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This is a list of television series that were produced, distributed, or owned by Warner Bros. Discovery's brands, including Warner Bros. Television Studios, Warner Bros. Animation, Hanna-Barbera, Warner Horizon Television, Warner Horizon Unscripted Television, Telepictures, HBO, TBS, TNT Originals, TruTV, CNN, Cartoon Network, Discovery Channel, and several predecessor companies.
Pages in category "Television series by Warner Bros. Television Studios" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 874 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The following is a list of programs [1] broadcast by The WB.Some programs were carried over to The CW, a network formed through a partnership between WB parent company Time Warner and UPN corporate parent CBS Corporation, in September 2006 following the closure of The WB.
Wonder Woman (Lynda Carter) in the 1975–1979 television series, Wonder Woman. For four years, from 1967 to 1971, the company's lone output was the existing television series The F.B.I., by 1970, several of the former talent from 20th Century-Fox Television as well as former agent writers was defected to Warner Bros., such as Paul Monash, Rod Amateau, Bill Idelson and Harvey Miller, Saul ...
The first installment of the Harry Potter TV series is targeted to hit the Max streaming service in 2026, Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav said on the company’s Q4 earnings call Friday.
Warner Bros. Family Entertainment 24 3-South: Mark Hentemann: 2002–2003 MTV: MTV Animation Hentermann Films First adult animated television series from Warner Bros. Animation. Rights owned by Paramount Global (via MTV Entertainment Studios). 25 Teen Titans: Glen Murakami Sam Register David Slack: 2003–2006 Cartoon Network Warner Bros ...
A “300” TV series adaptation is in early development at Warner Bros. Television, Variety has learned from sources. Exact plot details are still being worked out, but sources say that the show ...
“The Goonies’ never say die” is a memorable catchphrase from that fan favorite 1980s film. But it could also describe Warner Bros. TV’s recent strategic efforts to keep some of its series ...