Network variety and entertainment programming Other late night programs on broadcast and cable television break the standard format. In October 1975, after the network decided to discontinue its Saturday reruns of
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson per Carson's request to instead air reruns periodically during the week to decrease his production workload, NBC replaced the weekend
Tonight reruns with a new comedy-variety series, ''
NBC's Saturday Night (permanently retitled Saturday Night Live'' beginning with its
third season); the 90-minute program, which continues to air and has remained a staple of NBC's Saturday lineup even after the network (and its broadcast competitors) ceased producing original scripted prime time programming on that night in the mid-2000s, primarily features sketches performed by a repertory cast of comedians (referred to in its early seasons as the "Not Ready for Prime Time Players") and a celebrity guest host (who also performs a monologue following the opening sketch and title sequence) as well as live performances from a featured musical act. (Occasionally, the episode's musical guest also serves as the guest host.) The program inspired other sketch comedy-focused variety series, including a handful that aired in late night, such as
Fridays (developed in 1980 as ABC's answer to
SNL with a nearly identical format) and
MADtv (which served as a partial direct competitor to
SNL throughout its initial 1995–2010 run and was Fox's longest-running late night program to date). During the 1970s and 1980s, CBS filled its late-night period with dramatic programming, primarily under the
CBS Late Movie banner (which debuted in February 1972 as a replacement for
The Merv Griffin Show following its return to syndication). Although the time slot did, indeed, feature movies, it also featured a mixture of previously broadcast dramas dating back to the 1960s (such as
The Avengers,
The Prisoner and
Kojak) as well as first-run series (such as British imports
Return of the Saint and
The New Avengers). The
CBS Late Movie block was eventually restructured as
CBS Late Night in September 1985 (later revived in October 1989 following the cancellation of
The Pat Sajak Show, which had replaced the block eight months earlier), featuring reruns of CBS series, imported and first-run programs. CBS incorporated more conventional first-run fare (such as
Sajak and dating game show
Personals) into its late night lineup between 1989 and 1992, though, outside of sketch comedy
The Kids in the Hall (added as a Friday offering in September 1992, following a three-year, pay-cable run on HBO), most were unsuccessful against their competition on NBC and ABC, consistent with CBS's general underperformance in that timeslot from the 1970s through the early 1990s. The block was supplanted in March 1991 by
Crimetime After Primetime, a rotating collection of original crime drama series (including several Canadian-originated productions) that lasted until the
Late Show with David Letterman premiered in September 1993. Networks have also run music programs in the time period, including NBC's
The Midnight Special (which featured contemporary music performances conducted on a soundstage) and
Friday Night Videos (which originally was formatted as a
music video showcase, before evolving in 1991 into a variety program, eventually renamed
Friday Night, featuring live music performances; celebrity interviews;
stand-up comedy performances;
movie reviews; viewer polls and comedy sketches, and finally to an exclusive stand-up comedy showcase format as
Late Friday in 2000), and ABC's
In Concert (which featured pre-recorded concert performances from various established and up-and-coming music acts). NBC took a different approach to programming the overnight slot in September 1998; replacing the late newscast
NBC Nightside, "NBC All Night" showcased repeats of selected late night, daytime and news programs. Episodes of
The Tonight Show and
Late Night from the previous week and weekly 90-minute classic episodes of
Saturday Night Live (which followed the show's recent episodes in many markets) were prominent parts of the block, though rebroadcasts of
Meet the Press (same-day),
Dateline (up to one month behind) and even the daytime
soap opera Sunset Beach (also on a same-day basis until the series ended in December 1999) were also featured. The "All Night" banner was retired in 2008 as repeats of NBC late-night shows were gradually replaced over the next few years by
Poker After Dark (which was later canceled after its
sponsor was ensnared in a
bank fraud and money laundering case), a Saturday overnight block of lifestyle programs produced by sister company
LXTV and, in the early 2010s, weeknight rebroadcasts of the
fourth hour of
Today (which follows a daytime talk format) and the
CNBC financial program
Mad Money. (In addition to the Sunday/early Monday
Meet the Press replay and the Saturday LXTV block, NBC currently supplies weeknight rebroadcasts of the NBC News Now streaming newscast
Top Story with Tom Llamas and, for stations that carry the syndicated talk show,
The Kelly Clarkson Show to its affiliates during the early overnight slot.) Among American Spanish-language media, three of the four major broadcast networks—
Univision, Telemundo and Estrella TV—typically begin their late night programming with an hour-long network newscast that is separated into two half-hour programs (the first half, usually a rebroadcast of their flagship early-evening newscast, is preempted by local news on many stations, while the second half is treated as the main late broadcast); UniMás, the other major Spanish-language network, does not carry news programming in any form (despite sharing ownership with sister network Univision's in-house
news division). Other than Estrella TV (which airs paid programming for the rest of the night), the late night and overnight dayparts on the major Spanish-language networks are otherwise filled by reruns of
telenovelas and other entertainment programs (Telemundo, in particular, airs same-night repeats of its prime time serials on weeknights), movies or infomercials (both latter formats air on Telemundo and UniMás, with movies being limited to weekends on those two networks).
