Forty-five years after Norman Lear’s One Day at a Time premiered on CBS, the Once Day at a Time reboot is debuting there, marking Lear’s return to the network where he was a staple in the 1970s.
The Season 4 broadcast run, which kicks off October 5 with back-to-back episodes over three weeks, was part of the deal ViacomCBS sibling Pop TV made last year to rescue the praised family sitcom after its cancellation by Netflix. Odaat, a reimagining of the classic Lear sitcom with a Latino family, was going to be a likely summer fare for the broadcast network, but the pandemic-related production shutdown delayed the 2020-21 broadcast series and the comedy found its way to the fall schedule. (The timing proved fortuitous as star Justina Machado has been bringing attention to the comedy series’ upcoming CBS run with her strong showing on Dancing With the Stars.)
The pandemic...
The Season 4 broadcast run, which kicks off October 5 with back-to-back episodes over three weeks, was part of the deal ViacomCBS sibling Pop TV made last year to rescue the praised family sitcom after its cancellation by Netflix. Odaat, a reimagining of the classic Lear sitcom with a Latino family, was going to be a likely summer fare for the broadcast network, but the pandemic-related production shutdown delayed the 2020-21 broadcast series and the comedy found its way to the fall schedule. (The timing proved fortuitous as star Justina Machado has been bringing attention to the comedy series’ upcoming CBS run with her strong showing on Dancing With the Stars.)
The pandemic...
- 9/29/2020
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
Pop TV had a huge Emmys breakthrough thanks to “Schitt’s Creek,” which is nominated 15 times this year including Best Comedy Series. So it was ironic on Wednesday night, September 16, when Cheryl Campsmith (“One Day at a Time”) claimed Best Multi-Camera Picture Editing for a Comedy Series at the Creative Arts Awards; since “Schitt” hasn’t won any of its nominations yet, that makes “One Day” the first Pop TV series to win an Emmy.
SEECreative Arts Emmys Night #3: Watch our live post-show debating Wednesday’s winners and losers [Video]
“One Day” actually aired on Netflix for its first three seasons before being cancelled by the streaming service. After an outcry from fans of the show, Pop TV picked it up for a fourth season, which aired six episodes this past spring, plus one animated installment. That was all the show was able to produce before the Covid-19 pandemic shut down productions across the TV industry,...
SEECreative Arts Emmys Night #3: Watch our live post-show debating Wednesday’s winners and losers [Video]
“One Day” actually aired on Netflix for its first three seasons before being cancelled by the streaming service. After an outcry from fans of the show, Pop TV picked it up for a fourth season, which aired six episodes this past spring, plus one animated installment. That was all the show was able to produce before the Covid-19 pandemic shut down productions across the TV industry,...
- 9/17/2020
- by Daniel Montgomery
- Gold Derby
The third round of Creative Arts Emmy Awards were handed out on Wednesday, honoring winners in scripted categories including cinematography, hairstyling, costumes and visual effects.
Disney+ was the night’s big winner, picking up five awards for the first season of “The Mandalorian,” for visual effects, cinematography, production design and sound editing and mixing. Other winners included HBO’s “Watchmen,” Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” Netflix’s “Stranger Things” and CBS All Access’ “Star Trek: Picard.”
Hosted by “Nailed It’s” Nicole Byer, Wednesday’s ceremony was the third of four online Creative Arts Emmys ceremonies this week, which will be followed by a fifth live broadcast on Fxx on Saturday. The week will culminate in the Primetime Emmy Awards broadcast on ABC this Sunday, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel.
See the list of Wednesday’s winners below and see the reality and nonfiction winners from Monday night here, and the...
Disney+ was the night’s big winner, picking up five awards for the first season of “The Mandalorian,” for visual effects, cinematography, production design and sound editing and mixing. Other winners included HBO’s “Watchmen,” Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” Netflix’s “Stranger Things” and CBS All Access’ “Star Trek: Picard.”
Hosted by “Nailed It’s” Nicole Byer, Wednesday’s ceremony was the third of four online Creative Arts Emmys ceremonies this week, which will be followed by a fifth live broadcast on Fxx on Saturday. The week will culminate in the Primetime Emmy Awards broadcast on ABC this Sunday, hosted by Jimmy Kimmel.
See the list of Wednesday’s winners below and see the reality and nonfiction winners from Monday night here, and the...
- 9/17/2020
- by Reid Nakamura
- The Wrap
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