PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • TV Guide
rdfs:comment
  • Published from 1948 to 1988, TV Guide was a magazine dedicated to transvestites. In its early years, it boasted a subscription base of over 100,000, but, as transsexuals became more popular than transvestites, the magazine's popularity gradually declined until it ceased publication. The last issue appeared in June, 1988.
  • TV Guide was a magazine publication from 20th century Earth. Clare Raymond enjoyed the simple crossword puzzles that could be found in the TV Guide. (DTI novel: Watching the Clock)
  • TV Guide is the first episode of the animated series TV-Guy. It aired on SPEED on August 14 at 9:00 pm and August 14 on Nickelodeon Family. The episode was rated TV-14-DLV for dialogue, language, and violence.
  • __NOEDITSECTION__ TV Guide is a company that provides a listing of television shows, according to time and date. The company has produced, in the past, multiple different Star Wars covers, each featuring different characters from the Star Wars universe, or different events and actors related to the Star Wars saga. These covers have been made from the start of Star Wars until the present, and continue to do so.
  • The Muppets have made many appearances in TV Guide over the years, on covers and in articles. TV Guide has lent its name to the TV Guide Awards, the first of which featured an appearance by Big Bird, Roscoe Orman, and Ruth Buzzi, and the TV Guide Network, which has had Muppet, Jim Henson Company, and Sesame Street segments on its programs Hollywood 411, inFANity, and POPSUGAR Now. TV Guide's online series "Cubicle Confessions" has featured Cookie Monster, Abby Caddaby, and Kermit the Frog. Citations are of the US publication of the magazine, except where noted.
  • From its founding in the early 1950s until the 1980s, TV Guide was the most popular magazine in the United States, and appeared every week about Thursday, and would carry content for the following Saturday through Friday. Its primary focus was carrying local TV station listings. It started out as a split format, with approximately 15-30 slick magazine-type pages created by the national office in Radnor, Pennsylvania (later moving to King of Prussia), which formed the outside "shell" of the magazine. The inner portion consisted of local content, mostly TV listings for the local stations, printed on newsprint. The local content was created by about 20 local offices all over the U.S.
  • TV Guide is an American magazine about television. It is referenced in The Cigar Store Indian, in which Elaine's subplot for the episode revolves aroud TV Guide. Jerry suggests that she takes Frank's copy of TV Guide to use as reading material on a subway ride home from George's parents' house. While reading it on the subway, she is bothered by obsessive Ricky, who finds it unusual that a woman is reading TV Guide so far from a television. When she gets off the subway train to escape, she leaves the magazine behind. Later, Ricky tracks her back to the Costanza home by using the mailing address on the magazine.
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dbkwik:all-the-tropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:fiction-foundry/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:memory-alpha/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:memory-beta/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:muppet/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Day
  • 14
Month
  • August
Episode
  • TV Guide
Pre Ep
  • N/A
Nex Ep
  • Burning Love
Writers
  • That Guy in the Hat
Year
  • 2015
abstract
  • From its founding in the early 1950s until the 1980s, TV Guide was the most popular magazine in the United States, and appeared every week about Thursday, and would carry content for the following Saturday through Friday. Its primary focus was carrying local TV station listings. It started out as a split format, with approximately 15-30 slick magazine-type pages created by the national office in Radnor, Pennsylvania (later moving to King of Prussia), which formed the outside "shell" of the magazine. The inner portion consisted of local content, mostly TV listings for the local stations, printed on newsprint. The local content was created by about 20 local offices all over the U.S. In the 1980s, TV Guide was sold to Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, which proceeded to discontinue the TV station listings and turn the magazine into more of a general publicity rag, similar to People or a half-dozen other magazines already out. TV Guide was sold to Gemstar Corporation, inventor of the VCR Plus device that allowed people who couldn't figure out how, to program a VCR. However it was pretty much only bought in order to put a known brand behind their ubiquitous software seen on every cable and satellite guide, and to control patents for basic guide interfaces (such as the grid) which forced other guide providers