Sports news/talk programs—often prominently covering
soccer with supplemental coverage of other domestic sports, and serving as counterparts to
ESPN's
SportsCenter and local sports "wrap-up" shows that follow late-evening weekend newscasts on many stations—have also been produced for the late night slot on the major Spanish networks, including
Contacto Deportivo ("Contact Sports"; Telefutura/UniMás, 2002–2019; Univision, 2015–present),
Titulares Telemundo ("Telemundo Headlines"; Telemundo, 1999–2019) and its spinoff
Titulares y Mas: Zona Mixta ("Headlines and More: Mix Zone"; Telemundo, 2005–present).
News National newsmagazines and late-night newscasts ABC's
Nightline has long been an exception to the networks' "comedy/variety" formula. Debuting in March 1980 (although it traces its roots to a series of half-hour special reports on the
Iran hostage crisis that began in November 1979), the nightly half-hour newsmagazine originally aired immediately after local newscasts on ABC's
owned and affiliated stations for its first 32 years, before being pushed to a later slot in January 2013, when it switched timeslots with the hour-long
Jimmy Kimmel Live!. Under original anchor
Ted Koppel,
Nightline (which was based out of
Washington, D.C. throughout his tenure) maintained a single-topic format, featuring live interviews related to the subject discussed in the main story segment. Following Koppel's 2005 retirement, the program began employing multiple anchors (first consisting of
Martin Bashir and
Cynthia McFadden in New York City, and
Terry Moran in Washington); began featuring two or three topics per broadcast (similar to the format attempted during its short-lived expansion to a one-hour broadcast in 1983); and incorporated pop culture-related pieces alongside stories on current news events, interviews and investigative features. (Episodes focusing on a single topic continue to air occasionally; the program's anchors—which, since 2013, are based entirely out of New York—have since been assigned to rotating duties each night.) The program inspired CBS to create the similarly formatted
America Tonight, debuting in October 1990, as a direct competitor to
Nightline. Despite employing a top-tier slate of anchors that included
Dan Rather (then anchor of the
CBS Evening News),
Charles Kuralt (then host of
CBS News Sunday Morning) and
Lesley Stahl (who also served as a correspondent for
60 Minutes),
America Tonight failed to make a dent against
Nightline and NBC rival
The Tonight Show, resulting in its cancellation after only six months in March 1991. Predating the debut of
Nightline, ABC and CBS each offered late-night newscasts in the form of abbreviated, 15-minute weekend broadcasts. Fed to affiliates starting at 11:00 p.m. ET, the
ABC News Weekend Report (debuting in 1965 as the
ABC Weekend News, and airing on Saturday and Sunday nights) and the
CBS Sunday Night News (debuting in 1963) were usually shown immediately following local late-evening newscasts on their owned and affiliated stations; however, some stations opted to air them as filler programming leading into their regular sign-off period. Declining interest from affiliates (stemming in part from the presence of 24-hour cable news channels such as
CNN) and low viewership (mainly resulting from fewer affiliates airing them in their intended late fringe timeslots) resulted in both networks discontinuing their weekend late newscasts during the 1990s: ABC's
Weekend Report ended in September 1991, while CBS's
Sunday Night News aired its final broadcast in September 1997. The three major English-language networks have also ventured into overnight newscasts that air after the traditional late night schedules; airing as a continuous feed of looping 60- to 90-minute-long blocks (intended for affiliates to air in repeated fashion until their next designated broadcast day begins), stations typically preempt some portion of the rolling broadcasts to air local, acquired or paid programming following the network late night shows. NBC premiered the first overnight network news effort in July 1982 with
NBC News Overnight, an hour-long program that mixed
hard news features with incisive topical commentary and light-hearted feature stories; it aired for 18 months until high production costs and limited ad revenue led to the show being discontinued in December 1983. CBS followed in October 1982 with
