorette Australia from itssecond season[52] &Bachelor in Paradise, as well asFirst Dates, the eighth season ofWho Do You Think You Are?,[53] thesixteenth season ofDancing with the Stars andThe Masked Singer Australia.[54]
WBITVP New Zealand produces some of New Zealand's most successful entertainment shows includingRuPaul's Drag Race Down Under,The Bachelor NZ,The Bachelorette NZ,The Block NZ,Celebrity Treasure Island,Glow Up,House of Drag andThe Great Kiwi Bake Off.
The Spanish subsidiary was acquired as part of the Eyeworks takeover in 2014.[55] Eyeworks España was renamed Warner Bros. International Television Production España in December 2015.[55][56]
Shows produced by WBITVP España includeJuego de juegos [es], based onEllen's Game of Games;First Dates [es], based on the British show of thesame name;Pesadilla en la Cocina [es], based onRamsay's Kitchen Nightmares;¿Quién quiere ser millonario? (España) [es], based on the BritishWho Wants to Be a Millionaire?; andVen a cenar conmigo [es], based on the BritishCome Dine with Me.[57] Along withMediaset España andNetflix, the company also co-producedBrigada Costa del Sol.[58][59]
Warner Bros. Television Studios UK
Established asShed Productions in 1998, the company was acquired by Time Warner in 2010, before being rebranded as Warner Bros. Television Productions UK in 2015.
Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe
On April 7, 2021, it was announced that Cartoon Network Studios Europe had re-branded as Hanna-Barbera Studios Europe,[60][61][62] The Hanna-Barbera name had previously been revived on someWarner Bros. Animation series and films based on the classic franchises, includingScooby-Doo media, likeThe Jetsons & WWE: Robo-WrestleMania!, the 2017 reboot ofWacky Races, andYabba-Dabba Dinosaurs. Future plans for the studio have yet to be announced, however.[60] The first projects to be greenlit under the new name were anew series and a movie relating toThe Amazing World of Gumball.[63]
Notable shows produced and distributed by Warner Bros. Television includeWonder Woman,The Dukes of Hazzard,The Big Bang Theory,Young Sheldon,Two and a Half Men,Friends,The Middle, and many others.