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A rerun or repeat is a rebroadcast of an episode of a radio or television program. The two types of reruns are those that occur during a hiatus and those that occur when a program is syndicated.

Variations

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In the United Kingdom, the word "repeat" refers only to a single episode; "rerun" or "rerunning" is the preferred term for an entire series/season. A "repeat" is a single episode of a series that is broadcast outside its original timeslot on the same channel/network. The episode is usually the "repeat" of the scheduled episode that was broadcast in the original timeslot earlier the previous week. It allows viewers who were not able to watch the show in its timeslot to catch up before the next episode is broadcast. The term "rerun" can also be used in some respects as a synonym for "reprint", the equivalent term for print items; this is especially true for print items that are part of ongoing series such as comic strips. (Peanuts, for instance, has been in reruns since the retirement and death of creator Charles M. Schulz). In South Africa, reruns of the daily soap opera 7de Laan and others are called an omnibus. The omnibus is a weekly rerun that is broadcast on a Sunday afternoon on the original channel/network. It only broadcasts the past week's episodes back-to-back.

When used to refer to the rebroadcast of a single episode, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz are generally credited as the inventors of the rerun. It was first used for the American television series I Love Lucy (1951–57) during Ball's pregnancy. Prior to I Love Lucy rerunning its episodes during the summer, shows typically went on a summer hiatus and were replaced with summer replacements, generally lower-priority programs; this strategy has seen increased use in the 21st century as fewer episodes have been produced each season and in-season reruns have increased. Rod Serling's 1955 teleplay Patterns was credited with proving reruns' viability. Buoyed by strong word of mouth, the rerun of Patterns drew more viewers than the first run as people who had missed the first airing a month prior tuned in to catch the reairing.[1]

Reruns in the United States

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In the United States, most television shows from the late 1940s and early 1950s were performed live, and in many cases, they were never recorded. However, television networks in the United States began making kinescope recordings of shows broadcast live from the East Coast. This allowed the show to be broadcast later for the West Coast. These kinescopes, along with previously filmed shows, and later, videotape, paved the way for extensive reruns of syndicated television series.[2]

During hiatus

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In the United States, currently running shows can leave their regular timeslot, or rerun older episodes from the same season, either to fill the time slot with the same program on the same network, or in a slot outside its usual schedule during the "off-season" period when no new episodes are being made. Shows tend to start leaving slots or staying on to rerun episodes after the November sweeps period (the ratings that determine the cost of a commercial run during that time slot), and usually show only reruns from mid-December until mid-January or even February sweeps. This winter (or "mid-season") phase is also used to try out new shows that did not make it onto the fall schedule to see how they fare with the public. These series usually run six to 13 episodes. If they do well with the public, they may get a renewal for a half (13 weeks) or full season in the new schedule. Shows that are already popular return from February sweeps until the end of the season (which sometimes ends before May sweeps) with only limited absences or reruns used.

The number of episodes per season, originally well over 30 episodes during the 1950s and 1960s, dropped below 26 (the number of episodes required to fill a time slot for a year without rerunning any episode more than once) in the 1970s. Specials typically pad out the remainder of the schedule.[3]

Television specials

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Often, if a television special such as Peter Pan or a network television broadcast of a classic film such as The Wizard of Oz is especially well received, it will be rerun from time to time. Before the VCR era, this would be the only opportunity audiences had of seeing a program more than once.

Seasonal programming such as How the Grinch Stole Christmas, The Ten Commandments, It's A Wonderful Life, or the Charlie Brown television specials are normally reshown each year, for the appropriate holiday season.

Syndication

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A television program goes into syndication when many episodes of the program are sold as a package. Generally, the buyer is either a cable channel or an owner of local television stations. Often, programs are not particularly profitable until they are sold for syndication. Since local television stations often need to sell more commercial airtime than network affiliates, syndicated shows are usually edited to make room for extra commercials. Often, about 100 episodes (four to five seasons' worth) are required for a weekly series to be rerun in daily syndication (at least four times a week). Very popular series running more than four seasons may start daily reruns of the first seasons, while production and airings continue of the current season's episodes; until around the early 1980s, shows that aired in syndication while still in production had the reruns aired under an alternate name (or multiple alternate names, as was the case with Death Valley Days) to differentiate the reruns from the first-run episodes.

Few people anticipated the long life that a popular television series would eventually have in syndication, so most performers signed contracts that limited residual payments to about six repeats. After that, the actors received nothing and the production company would keep 100% of any income until the copyright expired; many shows did not even have their copyrights renewed and others were systematically destroyed, such was the lack of awareness of the potential for revenue from them. This situation went unchanged until the mid-1970s, when contracts for new shows extended residual payments for the performers, regardless of the number of reruns, while tape recycling effectively came to an end (rapid advancements in digital video in the 1990s made preservation far more economical) and the Copyright Act of 1976 extended copyright terms to much longer lengths, eliminating the need for renewal.