CBS News Nightwatch, which maintained a hybrid traditional newscast and interview/debate format (and, for its first two years, allowed affiliates to include local news updates during the program). More conventional overnight network newscasts debuted in the early 1990s to fill airtime on major network affiliates that had adopted or were planning to adopt 24-hour program schedules to compete with increased late-night offerings on cable television and more specifically
CNN, which was lauded for its round-the-clock coverage of the
Gulf War in early 1991. During the
1991–92 television season, the "Big Three" networks each premiered their own overnight newscasts:
NBC Nightside (debuting in November 1991 as a production of the
Charlotte-based NBC News Channel affiliate video service, and the only overnight network newscast ever to air seven nights a week), ABC's
World News Now (debuting in January 1992 as a more conventional newscast, which soon evolved into a more laid-back format, mixing serious news with features and some ad-libbed and intentional humor), and CBS's
Up to the Minute (debuting in March 1992 as a replacement for
Nightwatch, consisting of a mix of hard news, weather and sports segments as well as feature reports originated on the
CBS Evening News and
CBS News Sunday Morning). Many stations, including some Big Three affiliates, also filled overnight timeslots with syndicated rolling news blocks from CNN Headline News (until its evening and overnight rolling news blocks were replaced with talk shows in 2005) and
All News Channel (until its closure in September 2002)—either in conjunction with or in place of late-night network newscasts—during the 1990s and much of the 2000s. (Headline News (now
HLN and maintaining a
true crime-focused entertainment format) had been syndicating its newscasts to local stations for broadcast in various timeslots since its January 1982 launch.)
Overnight News was replaced in May 2024 by
CBS News Roundup, a more conventional broadcast produced by co-owned streaming network
CBS News 24/7 (which partially simulcasts the program and airs the loop feed one hour before it is made available to local CBS stations) incorporating reports filed by correspondents from CBS News and local CBS-owned stations. Most of the major Spanish-language networks have also offered conventional news programming in the late fringe slot. Univision debuted an 11:30 p.m. ET edition of its flagship news program
Noticiero Univision—titled for most of its history as
Noticiero Univision: Edición Nocturna ("
Univision News: Late Edition"), and currently the longest-running network late news show on American Spanish-language television—in September 1989; the half-hour preceding the newscast's late edition was occupied from 1998 to 2019 by
Primer Impacto Extra, a condensed half-hour version of the late afternoon tabloid newsmagazine
Primer Impacto ("
First Impact"), and since September 2019 by a rebroadcast of
Noticiero Univisions main 6:30 p.m. ET broadcast. Telemundo, which previously offered a late-night newscast from 1987 to 2011, resumed national news programming in the slot in March 2020; initially conceived as a specialized half-hour newscast focusing on the
COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on the country's Hispanic/Latino community, the one-hour news block utilizes the same structure as Univision's late news format (a rebroadcast of the main early-evening edition of
Noticias Telemundo in the first half-hour and a live late edition in the second half-hour). Estrella TV has long had a one-hour jump on Univision and Telemundo in airing its flagship late-evening newscast,
Cierre de Edición ("
Final Edition"), in the final half-hour of prime time (10:30 p.m. ET), from the network's launch in September 2009 until September 2024; it would follow its rivals' lead with its own late fringe news offering in January 2022, debuting an hour-long block of its secondary newscast
24 Horas ("
24 Hours")—which originated on co-owned streaming news channel Estrella News—as a companion broadcast to
Cierre de Edición, utilizing the same part-taped/part-live structure as Univision and Telemundo's late newscasts. Both newscasts—the latter having eliminated its weekend editions by that time—were moved up by a half-hour to form an hour-long, late-primetime news block in September 2024.