to use other forms of presentation which are incredibly inconvenient, or like TiVo and Dish Network did, pay Gemstar and paste a TV Guide logo on the screen for the right to use the grid interface. (The software is now owned by Rovi Corporation.) TV Guide basically exists now as a cable/satellite channel carrying on-screen listings with some fluff shows on Hollywood and infomercials, while the magazine was cut down to a singular national edition in 2005 which is filled with fluff pieces and lists, along with TV listings which make those in the Great Falls Argus look comprehensive. Meanwhile the end of 2008 saw a disastrous divorce of the magazine/cable network's website and the magazine itself; TV Guide Channel and TV Guide.com were sold to Lionsgate, while TV Guide was sold to a private equity group for $1, forcing the two entities apart onto two separate websites in a true What an Idiot! move. After basically nobody visited the magazine's website (mainly because there were no TV listings on it to speak of), Lionsgate eventually let the magazine put their site back on TV Guide.com in June 2010 as a conciliatory move. TV Guide, a production fairly typical of banal lowest-common-denominator TV listings magazines around the world (Great Britain also has its fair share) was responsible for the utter destruction of the original Jump the Shark website. Having bought out the JTS website, TV Guide stripped the guts out of it and removed everything that made it compulsive reading. For one thing, JTS, like tv tropes, had genuine international appeal. For instance, British shows not screened in the USA could be debated and deconstructed. TV Guide wrecked this aspect by stripping out the international content and retaining only a fraction of what there had once been, which was exclusively tied to current American shows. (And they wonder why Americans in the main are so parochial and inward-looking...) This act of wanton vandalism towards a genuinely great, original and readable website will always be remembered, even if it cannot easily be forgiven. The final word on TV Guide is that, in Family Guy, Peter Griffin identifies it as his favourite magazine... Homer Simpson also regards it as indispensible intellectual literature. Says it all, really...
  • Published from 1948 to 1988, TV Guide was a magazine dedicated to transvestites. In its early years, it boasted a subscription base of over 100,000, but, as transsexuals became more popular than transvestites, the magazine's popularity gradually declined until it ceased publication. The last issue appeared in June, 1988.
  • TV Guide was a magazine publication from 20th century Earth. Clare Raymond enjoyed the simple crossword puzzles that could be found in the TV Guide. (DTI novel: Watching the Clock)
  • TV Guide is an American magazine about television. It is referenced in The Cigar Store Indian, in which Elaine's subplot for the episode revolves aroud TV Guide. Jerry suggests that she takes Frank's copy of TV Guide to use as reading material on a subway ride home from George's parents' house. While reading it on the subway, she is bothered by obsessive Ricky, who finds it unusual that a woman is reading TV Guide so far from a television. When she gets off the subway train to escape, she leaves the magazine behind. Later, Ricky tracks her back to the Costanza home by using the mailing address on the magazine. As well as being referred to in Seinfeld, the magazine has frequently mentioned the show through the years. Not just in the listings section: in 2002, they ranked Seinfeld #1 on their list of the 50 Greatest shows of all time.
  • TV Guide is the first episode of the animated series TV-Guy. It aired on SPEED on August 14 at 9:00 pm and August 14 on Nickelodeon Family. The episode was rated TV-14-DLV for dialogue, language, and violence.
  • The Muppets have made many appearances in TV Guide over the years, on covers and in articles. TV Guide has lent its name to the TV Guide Awards, the first of which featured an appearance by Big Bird, Roscoe Orman, and Ruth Buzzi, and the TV Guide Network, which has had Muppet, Jim Henson Company, and Sesame Street segments on its programs Hollywood 411, inFANity, and POPSUGAR Now. TV Guide's online series "Cubicle Confessions" has featured Cookie Monster, Abby Caddaby, and Kermit the Frog. A few episodes of Dinosaurs, including "Baby Talk," "Network Genius," and "Wilderness Weekend," spoof the magazine as TV Guide Book. Citations are of the US publication of the magazine, except where noted.
  • __NOEDITSECTION__ TV Guide is a company that provides a listing of television shows, according to time and date. The company has produced, in the past, multiple different Star Wars covers, each featuring different characters from the Star Wars universe, or different events and actors related to the Star Wars saga. These covers have been made from the start of Star Wars until the present, and continue to do so.
is Publisher of