Once a series is no longer performing well enough to be sold in syndication, it may still remain in barter syndication, in which television stations are offered the program for free in exchange for a requirement to air additional advertisements (without compensation) bundled with the free program during other shows (barter syndication is far more common, if not the norm, in radio, where only the most popular programs charge rights fees). The Program Exchange was once the most prominent barter syndicator in United States television, offering mostly older series from numerous network libraries. Barter syndicated series may be seen on smaller, independent stations with small budgets or as short-term filler on larger stations; they tend not to be as widely syndicated as programs syndicated with a rights fee. Free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) relies on the barter model for its revenue.[4]

Classic television

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With the growing availability of cable and satellite television channels, as well as over-the-air digital subchannels, combined with a growing body of available postsyndication programming, a handful of specialty channels have been built solely or primarily to run former network programming, which otherwise would no longer be in syndication. Branded as "classic television", these often carry reruns of programming dating back to the black-and-white television era and are promoted as nostalgia. Depending on the programs chosen for a classic network, running the format can be very inexpensive, due to many shows beginning to fall into the public domain.

On cable and satellite, channels that devote at least some of their program schedule to postsyndication reruns include Nick at Nite, TV Land, TBS, USA Network, WGN America, Logo TV, Pop, Discovery Family, Game Show Network, Boomerang, Nicktoons, INSP, fetv, RFD-TV, and the Hallmark Channel. Equity Media Holdings had been using low-power television stations to carry its own Retro Television Network in various markets; those stations were, as a result of Equity going bankrupt, sold to religious broadcaster Daystar Television Network. Since the early 2010s, the growth of digital subchannel networks has allowed for increasing specialization of these classic networks: in addition to general-interest program networks such as MeTV, MeTV+, getTV, Antenna TV and Rewind TV, there exist networks solely for comedies (Catchy Comedy and Laff), game shows (Buzzr), ethnic-oriented programs (Bounce TV and TheGrio), lifestyle and reality programming (Story Television, TBD, TrueReal, Defy TV, Twist, and Quest), westerns (Grit, and Heroes & Icons), music programming (Circle), sports programming (Stadium and SportsGrid), sci-fi and action programming (Comet and Charge!), true crime and court programming (True Crime Network, Court TV, Ion Mystery, and Start TV), news programming (Newsy), and feature films (Movies!, and This TV).

Traditionally, shows most likely to be rerun in this manner are scripted comedies and dramas. Such shows are more likely to be considered evergreen content that can be rerun for a long period of time without losing its cultural relevance. Game shows, variety shows, Saturday morning cartoons, and to a lesser extent, news magazines, tabloid talk shows, and late-night talk shows (often in edited form) have been seen less commonly in reruns; game shows can quickly become dated because of inflation, while talk shows often draw humor from contemporary events. Tabloid talk shows, with episode archives of thousands of episodes, tend to do well in reruns compared to talk shows without an element of conflict.[5] Newsmagazines, especially those that focus on evergreen stories such as true crime, are easily repackaged for the syndication market, which (along with much lower residuals compared to a scripted series with star talent) can also make them cheaper than a first-run program or scripted reruns.[5] Most variants of reality television have proven to be a comparative failure in reruns, due to a number of factors (high cast turnover, loss of the element of surprise, overall hostility toward the format, and lack of media cross-promotion among them); some self-contained and personality-driven reality shows have been successfully rerun. Reruns of sports broadcasts, which face many of the same issues reality shows face, have found a niche on multichannel television and free ad-supported streaming television.

DVD retail

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With the rise of the DVD video format, box sets featuring season or series runs of television series have become an increasingly important retail item. Some view this development as a rising new idea in the industry of reruns as an increasingly major revenue source in themselves instead of the standard business model as a draw for audiences for advertising. While there were videotape releases of television series before DVD, the format's limited content capacity, large size and reliance on mechanical winding made it impractical as a widespread retail item. Many series (such as Modern Family and Grey's Anatomy) may release DVD sets of the prior season between the end of that season and the beginning of the next.

Some television programs that are released on DVD (particularly those that have been out of production for several years) may not have all of the seasons released, either due to poor overall sales or prohibitive costs for obtaining rights to music used in the program; one such incidence is Perfect Strangers, which has seldom been in wide syndication since the late 1990s primarily due to lack of demand, which had only a DVD set of the first and second seasons released due to the expensiveness of relicensing songs used in later seasons of the series that are performed by the show's two lead characters.[6] In some cases, series whose later season releases have been held up for these reasons may have the remaining seasons made available on DVD, often after a distributor that does not hold syndication rights to the program (such as Shout! Factory) secures the rights for future DVD releases.

TV listings

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TV Guide originally used the term "rerun" to designate rebroadcast programs but abruptly changed to "repeat" between April and May in 1971.

Other TV listings services and publications, including local newspapers, often indicated reruns as "(R)"; since the early 2000s, many listing services only provide a notation if an episode is new -"(N)", with reruns getting no notation.

Repeats internationally

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Reruns are often carried by Canadian broadcasters in much the same way as they are in the United States, especially on specialty television channels that rely largely on off-network or library rights to programs (and in many cases, may originate little to no first run programming of their own). Reruns of a broadcaster's own library programs are often used to comply with Canadian content regulations enforced by the CRTC, requiring that a minimum of the broadcaster's programming be dedicated to programming that is produced by Canadians.