Local news Late-night local newscasts are traditionally broadcast at 11:00 p.m. ET/PT (10:00 p.m. in all other time zones) on most CBS, NBC and ABC stations, and various other network and independent stations (including O&Os and some affiliates of Fox,
The CW, Univision and Telemundo). Originally lasting typically for 15 (until the 1960s) and later 30 minutes (although some non-Big Three stations presently air theirs at that length), the 35-minute late news format became the industry norm starting with NBC's move of
The Tonight Show to 11:35 p.m. ET/PT in September 1991, which allowed stations to use the five extra minutes of local airtime to run more story packages and commercials. Other large- and mid-market independents (such as WNEW's New York-area rivals
WPIX and
WWOR-TV;
KTTV,
KTLA and
KCOP-TV in Los Angeles;
WGN-TV in Chicago; and
WTCN-TV and
KMSP-TV in Minneapolis–St. Paul) launched their own newscasts in the 10:00/9:00 hour through the 1970s and 1980s, although the concept gained momentum during Fox's expansion in the early 1990s as the network pushed its stations to offer local newscasts and
aligned with several former ABC, CBS and NBC affiliates. Local newscasts airing in the slot usually provide newer top stories and follow-ups of stories from earlier that day;
breaking news stories occurring prior to airtime; in-depth feature segments (such as
investigative and
human-interest reports; stories focusing on
criminal justice, socioeconomic and government issues; and occasional interviews); special coverage of local and national elections when held; national and international news (usually reserved for notable headlines or presented as a general summary, though longer-form prime time newscasts tend to cover them in more detail); weather reports with an emphasis on next-day forecasts; and highlights of the day's sporting events. On some stations, the newscast may run a 10- or 11-minute "non-stop" first segment (slightly longer than those shown during newscasts aired in other dayparts) and, on Sunday nights (though some air them as weekend-only or nightly shows), may be followed by an extended sportscast—often structured as a separate "sports extra" program, some of which focus mainly on football and baseball action—providing game recaps, sports news headlines and commentary. Since they commonly air at the start of the
watershed slot, late-night newscasts have more editorial freedom to cover stories of a more violent, profane or sexual nature compared to those in earlier timeslots. The idiom "
film at 11" comes from the now-archaic term once used to close
promotions for the upcoming newscast that are shown during prime time programs, promising shots from a breaking story during the 11:00 p.m. newscast; the phrase—dating to when news footage was shot on film and had to be transported back to the station to be edited before broadcast—has since been substituted by similar idioms like "story at 11" or "details at 11" as the advent of
videotape and later
digital video, and technological advances in
remote broadcasting saw these become the chosen mediums for packaging televised reports more efficiently and instantaneously. Local news programs have also aired in the overnight slot in various formats; between the 1960s and the mid-1980s, many stations carried "sign-off edition" newscasts of varying length—usually running between five and 15 minutes (sometimes lasting up to a half-hour, as was the case with Chicago independent WGN-TV's
Nightbeat, which followed the station's early late-night movie presentations from 1958 to 1983)—that provided brief summaries of local (and more prominently), national and international headlines, sports scores and a short- to medium-range weather forecast (often presented using slides and narrated by a station announcer). Independent stations
WFLD/Chicago and KTTV/Los Angeles (now both Fox O&Os) experimented with
teletext to serve a similar purpose in the early 1980s; notably, WFLD utilized the KeyFax service (partially owned by then-WFLD parent
Field Enterprises) for its teletext news service
Nite-Owl, which aired until the resumption of regular programming each day from 1981 to 1982, when Keyfax began an attempt to reposition itself as a two-way information service that ended in 1986. Since then, at least four other stations have offered live newscasts past the traditional late news slot: ABC affiliate
KSTP-TV/Minneapolis–St. Paul (which ran an overnight news block, featuring rotating half-hours of live locally produced newscasts and All News Channel simulcasts, from March 1990 to October 1994), Fox affiliates
WXIX-TV/
Cincinnati (which ran a half-hour midnight newscast from its news department's October 1993 launch until September 1995) and
KTVI/
St. Louis (which launched an 11:00 p.m. newscast, the first to regularly air on a Central Time Zone station, in January 2016), and CW affiliate
KWGN-TV/
Denver (which also aired an 11:00 p.m. newscast, the first to regularly air on a Mountain Time Zone station, from September 2016 to July 2021). Beginning in the early 1980s, many stations (mainly major network affiliates) offered rebroadcasts of their late-evening newscasts, intended primarily for the convenience of late-shift workers who were not awake hours earlier for the broadcast's initial airing, and in many cases, acting as replacements for the "sign-off edition" broadcasts. (During
severe weather situations, live cut-ins are sometimes inserted in place of weather segments from the initial broadcast to provide updates on active storms.) Late-night news rebroadcasts declined in prevalence during the 2000s (partly due to local news websites, including station-managed sites, and
cable news channels filling their intended purpose), being replaced by syndicated programs, extended feeds of overnight network newscasts and infomercials; in 2021 however, NBC's decision to turn over the 1:35 a.m. ET timeslot (which the network had begun regularly programming since the now-defunct
Later premiered in August 1988) to its stations following the cancellation of
A Little Late with Lilly Singh allowed some affiliates—including those that previously abandoned the practice—to offer late news rebroadcasts in the vacated slot as a lead-out to network late-night programs. Stations that employed the "24-Hour News Source" concept (which incorporated hourly newsbriefs throughout the broadcast day into the local advertising allotments of syndicated, network and non-news local shows) during the 1990s also produced live or prerecorded overnight updates, often employing on-duty production staff assigned to their local morning newscasts in lieu of station daytime and evening talent that would normally conduct the segments.
