Television websites

Channel 101 is a monthly event in Los Angeles run by Dan Harmon and Rob Schrab (the creators and writers of Heat Vision and Jack) where participants submit a TV show pilot (under five minutes in length). ...more on Wikipedia about "Channel 101"

Channel 102 is a monthly live screening of five-minute-long TV shows in New York City, created by Tony Carnevale, with the blessings of Dan Harmon and Rob Schrab. Harmon and Schrab created the Los Angeles-based show that inspired Channel 102, aptly named Channel 101. ...more on Wikipedia about "Channel 102"

iCraveTV was a Canadian website, which operated from 1999 to 2000. The site offered streaming Internet broadcasts of the conventional television stations, both Canadian and American, that were available as over-the-air signals in Toronto. ...more on Wikipedia about "ICraveTV"

Media Spy (established 2002) is an online discussion forum dedicated to analysis and critique of the Australian media industry. ...more on Wikipedia about "Media Spy"

Retro Junk is a website with information about movies, TV shows, and commercials from the 1970s through the 1990s. Its slogan is "Your memory machine!" ...more on Wikipedia about "Retro Junk"

Television Without Pity (often abbreviated TWoP) is a website that provides detailed recaps of certain television dramas and reality TV shows, often by mocking them, as well as forums in which members can discuss myriad television related topics. The site began by recapping the television show Dawson's Creek and was originally called Dawson's Wrap; later it broadened its scope and changed names to Mighty Big TV before settling on the current moniker. The site is notable for popularizing usage of the word " snark" to describe its typical style of sarcastic review. Their official motto is "Spare the snark, spoil the networks," a takeoff on "spare the rod, spoil the child." ...more on Wikipedia about "Television Without Pity"

TV Acres is a website collecting information about characters, places, and things that have appeared on American television programs broadcast from the 1940s through today. ...more on Wikipedia about "TV Acres"

TV Cream is a British television nostalgia site which originally appeared as The Arkhive in 1997, before adopting its current name the following year. The site, founded by Phil Norman, mainly consists of highly opinionated reviews of hundreds of programmes shown on British television (but not necessarily made in the UK), mainly during the 1970s and 1980s, though some earlier and later shows are also featured. In addition, the site features a selection of nostalgia-based articles relating to other areas of popular culture, such as pop music, film, comics, and so on. It also runs occasional polls, but openly admits that the votes cast are largely ignored with the "results" being made up by the site writers. Though it predates TV nostalgia shows such as "I Love the 70s" and "Hundred Greatest", the site has a similar tone and appeal, and the main contributors have been known to appear on retrospective shows themselves. ...more on Wikipedia about "TV Cream"

The TV IV ( tviv.org ) is a website devoted to informational guides for television shows and the people involved in their production. As it is a wiki, it is entirely dependent on user contributions. The TV IV runs the MediaWiki software, but has disabled anonymous editing and has licensed the content under the Creative Commons license (cc-by-2.5). It was started by people from the Something Awful forums, who were unhappy with what TV Tome turned into after its acquisition by CNET. It is one of the largest wikis on the web. ...more on Wikipedia about "TV IV"

TV Tome was a US based website devoted to informational guides for English-language television shows and the people involved in their production. It was run mainly by volunteer editors, with the assistance of user contributions. ...more on Wikipedia about "TV Tome"

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