In the United Kingdom, most drama and comedy series run for shorter seasons – typically six, seven, or thirteen episodes – and are then replaced by others. An exception is soap operas, which are either on all year-round (for example, EastEnders and Coronation Street), or are on for a season similar to the American format.

As in the U.S., fewer new episodes are made during the summer. Until recently, the BBC, ITV and Channel 4 commonly repeated classic shows from their archives, but this has more or less dried up in favor of newer (and cheaper) formats such as reality shows, except on the BBC, where older BBC shows, especially sitcoms, including Dad's Army and Fawlty Towers, are frequently repeated.

Syndication did not exist as such in United Kingdom until the arrival of satellite, cable, and later, from 1998 on, digital television, although many ITV programs up to the early 1990s, particularly imported programming, were syndicated in the sense that each ITV region bought some programs independently of the ITV Network, and in particular many programs out of primetime made by smaller ITV stations were "part-networked" where some regions would show them and others would not.[original research?] Nowadays, many channels in the UK (for example, Gold) repackage and rebroadcast "classic" programming from both sides of the Atlantic. Some of these channels, like their American counterparts, make commercial timing cuts; others get around this by running shows in longer time slots, and critics of timing cuts see no reason why all channels should not do the same.

It has been common practice by networks, notably the BBC, to rerun some series after they have not fared particularly well on their original run. This was particularly common with sitcoms such as The Office, which had very low ratings in its first series, as well as a poor reception from both critics and focus groups and was almost cancelled.[7] The series started to gain traction once the BBC decided to repeat it in a different timeslot and The Office went on to be an award-winning and critically acclaimed show which has regularly featured in lists of the Best Sitcoms ever. In 2019, the series was ranked 6th on The Guardian's list of the 100 best TV shows of the 21st century.[8]

Early on in the history of British television, agreements with the actors' union Equity and other trade bodies limited the number of times a single program could be broadcast, usually only twice, and these showings were limited to within a set time period such as five years. This was due to the unions' fear that the channels filling their schedules with repeats could put actors and other production staff out of work as fewer new shows would be made.[citation needed] It also had the unintentional side effect of causing many programs to be junked after their repeat rights had expired, as they were considered to be of no further use by the broadcasters. Although these agreements changed during the 1980s and beyond, it is still expensive to repeat archive television series on British terrestrial television, as new contracts have to be drawn up and payments made to the artists concerned. Repeats on multichannel television are cheaper, as are reshowings of newer programs covered by less strict repeat clauses. However, programs are no longer destroyed, as the historical and cultural reasons for keeping them have now been seen and the cost to maintain archives is now far less, even if the programs have little or no repeat value.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A rerun or repeat is a rebroadcast of an of a radio or television program. The two types of reruns are those that occur during a hiatus and those that occur when a program is syndicated.

Overview and Terminology

Definition

A rerun is the rebroadcast of a previously aired of a television or , distinguishing it from first-run content that is shown for the initial time. This practice relies on archived material already produced, allowing broadcasters to air content without incurring additional creation expenses. Reruns serve key purposes such as filling programming schedules during off-peak times or hiatuses and exposing the material to new audiences who missed the original broadcast. For a program to be rerun, the broadcasting network or station must hold the necessary ownership rights to the content, which are typically negotiated during initial production agreements. Performers and other talent are entitled to residuals—ongoing compensation payments—for these rebroadcasts, a right secured through union contracts with organizations like , which has negotiated such provisions since the mid-1950s to ensure fair remuneration beyond the original airing. These residuals are calculated based on factors including the type of reuse, such as syndication or network rebroadcasts, and are paid out periodically to cover the extended value of the work. Economically, reruns play a vital role by enabling broadcasters to generate from established content without the high costs associated with new production. Advertisers pay based on anticipated audience size, allowing networks to monetize popular shows repeatedly while minimizing and maintaining steady income streams. This model supports the overall viability of broadcast operations, particularly for filling airtime efficiently.

Variations in Usage

In , the term "repeat" is commonly used as a for rerun, particularly in to rebroadcast television or radio programs that have aired previously. This contrasts with , where "rerun" predominates for the same concept. In sports broadcasting, "replay" serves as a variant term, often denoting the rebroadcast of recorded events such as games or matches for review or entertainment, distinguishing it from the broader rerun of scripted content. For special events or performances, "encore" is employed to describe repeat airings, framing the rebroadcast as an additional or highlighted presentation rather than a standard repetition. Contextual variations in usage highlight distinctions across media types. Scripted television reruns typically involve full-episode rebroadcasts of series, allowing audiences to revisit complete story arcs, whereas news recaps focus on abbreviated summaries or highlight segments rather than integral rebroadcasts of entire bulletins. Live event rebroadcasts, such as concerts or awards shows, align more closely with reruns but emphasize archival or on-demand access to singular occurrences, differing from the episodic repetition in scripted formats. Within the television industry, specific terms delineate syndication practices involving reruns. "Strip syndication" refers to the daily airing of reruns in the same time slot across weekdays, optimizing viewer habit formation for off-network series. "Off-network syndication" describes the licensing of reruns from original network broadcasts to independent stations or secondary markets, enabling revenue generation post-initial run. The has evolved over time, with early print references often employing the hyphenated "re-run" to denote repeated broadcasts, particularly in mid-20th-century media discussions, before standardizing to the unhyphenated "rerun" in contemporary and industry usage.