Local and syndicated programming American television stations have used the late-night timeslot to feature syndicated programming designed for the time period, such as late-night talk shows intended to compete with their network counterparts and series (such as
dating game shows) that incorporate more mature material; however, the daypart has also acted as a de facto "death slot" for syndicated programs that either were placed there involuntarily due to low ratings in their original daytime slots, a lack of room on their station's schedule to fit them in an appropriate timeslot where the program would otherwise benefit from a higher available audience, or to fill time that would otherwise be taken up by infomercials or reruns of current and past network shows (including
sitcoms and
drama series) distributed in off-network syndication. Up through the 2000s, first-run syndicated programs most commonly seen in the overnight period consisted of daytime talk shows and game shows being
burned off due to low ratings. Certain syndicated
tabloid talk shows (such as
Jerry Springer,
The Steve Wilkos Show,
Jenny Jones and
The Morton Downey Jr. Show) have also aired in late night—most either in their primary or secondary daily runs—because of their adult content. Some stations—most prevalent when
King World (since absorbed into what is now
CBS Media Ventures) began offering carrier stations of
The Oprah Winfrey Show the option of running late-night rebroadcasts of the show in 2001—have also offered same-day reruns of talk shows already carried in daytime slots (such as
Katie,
The Kelly Clarkson Show and
The Jennifer Hudson Show) to reach audiences unable to watch them in their primary timeslot. (Incidentally, ABC's first late-night effort,
The Les Crane Show, was the first program to follow the format known today as the "daytime talk show".) Talk shows had been satirized on late night television—including in syndication—long before shows like
The Larry Sanders Show,
Space Ghost Coast to Coast and
The Colbert Report gained acclaim amongst audiences for their takes on the format. The first television talk show satire, the
Norman Lear-created syndicated comedy
Fernwood 2 Night (1977), itself a spin-off of the satirical soap opera
Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (1976–77), starred
Martin Mull and
Fred Willard in an irony-laden parody of late-night talk shows and locally produced fare found on
midwestern American television at the time; the fictional
show-within-a-show was retooled in-universe for its continuation series,
America 2-Night (1978), changing it from a local
Ohio program to a national show set in
Southern California, making it more plausible for real-life celebrities to appear as themselves. The weekly syndicated late-night comedy
Night Stand with Dick Dietrick (1995–97) parodied the tabloid talk format—which had reached its zenith in syndication during the late 1980s and 1990s with shows like
Downey,
Springer,
Geraldo, and in its early years,
Oprah—with the titular dimwitted host character (
Timothy Stack, who also co-created the series) presiding over a fictional talk show that mocked the oft-exploitative and sensationalized nature of the format. A brief influx of
game shows began to fill the late night airwaves in the mid-to-late-1980s (such as
Tom Kennedy's
nighttime Price Is Right,
The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime, the syndicated version of
Sale of the Century, the
Bill Rafferty-hosted version of
Card Sharks, and
High Rollers), virtually all of which were cancelled after one season due to low ratings exacerbated by undesirable scheduling or declining station clearances. These shows were intended for
prime time access slots but by that time, as game shows were saturating the syndication market,
Wheel of Fortune and
Jeopardy! (as well as magazine shows like
PM Magazine and especially towards the end of the decade,
Entertainment Tonight) had already cornered the access timeslot. From 1984 to 2007, the syndicated
George Michael Sports Machine—produced out of and hosted by the
titular then-sports director at Washington NBC O&O
WRC-TV—featured highlights of sports events held before its initial Sunday late access airtime (where it was a staple of the time period) and interview-based feature segments; the program was syndicated by various distributors throughout its run (culminating in NBC Enterprises (now
NBCUniversal Syndication Studios) assuming syndication rights in 2001), commonly airing as a lead-out to (and in later years, being displaced to later timeslots, if not dropped entirely, by) local sports news shows that followed Sunday night newscasts, primarily on NBC stations, in many markets. During the 1990s and early 2000s, the dating game show also often filled late night slots in syndication. Two of the earliest successes were
Love Connection (1983–94, 1998–99), which incorporated elements of the video dating concept popularized in the 1980s and featured contestants discussing the date they went on; and
Studs (1991–93), a "question-and-answer" format that relied more heavily on sexual
innuendo and
double entendres. The dating game shows that debuted from 1998 onward (among them
Blind Date,
The 5th Wheel and
ElimiDate) were known for often pushing the boundaries of sexually suggestive content on broadcast television, and therefore usually aired in late night on the vast majority of their carrier stations. Though the genre largely died off from syndication in 2006 (partly due to effects from tighter content restrictions enforced by syndicators after the
Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy), it saw a resurgence in 2011 with the debuts of the elimination-style
Excused and
Who Wants to Date a Comedian?, followed by the 2012 sale of the
Game Show Network series
Baggage into syndication; this would prove to be short-lived, as all three shows would exit the syndication market in September 2013. The expansion of the
entertainment news genre in syndication (influenced by genre pioneer
Entertainment Tonight and beginning in earnest with the September 1993 premiere of
Extra) starting in the early 1990s has also resulted in many first-run tabloid and infotainment programs (such as
Access Hollywood and
The Insider) occupying late night slots; while this is often because of a lack of available space in early access or prime access dayparts, some programs (like
ET) offer an optional same-day rebroadcast—usually incorporating updated material to account for story developments that broke after or production errors that occurred during the initial broadcast feed—in a secondary late night slot.
