In Anglophone territories (the
United Kingdom,
United States,
Canada, and
Australia),
talk show (hosted by a single personality, or a larger panel, such as
The View and
Loose Women) are a significant part of this timeslot, as well as, to a lesser extent,
game show and
soap opera. In the U.S., the
Big Three television networks all provide some degree of daytime programming, but the once-popular genre of soap operas have declined; although a few remain active, they have been largely replaced by less-expensive programming such as talk shows (including
GMA3: What You Need To Know,
The Talk, and
Today with Hoda & Jenna, which fill timeslots once filled by
One Life to Live,
As the World Turns, and
Passions respectively, with two of them serving officially as extensions of their networks' respective morning shows). Game shows were also common in U.S. daytime lineups, but by the 1990s, only CBS's long-running
The Price Is Right remained (which was later joined in 2009 by a revival of ''
Let's Make a Deal, which replaced the cancelled soap Guiding Light). Daytime game shows are still relatively popular in the United Kingdom: the long-running Countdown'' has been a fixture of
Channel 4's daytime schedule since the network's launch in 1982, and was also the first program aired by the channel. In the U.S.,
syndicated programming is most common during the daytime hours on broadcast stations, such as news-based programs (often dealing with entertainment news and gossip), talk shows (including personality-based programs, lifestyle-oriented programs, or
tabloid talk shows with a focus on
sensationalism and controversial subjects) hosted by a single personality or a larger panel, as well as
court shows, game shows, and syndicated
reruns of popular
sitcoms and dramas. Notable syndicated daytime programs in the U.S. have included
The Ellen DeGeneres Show,
The Steve Wilkos Show,
Dr. Phil,
Judge Judy,
Live with Kelly and Mark,
Maury,
The Wendy Williams Show,
The Oprah Winfrey Show, ''
America's Court with Judge Ross, & The Kelly Clarkson Show''. In Canada, daytime lineups on the major commercial networks are nearly identical in programming to their American counterparts (and often include network and syndicated daytime programs from the U.S., with timeslots adjusted by market to allow the invocation of
simsub rights), although they typically schedule at least one original lifestyle or talk show (such as
The Marilyn Denis Show and
The Social on
CTV Television Network,
CityLine on Citytv, and
The Morning Show on Global), or reruns of other library programs, to help comply with
Canadian content quotas.
CBC Television devotes its morning schedule to children's educational programming, while the remainder is typically devoted to reruns of other CBC programs, and imported programs from the UK and Australia (the network's most recent attempt at a daytime lifestyle show,
The Goods, was cancelled in 2018). Although it had done so in the past, CBC no longer carries syndicated American programming. Local newscasts may also air during the daytime period, typically featuring continuing coverage of events that had occurred since the morning news, and
"soft" stories on entertainment headlines, lifestyle topics, and local events. Some stations may produce daytime talk shows that are built around
advertorials
brokered by local businesses. Meanwhile,
news channels usually program rolling news coverage with anchors, where a set schedule of stories is followed (as opposed to evening and prime time, which typically focus on opinion-driven programs hosted by
pundits), but can be interrupted at any time for breaking news stories and other live events.
Business day similarly falls within the daytime hours for channels devoted to business news, whose audience is concentrated towards out-of-home viewers. Children's television networks usually use the 9a.m.–3p.m. timeslot before children of school age return home to air
preschool programming for young viewers, while
PBS member stations might either carry exclusively children's programming, instructional programming to be taped for later use, or other library content. Other basic cable networks generally rerun episodes of their current prime time programming, often in
marathon blocks; stations that devote much of their programming to acquired reruns may also follow this strategy, or use the daytime slot to
burn off a contract for a less popular program (in this sense, daytime can be seen, much like the overnight, to be a
graveyard slot that is wasteful to program with high-budget content). Daytime lineups on sports-oriented networks are typically devoted to studio programs with news, analysis, and discussion of sports-related topics (in the United States, some of these programs are
simulcast from syndicated
sports talk radio shows), but may also feature reruns of recent or "classic" events, lesser-viewed and niche events, or other original programming. It is not uncommon for live events to occur domestically during the daytime hours — particularly for events taking place in the prime time hours of other regions (such as the Asia-Pacific in Europe, and Europe in North America), or domestic play in outdoor sports such as
baseball,
cricket,
golf, and
tennis. While occasionally encountered on weekdays, this is especially true on weekends, when broadcasts of
association football (soccer) and
American football are a pervasive fixture of weekend television in the autumn months (with European football fixtures often airing in the morning and early afternoon in North America, U.S.
college football typically playing on Saturday afternoons, and the professional
NFL on Sunday afternoons). The
Philippines has the
noontime variety show, a format largely unique to that country. == See also ==