Historical Development

Origins in Radio and Early TV

The origins of reruns trace back to in the 1920s and 1930s, when technical constraints made live repeats a necessity for reaching wider audiences. Lacking viable recording methods, networks like relied on simultaneous rebroadcasts via leased telephone lines from to transmit programs to affiliate stations across time zones, effectively creating "live repeats" for regional viewers. 's inaugural broadcast on November 15, 1926, exemplified this, airing over 19 stations from New York to Kansas City and marking the first major use of such infrastructure for national distribution. By the late 1930s, rudimentary electrical transcriptions—disc recordings of live shows—enabled limited delayed rebroadcasts, such as 's 1939 allowance for affiliates to air "" without requiring additional live performances. As radio evolved into television during the and early , reruns transitioned from live simulcasts to preserved replays, driven by emerging recording technologies. Early TV was predominantly live, but to accommodate differences, networks produced kinescopes—16mm or 35mm films shot directly from a television monitor—to facilitate delayed West Coast airings. This method, pioneered by RCA, debuted officially in June 1948 during NBC's coverage of the in , allowing the event to be rebroadcast three hours later on the Pacific coast. The 1951 premiere of "" on marked a pivotal shift, as producer insisted on filming episodes on high-quality 35mm stock instead of or , enabling crisp, reusable prints for and national replays from the outset. Episodes were first rerun in 1952 during the show's pregnancy storyline arc. These technological enablers laid the groundwork for sustainable reruns, with kinescopes providing the initial bridge from ephemerality to repeatability despite their grainy quality and high cost. The advent of magnetic videotape recording in the mid-1950s accelerated this, as Ampex's VRX-1000—demonstrated successfully in 1956—offered superior fidelity and editing flexibility compared to film, reducing production expenses and expanding rerun viability for live shows. By 1955, "" achieved a milestone as the first series routinely syndicated for reruns nationwide, capitalizing on these innovations to distribute episodes beyond their original air dates. Culturally, reruns faced initial viewer skepticism in the early , often perceived as lazy programming amid the novelty of live TV, but practical demands during summer off-seasons and strikes shifted perceptions toward appreciation for accessible favorites. This evolution from radio's ad-hoc repeats to TV's structured replays established reruns as a core element of broadcast and viewer habits.

Expansion in the Mid-20th Century

The post-war economic expansion in the fueled a surge in television production and syndication deals, transforming reruns into a lucrative for studios and networks. Productions, founded by and , exemplified this boom by selling syndication rights to episodes of to for $4.3 million in 1956, enabling the company to acquire the RKO Studios lot the following year. This deal highlighted how filmed series, shot on 35mm for higher quality and reusability, became assets for repeated airings beyond initial network runs, driving industry growth as television households proliferated across the . Labor unions played a pivotal role in institutionalizing fair compensation for reruns during this era, with the (SAG) advocating for residual payments to actors. Building on mid-1950s agreements for TV program syndication residuals, the concurrent 1960 SAG and WGA strikes secured landmark provisions including a 4% residual fee for television reruns and 1.2% of the license fee for theatrical motion pictures aired on TV, applying to productions made from 1960 onward (SAG's strike lasted about 84 days, ending April 18, while WGA's lasted 148 days). These formulas, tied to syndication and broadcast fees, established a precedent for ongoing payments per episode or airing, ensuring performers benefited from the expanding rerun market while addressing inequities from pre-1960 live broadcasts. The expansion extended globally as U.S. networks and studios exported popular series to international markets in the and , often adapting formats to local cultures and regulations. American shows like westerns and sitcoms traveled to and , where they influenced domestic programming; for instance, U.S. formats were licensed and modified for broadcasters in , sparking debates on cultural impact and import quotas. This trade solidified reruns as a tool for cultural dissemination and revenue generation beyond domestic audiences. Viewer data from the period underscored reruns' enduring appeal. This high retention supported networks' reliance on reruns to maintain ratings during off-seasons, contributing to their economic viability through the 1970s.