Preemptions and deferences of network and syndicated programs Network programs preempted by their owned and affiliated stations in favor of an irregularly scheduled special event, special programming of local interest (such as coaches' and team highlight shows shown during the prime access hour in markets with major sports teams),
breaking news or severe weather coverage are typically rescheduled in overnight timeslots—often but not always during the same broadcast day—to fulfill their contractual programming obligations. Because of the genre's daily format and continuity structure, preempted episodes of daytime
soap operas are typically rebroadcast the night of their airdate to allow viewers to catch up on storylines before the next episode. (Despite the 21st century proliferation of subscription
streaming services such as
Hulu,
Paramount+ and
Peacock, and network-run apps and
video on demand services that enable network shows subjected to local preemption to be viewed at a later time, the rescheduling option continues as a means to allow viewers that either do not have access to those services or are unable to view recent episodes until as late as eight days after their initial airing due to network restrictions on day-after-air releases on VOD or streaming platforms to be able to record them for later viewing.) In some cases, higher-profile syndicated programs (such as
Jeopardy! and
Wheel of Fortune) displaced from their regular daytime or early fringe slots for similar reasons have also been rescheduled in the overnight slot for the same purpose, allowing their carrier stations to fulfill obligations to air the program without penalty to the syndicator. Conversely, following its September 2009 conversion from a broadcast network to a syndication service, some affiliates of
MyNetworkTV have pushed its schedule to late night or overnights full-time to make room for syndicated or local news programs in the service's normal two-hour weeknight prime time slot.
Movies Movies, particularly films sold for the syndication market, have been a regular staple of late night programming since the 1950s. Until the late 1980s, many television stations offered nightly presentations of theatrical films in late night; during their respective heights,
made-for-television films originally shown on network prime time television (beginning in the 1980s up through the early 2000s) and
direct-to-video films (during the 1990s and 2000s) were sometimes featured in syndicated movie packages, especially those presented during the slot. Major network affiliates (mainly CBS and ABC stations) usually scheduled these presentations after the conclusion of their late local newscasts or following syndicated or, if cleared wholly or in part, network late-night offerings; NBC—whose affiliates did not have as much leeway to air movies until deeper into the night, if they signed off later or not at all, due to the presence of its late-night talk and variety block led by
The Tonight Show and
Saturday Night Live—syndicated a weekly movie package to its owned-and-operated stations and selected affiliates, the
NBC Late Night Movie, which aired on Sunday nights following their late local newscasts from 1977 to 1984. Stations that offered 24-hour programming in some capacity (either on weekends only or throughout the week) as early as the late 1970s often aired multiple films well into the overnight hours. Many public television stations (like
WYIN/
Gary, Indiana, the
Oklahoma Educational Television Authority (OETA),
KCET/Los Angeles and
WNET/
Newark–New York City) have long aired packages of older mainstream theatrical films—syndicated mainly by
American Public Television—on weekends (usually Saturday nights) in late prime time and late night; these presentations, however, are regularly suspended during
pledge drives held two to four times per year in favor of health and financial advice, and music specials normally shown in place of regular programming (except in daytime slots reserved for children's programming) during pledge periods. One popular late night format found particularly among local stations has been the "
midnight movie", showcases of low-budget genre films (particularly
fantasy,
sci-fi and
horror movies) that typically aired on Friday or Saturday nights, often featuring comedy skits and
sardonic commentary bookending the films, which has its origins in the 1954–55 film showcase
The Vampira Show that aired on Los Angeles ABC owned-and-operated station
KABC-TV. Some of the better-known late night hosted movie series have included
Svengoolie in the Chicago market (
WFLD, 1970–73 and 1979–86;
WCIU-TV, 1994–present),
Off Beat Cinema in
Buffalo, New York (
WKBW-TV, 1993–2012;
WBBZ-TV, 2012–present), ''
Big Chuck and Lil' John in Cleveland (WJW, 1979–2007), the Creature Double Feature in Boston (WLVI, 1972–83) and Philadelphia (WKBS-TV, 1976–79), and Elvira's Movie Macabre in Los Angeles (KHJ-TV (now KCAL-TV), 1981–86). (Of those mentioned, Svengoolie
