News

Norman Lear, the legendary television producer who died Tuesday at 101, left behind a legacy that stretched beyond the dozens of television shows he developed during a seven-decade career.
Norman Lear, who was responsible for revolutionizing television in the 1970s with such groundbreaking hit series as All in the Family, Good Times, and One Day at a Time, has died. He was 101.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Norman Lear, the writer, director and producer who revolutionized prime time television with “All in the Family” and “Maude,” propelling political and social turmoil ...
Famed television producer Norman Lear, whose wildly successful TV sitcoms including “All in the Family” and “The Jeffersons” fused comedy with trenchant social commentary and dominated ...
The biggest people in the business wanted to be involved not because of the lure of TV karaoke, but because Kimmel kept Norman Lear front and center in the process, making sure the specials weren ...
“It was just a fluke that Norman found a new regime at CBS that was looking to make its mark,” says Jim Colucci, author of the 2021 book, “All in the Family: The Show That Changed Television.” ...
In creating “One of the Good Ones,” veteran comedy writer Calderón Kellett felt inspired not only by those voices and by the ...