Practices in the United States

During Hiatus Periods

In the United States, broadcast networks traditionally schedule reruns to fill hiatus periods in , a practice rooted in the domestic production cycle where shows pause for 8-12 weeks during summer and holidays due to factors like elevated temperatures hindering outdoor shoots and seasonal dips in viewership. This approach emerged prominently in the mid-20th century as networks sought to retain time slots without incurring full production costs, with summer reruns becoming a staple by the to bridge the gap until fall premieres. For example, historical patterns show networks airing repeats of successful episodes from the prior season to sustain audience habits amid lower overall ratings. Network strategies for these reruns emphasize selecting high-rated episodes to optimize performance, often drawing from early-season installments to minimize disruption for ongoing narratives while maximizing familiarity for returning viewers. This curation helps avoid alienating audiences by steering clear of plot-heavy content that could reveal unresolved arcs, ensuring the repeats align with the show's established appeal. Economically, reruns provide substantial advantages, with costs roughly 75% lower than producing new episodes due to eliminated scriptwriting, filming, and expenses, enabling networks to allocate budgets more efficiently during off-peak times. Advertising rates for these slots generally range from 60-70% of primetime new-show levels—for instance, 30-second spots in popular rerun blocks like CBS's "" repeats command around $78,000, compared to $95,000-$118,000 for hits like "Survivor" or "The Voice." To enhance viewer engagement and loyalty, networks incorporate tactics such as themed marathons, grouping episodes around holidays or motifs to create event-like viewing experiences. Notable examples include Comedy Central's blocks of "" episodes from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. and FXX's late-night "" runs, which draw dedicated fans and boost retention without requiring fresh content. These strategies not only fill airtime but also reinforce brand affinity, distinguishing in-house hiatus reruns from broader syndication models by prioritizing continuity for the originating network's audience.

Syndication Models

Syndication of reruns in the United States primarily occurs through off-network models, where broadcasters license previously aired network programming for distribution to local stations and independent outlets, distinct from first-run syndication that involves newly produced content not originally tied to a broadcast network. Off-network syndication allows shows to generate substantial long-term revenue after their initial network run, often requiring a minimum of 80 to 100 episodes to facilitate daily stripping in syndication slots. A prominent example is Seinfeld, which has earned over $4 billion in off-network syndication revenue since entering the market in 1998, underscoring the financial longevity of successful sitcoms. Deal structures for off-network syndication commonly include barter arrangements, in which stations receive programming at no or reduced cash cost in exchange for a portion of the inventory, typically allocating about half the ad spots—such as 7 minutes out of 12 in a half-hour episode—to the syndicator for national while retaining the rest for local ads. Cash-plus-barter hybrids combine a direct paid by the station with shared ad time, balancing upfront for the syndicator with ongoing ad opportunities and reducing for stations in varying market sizes. In the and , market dynamics were shaped by major distributors like Viacom, which expanded from handling CBS library reruns—such as and —into a dominant force in both off-network and first-run syndication, capitalizing on regulatory changes like the FCC's relaxation of financial interest rules to build nationwide clearances. Viacom's strategies often targeted clearances in over 100 markets, covering the top designated market areas (DMAs) to achieve broad household reach, as exemplified by its 1988 distribution of reruns, which secured extensive station commitments for multi-season runs. Syndication revenue is fundamentally calculated using a basic formula: total fees approximate the product of episode count, average market rate per episode, and clearance percentage, where clearance percentage reflects the proportion of U.S. markets (typically 210 ) acquiring the rights, enabling syndicators to project earnings based on anticipated distribution breadth. For instance, a show with 100 episodes clearing 80% of markets at an average $500,000 per-episode fee across acquired stations could yield $40 million in baseline licensing , excluding ad components.

Classic Television Channels

Classic television channels in the United States represent a dedicated niche in cable and digital multicast , specializing in the continuous airing of archival reruns from past decades. These networks emerged to capitalize on for older programming, offering viewers a respite from contemporary content amid the fragmentation of modern television landscapes. By curating libraries of shows primarily from the through the , they provide 24/7 access to familiar series, often structured around themed blocks such as westerns, sitcoms, or family dramas to enhance viewer engagement. One of the earliest models influencing this format was , which launched on July 1, 1985, as a nighttime programming block on dedicated to family-oriented reruns like The Donna Reed Show and My Three Sons. This approach proved successful in attracting evening audiences seeking lighthearted, intergenerational viewing, paving the way for full-time channels. Building directly on this concept, debuted on April 29, 1996, as a standalone cable network initially focused exclusively on classic television, featuring series such as Bewitched, The Bob Newhart Show, and Route 66. MeTV, short for Memorable Entertainment Television, followed in 2010, launching nationally on December 15 via Weigel Broadcasting's digital subchannels and emphasizing uncut episodes of staples like The Andy Griffith Show, MASH*, and The Dick Van Dyke Show. These networks maintain rotations that prioritize complete seasons and episodes, with themed programming blocks—such as MeTV's "Svengoolie" for horror hosts or TV Land's early comedy marathons—to foster habitual viewing. The primary audience for these channels consists of viewers aged 50 and older, who represent a loyal demographic drawn to nostalgic content amid broader shifts toward streaming among younger groups. In the 2020s, has averaged around 620,000 primetime viewers, while reaches approximately 213,000, reflecting a stable but niche household base that values reliable, ad-supported access to heritage programming without subscription barriers. This older skew aligns with industry trends where traditional linear retains appeal for boomers and Gen Xers, who tune in for comfort viewing of shows evoking cultural touchstones. Operating these channels involves significant licensing hurdles due to the fragmented ownership of aging content, often split among studios, guilds, and , compounded by issues like expired music rights or outdated clearances. Networks typically secure multi-year deals for rerun rights, though costs can escalate for popular titles requiring negotiations with multiple stakeholders. These challenges necessitate careful curation to balance affordable acquisitions with viewer demand, ensuring economic viability through to the senior demographic.