(since April 2011 on MeTV) and Off Beat Cinema
(since 2008 on Retro TV) have also been distributed nationally.) Though traditionally found in late-night slots, some broadcasters have aired "midnight movie" packages—like Movie Macabre
and the current incarnation of Svengoolie
—in weekend prime time, sometimes accompanied by another genre film—whether broken up by late-evening news or not, making the second presentation a literal midnight movie—resulting in unique virtual double bills (such as Dr. Heckyl & Mr. Hype
and The Night Evelyn Came Out of the Grave on Movie Macabre''). Horror-themed late-night movie presentations largely disappeared from many broadcast stations by the 2000s, though
B movies (mostly of a
melodramatic nature) have continued to run in post–primetime slots. By the 1990s, late-night movie presentations (and syndicated film packages in general) were primarily offered by Fox affiliates and independent stations (including those that would become affiliates of
The WB and
UPN as early as 1995), usually during the overnight graveyard slot, although some Big Three affiliates (such as ABC's owned-and-operated stations and Cleveland ABC affiliate
WEWS) continued to offer them on weekends into the early 2000s in certain markets (some scattering in
Pre-Code/
Hays Code-era titles—often buried in overnight slots—well into the 1990s, even as cable networks like
AMC and
Turner Classic Movies were increasingly taking over the mantle of televising classic films). Movie packages sold through the commercial syndication market have steadily declined in volume since the late 1990s due largely to cable television cornering the film market, and the prime time expansions of The WB and UPN (and before that, Fox) during that decade reducing available airtime on their affiliates, and more substantially amid the proliferation of streaming platforms (like
Netflix, Hulu and
Prime Video) in the mid-2010s, as film studios increasingly resorted to licensing their library titles to that medium; syndicated
reruns and paid programming primarily now occupy late-night schedules on most stations outside or in lieu of network offerings made for the broader daypart, although some of the stations (along with The CW's
national small-market feed) that carry the few film packages remaining in syndication continue to run movies in that daypart on weekends. In the present day, late-night movie presentations on American broadcast television are otherwise found primarily on digital multicast networks such as
Movies!,
Bounce TV,
Positiv,
365BLK, Outlaw and
Grit.
Paid programming Following the 1984 elimination of
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations (established in the 1950s and 1960s) prohibiting program-length advertising on television, the late-night slot has increasingly been used for
infomercials, a type of
direct-response advertisement (typically running 30 minutes in length, though a few have had one-hour runtimes) intended to promote or sell
mail-order products or other services (such as cleaning products,
housewares, fitness products and
multi-level marketing services) that is paid for by the sponsor under time brokerage agreements. The concept of the program-length advertisement dates to the early years of modern commercial television: the first filmed half-hour infomercial for a commercial product was produced in 1949 by Ohio-based
Cinécraft Productions for a
Vitamix blender; first airing on New York City independent station WOR-TV (now
Secaucus, New Jersey-licensed MyNetworkTV O&O WWOR-TV) in a Sunday 12:30 a.m. slot, an estimated 130 orders for the blender were made within 10 minutes of the infomercial's conclusion, and more than $41,400 in sales () were generated after 12 airings of the broadcast. Infomercials are usually structured under various concept formats including demonstration-based advertisements (highlighting the product in action), "storymercials" (fictional stories that use emotion as a draw to the product being marketed), "documercials" (news- or
documentary-based formats typically selling higher-priced products), "brand demand" ads (usually demonstration-based and pushes customers to purchase products by phone, Internet and retail outlets) and talk show-style ads (a low-budget format usually featuring a panel discussing the product or service). These advertisements generate additional revenue for stations on top of the conventional short-form advertising they sell to sponsors, and provide them an inexpensive programming source to fill airtime as opposed to purchasing additional syndicated content in lower-profile time periods. Although they are commonly associated with overnight programming, infomercials are used as
filler by some television stations for other timeslots (mostly on weekends or in the morning) not reserved for scheduled network, syndicated or local programming.
