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- The Program Exchange - Wikipedia
In 1997, The Program Exchange secured the syndication rights to the first 65 episodes of the original English dub of Sailor Moon A year later, it helped DiC broadcast the remaining 17 episodes on Cartoon Network 's programming block Toonami
- The Program Exchange - Audiovisual Identity Database
Seen on 1980s syndicated prints of Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, and The Abbott and Costello Show, as well as the 1986 Dennis the Menace cartoon, including 2007 broadcasts on Boomerang
- Bewitched | Broadcast Syndication Wiki | Fandom
Then Darrin finds out that his new bride is one of a secret society of powerful witches and warlocks and that a twitch of her nose brings magic results Thoroughly befuddled, Darrin makes her promise never to use her powers She agrees and tries to settle into being the perfect suburban housewife
- Bewitched - The TV IV
Bewitched is a situational comedy featuring a man, Darrin Stephens, who is married to a witch, Samatha Stephens It was one of many series which transitioned from black white (seasons 1-2) into color with great success
- Ashmont Productions Columbia Pictures Television The Program Exchange . . .
From the end of a 1996 TBS airing to Bewitched
- Columbia Pictures Television Distribution The Program Exchange Logo . . .
Columbia Pictures Television Distribution The Program Exchange Logo 1993-1995
- Bewitched (Television Series) - Guide to Value, Marks, History . . .
Screen Gems Columbia Pictures did syndication from 1973 to 1982, DFS Syndication from 1981 to about 1991 (only the color episodes), and since 1993 by Columbia TriStar Television
- Columbia Pictures Television - Dreamverse Wiki
On November 5, 1990, CPE folded its first-run syndication unit Guber-Peters Television into Columbia Pictures Television Distribution On August 7, 1991, CPE changed its name to CBS Pictures Entertainment and TriStar Television was relaunched on October 10
- Columbia Pictures Television - fortunecity
The words "Columbia Pictures" appear on either side of the torch lady, the word "Television" underneath, and underneath that, either "A Unit of The Coca-Cola Company" (with Coca-Cola in their logo font) or sometimes nothing at all The woman's torch "shines" after the music ends
- The Program Exchange Explained
Instead of paying a cash fee, television stations who ran those programs agreed to a barter exchange (hence the syndicator name), wherein the station agreed to air a certain number of commercials for various General Mills products per program
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