Home Video Releases

The home video release of television reruns in the United States began with the format in the late and , allowing consumers to own episodes of classic series previously accessible only through syndication broadcasts. Early offerings focused on popular sci-fi and adventure shows, with Paramount Home Video releasing individual episodes and compilations of Star Trek: The Original Series starting in 1980, marking one of the first major TV franchises to enter the physical media market on tape. This era democratized access to reruns, as players became household staples by the mid-, enabling fans to build personal libraries of syndicated favorites without relying on erratic TV schedules. The transition to DVD in the late 1990s and early 2000s revolutionized rerun consumption, offering superior picture quality, multiple episodes per disc, and affordable box sets that bundled entire seasons or series. Studios like Warner Home Video and Paramount capitalized on nostalgia for classic TV, releasing comprehensive collections of shows such as The Twilight Zone and I Love Lucy beginning around 2000, which appealed to both original viewers and new audiences discovering reruns through cable channels. By the mid-2000s, DVD box sets had become a staple retail format, with full-series editions providing a tangible alternative to broadcast syndication. Market trends for TV rerun home video peaked during 2005-2010, driven by widespread DVD adoption and strong demand for catalog titles amid the decline of VHS. Overall U.S. DVD sales reached $16.3 billion in 2005, with television series contributing significantly through box set sales that accounted for a growing share of the home entertainment market. However, post-2010, physical media sales for TV shows declined sharply—down 16% in units by 2019—as streaming platforms eroded the market, though catalog reruns like sitcoms maintained steady niche sales. Production for home video releases often involved remastering original footage to enhance visual and audio quality, particularly for high-definition DVD and later Blu-ray editions. Studios scanned film-based elements or upconverted videotape sources, cleaning artifacts to suit modern displays, as seen in the 2006 remastered Star Trek: The Original Series DVD sets, which improved clarity over prior VHS versions. Unique to physical releases, these editions frequently included bonus features such as cast commentaries, deleted scenes, and production documentaries, adding value not always available in broadcast reruns—for instance, The Andy Griffith Show Blu-ray sets from 2012 onward featured episode guides and interviews exclusive to disc formats. Sales data highlights the commercial success of rerun box sets, with Friends: The Complete Series generating $66.3 million in domestic DVD and Blu-ray revenue through ongoing catalog sales as of 2024. Similarly, early DVD releases like the 2003 Friends: The Complete First Season sold 1.3 million units, underscoring the appeal of full-season collections for syndicated hits. These figures reflect broader trends where TV DVD sales peaked alongside theatrical tie-ins but tapered as digital alternatives rose.

Scheduling in Listings

In the United States, television guides have evolved from print formats to digital applications, consistently incorporating mechanisms to identify reruns and facilitate viewer navigation. TV Guide magazine, first published on April 3, 1953, pioneered comprehensive weekly listings that included notations for repeat episodes, often using symbols like "R" to denote reruns alongside brief episode descriptions or synopses. This approach allowed audiences to distinguish new content from repeats, supporting informed viewing choices in an era dominated by scheduled broadcasts. As print guides declined in the late 20th century, digital counterparts such as on-screen electronic program guides (EPGs) and mobile apps from providers like Comcast and DirecTV adopted similar conventions, integrating rerun flags, episode recaps, and metadata to enhance usability. Algorithmic scheduling in TV listings prioritizes reruns for off-peak time slots to optimize channel lineups and audience retention. Broadcasters and guide providers employ data-driven algorithms to place repeats in less competitive periods, such as daytime hours, where they form the bulk of programming to fill airtime economically while maintaining viewer engagement. For instance, Nielsen data indicates that relies heavily on syndicated reruns to sustain viewership during non-prime periods, though exact proportions vary by network and season. This placement strategy ensures reruns serve as reliable fillers, bridging gaps between original content and appealing to habitual viewers seeking familiar programming. Viewer tools for identifying reruns advanced significantly with the introduction of on-screen EPGs in the , transforming passive listings into interactive interfaces. Early systems like , launched in 1994, displayed program details including repeat indicators, allowing users to filter or avoid reruns via navigation. By the late , EPGs from cable and satellite providers incorporated episode-specific metadata, such as airdate comparisons or labels like "repeat," enabling features that supported sequential viewing akin to early forms of on linear TV. These tools not only improved schedule transparency but also empowered audiences to curate their experience, reducing frustration from unexpected repeats. Studies from the highlight the navigational role of rerun listings in enhancing overall series awareness and engagement. Licensed rerun content on platforms like accounted for 80% of U.S. streaming views in 2017, driving new subscriptions and boosting linear TV ratings for ongoing series by exposing audiences to prior episodes. For example, availability of "Riverdale" reruns on contributed to its 2017 premiere achieving record-breaking ratings, demonstrating how guide-accessible repeats amplify cultural familiarity and encourage continued viewership. This integration in listings has proven essential for sustaining long-term series popularity amid fragmented media consumption.