Simulcasts of
home shopping channels (such as the
HSN syndication service Home Shopping Spree (later
America's Store),
Shop at Home Network and
Jewelry Television) have also been used to fill overnight airtime, more commonly during the late 1980s and the first half of the 1990s. (A handful of stations—including a few small-market Fox and MyNetworkTV stations owned by
Mission Broadcasting that run Jewelry Television programming overnights each day—continue to employ this practice.)
Shopping channels began serving as overnight filler on local broadcast stations with the 1988 launch of the Home Shopping Club Overnight Service, which was primarily syndicated to independent stations and selected network affiliates; originally operating as a nine-hour-a-day service (from midnight to 9:00 a.m. ET), it evolved into a hybrid format as the Home Shopping Spree in 1989, broadcasting 24 hours a day on various
low-power stations (which offered it on a full-time or part-time basis) alongside the existing overnight syndication package, a structure that continued until what became America's Store shut down in April 2007. Although typically associated with the Sunday morning timeslot, primarily as a means to allow those who cannot attend church services in-person due to illness or disability to participate from home, some time-brokered
televangelist programs (such as ''
The Shepherd's Chapel, Inspiration Ministries Campmeeting and In Touch with Dr. Charles Stanley'') are also carried by some commercial stations during the overnight graveyard slot, particularly during the pre-dawn hours on weekends.
Overnight sign-offs For much of the early history of American television broadcasting until the 1980s, most television stations regularly signed off during the overnight hours each night for a predetermined period (typically from as early as 1:00 a.m. to as late as 6:00 a.m.), primarily due to technical constraints and, in earlier decades, the lack of demand or available viewership for stations to offer overnight programming. The sign-off was usually marked by a set sequence preceding the shutdown of the station's
transmitter (including a video montage set to "
The Star-Spangled Banner", a
sermonette, and station announcements and technical information), usually concluded by a
test pattern (such as the
SMPTE color bars) that lasts for several minutes until the transmitter is powered down. One widely used sign-off sequence was "National Anthem", produced by New York-based graphics firm Saxton Graphic Associates, Ltd; accompanied by a trumpet-led arrangement of "The Star-Spangled Banner" performed by the
London Festival Orchestra and conducted by
Bob Sharples in 1963, it featured images highlighting important events in U.S. history, culminating with the iconic 1969 photograph of an
Apollo 11 astronaut standing on the Moon by the American flag. Most stations scaled back or completely discontinued the practice during the 1980s and 1990s, as the rise of modern cable television—which saw many basic and premium cable channels (following the lead of
superstations like WTBS, WGN-TV and WOR-TV that were already offering round-the-clock schedules) begin switching to 24-hour-a-day programming or offering nighttime-only timeshare services in the early 1980s—increased demand for overnight programming. (Many independent stations and selected major network stations had offered 24-hour programming in some capacity as soon as the late 1970s.) However, some commercial and
noncommercial stations (such as those owned by
Citadel Communications and many PBS member stations) would continue to sign-off nightly or on weekends well into the 2000s, before they switched to round-the-clock broadcasts in the period surrounding the
analog-to-digital transition. Stations that transitioned to 24-hour broadcasts instead air many of the aforementioned programming formats during the overnight slot, although a scant few, particularly those that previously continued to sign-off overnight on weekends long after switching to 24-hour programming the rest of the week (such as
Green Bay, Wisconsin ABC affiliate
WBAY-TV, which ended this practice after a transmitter malfunction during one of its weekend sign-off periods kept it off the air for several days in January 2010), chose to fill their former off-hours with a "nightlight" feed of live
radar imagery (displaying data sourced from
National Weather Service- or station-operated radars) or, if applicable, a simulcast of a locally programmed weather channel (normally distributed by the station on an
over-the-air subchannel, local cable providers or an online livestream). Public television stations, meanwhile, fill that time by either running PBS's
National Program Service feed or some combination of local programming repeats and programs from outside distributors. In the present day, some stations (such as those owned by
Nexstar Media Group and
Gray Media) conduct a formal sign-on sequence—typically consisting solely of a national anthem montage—during the early morning (usually between 4:00 and 5:00 a.m.) to signify the start of the broadcast day; standard sign-off periods involving the temporary cessation of regular programming, meanwhile, are usually reserved for occasions where the transmitter is scheduled to undergo significant maintenance. ==Cable television==