International Practices

Europe

In Europe, television reruns are typically termed "repeats" in the and "rediffusions" in French-speaking countries such as . These practices differ from U.S. syndication models, where episodes are often resold to independent stations for off-network , by emphasizing in-house repetitions on originating or affiliated channels to comply with cultural protection policies and fill schedules. European regulations, particularly the Audiovisual Media Services Directive (AVMSD), mandate that broadcasters ensure a majority of transmission time—where practicable—is dedicated to European works, fostering reliance on local reruns over imported content. In 2023, this resulted in European productions accounting for 51% of all films and audiovisual content broadcast on EU television, compared to 40% from the , with public channels showing even higher proportions of national works to meet quotas and promote . The directive's emphasis on independent European productions (at least 50% of total European content) further incentivizes rediffusions of domestic classics, as seen in where channels routinely replay series like Une famille formidable and to prioritize French narratives amid linguistic fragmentation across member states. A seminal example is the BBC's early repeats of , which began in the late 1960s as a cost-effective way to re-engage audiences with British science fiction amid limited archival resources; the first complete serial rerun, , aired in 1968, setting a precedent for periodic revivals that preserved the show's cultural status. In the commercial sector, the UK's ITV has syndicated episodes through omnibus formats since the 1990s, allowing weekend compilations that historically comprised up to 17-30% of networked output amid budget constraints to sustain viewership for the long-running soap. Germany's public broadcaster ARD exemplifies market-specific adaptations, integrating reruns into its schedule in the 2020s to fulfill mandates for educational and regional content, particularly documentaries and series that reinforce under the AVMSD framework. This regulatory-cultural interplay ensures reruns serve not only economic efficiency but also the EU's goal of safeguarding diverse linguistic traditions, with coproductions circulating more widely than purely national works to balance local promotion and cross-border appeal.

Asia and Australia

In Asia, rerun strategies are characterized by high-volume repetition of popular content to capitalize on cultural familiarity and broad audience reach in diverse markets. In , long-running anime series exemplify this approach, with shows like —which debuted on in 1979—continuing to air new episodes alongside extensive reruns, amassing over 900 episodes and maintaining solid ratings through repeated primetime and daytime slots. This model supports a programming landscape where reruns form a substantial portion of broadcast schedules, driven by domestic production strengths and viewer loyalty to established franchises. Similarly, in , state broadcaster employs ad-supported repeats across its channels, leveraging its vast reach to generate revenue; alone covers approximately 82% of the population as of 2025. These repeats, including classic dramas and variety shows, contribute to CCTV's model, where commercial income supports operations amid a competitive media environment. Cultural adaptation plays a key role in Asia's rerun ecosystem, particularly with imported content. In , dubbed or subtitled U.S. sitcoms like Friends have become staples on cable channels such as , where reruns filled significant programming slots and built a massive following among urban audiences. The show's enduring popularity is evident in its status as the most-watched English-language series on Indian TV, with reruns on networks like garnering 2.08 million impressions in the first half of 2016 alone, reflecting how Western imports localize to occupy a notable share of non-Hindi cable airtime. This strategy addresses the demand for aspirational, light-hearted content in a market dominated by programming, allowing channels to sustain viewership without heavy investment in originals. In Australia, rerun practices emphasize archival preservation and multichannels to engage nostalgic viewers. The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) maintains archival blocks through initiatives like RetroFocus, which resurfaces classic programs from its extensive collection, including historical documentaries and dramas, to educate and entertain contemporary audiences. For commercial examples, long-running soap —originally on Network Ten—saw repeats of episodes from the 1988–1991 era aired daily between 2000 and 2003, later extending to Seven Network's channel in the 2010s for classic episode marathons that filled daytime and evening slots. These models highlight Australia's blend of public-service archiving and commercial syndication, where repeats preserve while boosting ratings on secondary channels. Economic incentives are clear, as ad-supported reruns on platforms like 7TWO sustain profitability in a fragmented market, contrasting with stricter European quotas by prioritizing viewer-driven localization.

Other Regions

In , rerun practices for form a core part of programming strategies on networks like , where successful series are cycled in subsequent airings to maintain viewer engagement and cost efficiency. For example, the popular telenovela La Reina del Sur, which premiered in 2011, has been structured as a "super series" with seasonal returns, allowing for repeated broadcasts that halve the continuous output while enabling annual reruns. In , public broadcasters such as the South African Broadcasting Corporation () heavily rely on replays of local soap operas to fill schedules amid constraints on original content production, with a substantial share consisting of soap operas and dramas, reflecting the genre's dominance in viewership—nearly 40% of overall television consumption—despite limited new episodes. In the , the Middle East Broadcasting Center (MBC) has long incorporated reruns of Arabic-dubbed U.S. shows into its lineup, a practice that began in the 1990s following the network's 1991 launch. MBC pioneered dubbing for American series like during this period, adapting content for regional audiences, while later efforts included a culturally modified version of in 2005, which aired on MBC1 and featured ongoing reruns. Across these regions, piracy presents major challenges to official rerun revenues in developing markets, with piracy penetration surpassing 40% in and contributing to billions in lost income for content distributors. Similar high piracy rates—averaging 63% in parts of and the —further erode broadcaster earnings from repeats by diverting audiences to unauthorized streams and downloads.

Modern Adaptations

Streaming and On-Demand

Since the , digital streaming platforms have revolutionized the consumption of television reruns by enabling non-linear, on-demand access to entire seasons of classic series, shifting away from scheduled broadcasts to viewer-controlled . This model allows audiences to revisit older content at their convenience, fostering deeper engagement with legacy programming. Platforms like have led this transformation by acquiring rights to full catalogs of popular shows, making reruns a cornerstone of their libraries and driving subscriber retention through nostalgic viewing. A key aspect of this evolution is the full-series drop strategy, where platforms release all episodes of a rerun series simultaneously for immediate binge access, contrasting with traditional episodic syndication. Netflix exemplified this approach with its licensing of "The Office," which garnered over 57 billion minutes of U.S. viewing time in 2020 alone, far surpassing any other streamed title that year and highlighting the appeal of unrestricted rerun marathons. Such drops not only capitalize on the enduring popularity of sitcoms and dramas but also encourage prolonged sessions, with viewers often completing multiple seasons in days. Licensing practices for streaming reruns have undergone significant changes, moving from long-term perpetual deals to more flexible short-term agreements that prioritize exclusivity and platform-specific windows. Perpetual licenses grant indefinite access but tie up capital, while short-term exclusives allow studios to rotate content across services for maximized revenue; for instance, Netflix's 2019 renewal for "Friends" cost $100 million for one year, equating to roughly $425,000 per episode across its 236 installments. These deals often exceed $100,000 per episode for high-demand exclusives, reflecting the premium placed on reruns that anchor viewer habits and justify subscription fees. Viewer behavior on these platforms increasingly favors older content, with accounting for a substantial portion of session time as audiences seek comfort in familiar narratives. By the first half of 2025, 37% of U.S. streaming viewing time on major services was dedicated to series launched over a decade earlier, up from 32% in 2023, underscoring reruns' role in daily habits amid content overload. This trend is amplified by features like autoplay, which sustain engagement by seamlessly queuing subsequent episodes of rerun seasons. On a global scale, recommendation algorithms personalize rerun suggestions based on viewing history, preferences, and cultural trends, significantly enhancing accessibility and retention for international audiences. These AI-driven systems boost viewer retention by 10-20% through tailored feeds that surface relevant older content, such as localizing "" equivalents or nostalgia-driven revivals, thereby increasing overall platform stickiness by up to 25% in diverse markets.

Impact of Digital Distribution

The advent of has profoundly reshaped the economics of television reruns, with linear TV experiencing a marked decline in viewership and reach. Since 2014, linear TV networks have lost 35% of their overall reach, a trend that continued into 2025, where broadcast TV accounted for just 18.5% of total viewing while linear TV's share fell below 50% as early as 2023. This downturn, driven by —where cable and satellite TV usage dropped from 76% of U.S. adults in 2015 to 56% by 2021—has reduced demand for traditional rerun slots on broadcast and cable channels. However, this decline has been partially offset by streaming residuals, which provide ongoing payments to creators and performers based on digital views; for instance, SAG-AFTRA's 2023 streaming bonus agreement is projected to generate up to $40 million annually in additional residuals for by enhancing compensation tied to streaming performance. Culturally, digital platforms have enabled fan-driven revivals of canceled series, breathing new life into rerun content that might otherwise fade. A prime example is , which ended its original Fox run in 2006 but gained a devoted following through DVD sales and online sharing; this grassroots enthusiasm prompted to revive the show in 2013 with a fourth season of 15 episodes, allowing fans to binge-watch and rediscover the series' satirical humor. Such revivals highlight how democratizes access, fostering communities that sustain interest in older episodes long after initial airings. In terms of industry metrics, now dominates TV , with streaming services capturing a growing portion of revenues as traditional pay TV's share of video subscriptions shrinks from 66% in 2021 to an estimated 36.1% by 2027. By 2025, approximately 90% of U.S. video subscriptions were for streaming apps, contributing to overall TV revenues where digital formats, including on-demand reruns, accounted for over 60% of the market through subscriptions and ads. AI-powered content recommendation systems further amplify this impact by personalizing suggestions for rerun episodes, enhancing viewer engagement on platforms like and ; these algorithms analyze habits to surface niche or archival content, boosting retention and without relying on linear scheduling. Looking ahead, future trends in digital rerun distribution include experimental pilots for NFT-based of episodes, allowing fans to purchase unique digital tied to specific content for collectible or resale value. These initiatives, building on earlier media projects like Fox Entertainment's 2021 $100 million NFT investment for interactive TV experiences, emerged in 2024 pilots aimed at redefining viewer in streaming ecosystems. Such innovations could further decentralize rerun economics, though their long-term viability remains tied to broader adoption in entertainment.

References

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