Sitcom '', listed clockwise from top left:
William Frawley (Fred Mertz),
Desi Arnaz (Ricky Ricardo),
Lucille Ball (Lucy Ricardo), and
Vivian Vance (Ethel Mertz) The situation comedy (or
sitcom) has become one of the most commonly-watched types of television comedy. Since the early 1950s, with shows including ''
Hancock's Half Hour in the U.K. (derived from a radio show), and I Love Lucy in the United States, sitcoms have become more prominent among television viewers. I Love Lucy'' was popular in Nielsen's audience ratings, topping the viewing charts in four out of their six years on the air. Sitcoms will often portray comedic moments through audience laughter, either through live audiences or a laugh track. Before appearing on television, comedy programs were already present on the radio. Programs that have accomplished this include
The Daily Show and "
Weekend Update" on
Saturday Night Live.
The Daily Show became more well-known when
Jon Stewart began hosting in 1999. The award-winning show mocks political events and candidates, and brings in correspondents to report further on these events and people. During the 2000 U.S. presidential election, 435,000 young adults viewed Stewart's coverage, while 459,000 watched traditional news. Despite its satirical approach, journalists have stated that programs such as
The Daily Show and "
Weekend Update" still broadcast real news, which ensures that its producers are aware of how to cover this news in a way that viewers can gain knowledge.
Stand-up Stand-up comedy has been represented on television. Stand-up comedians have been a staple of variety and late-night talk shows; talk-variety shows such as
The Tonight Show traditionally open with a comedy monologue performed by the program host. Television stand-up reached a peak of popularity on
British schedules with the
ITV programme
The Comedians. Their style of comedy was swept away almost entirely in the Britain of the early 1980s when a new generation of stand-ups challenged what they saw as racist and sexist humour and revolutionised the form under the banner
alternative comedy. In the US, stand-up comedy programs became popular on many
cable television channels beginning in the mid-1980s, as such "brick wall" shows (nicknamed for the stereotypical use of a fake brick wall as a backdrop) were cheap to produce and air. Stand-up humour later had mixed fortunes on the small screen, often shunted away to the small hours or as part of a larger entertainment extravaganza.
Game show Some
game shows may give the guests a chance to perform stand-up comedy to win a round. Examples of this genre in the UK include
Have I Got News for You,
8 Out of 10 Cats,
Mock the Week, and
Never Mind the Buzzcocks. In the United States, this is a less common genre,
Oblivious being one of the few examples. In Japan and South Korea, these
comedy gameshows, often with subtitles and
word bubbles, are extremely popular.
Comedy drama A
comedy-drama is a program that combines humor with more serious dramatic elements, aiming for a considerably more realistic tone than conventional sitcoms. These programs are shot with a
single-camera setup and presented without a laugh track and typically run an hour in length. This can refer to a genre of television or radio drama series. There are different subgenres within this category, such as the medical comedy dramas like
M*A*S*H and
Doogie Howser, M.D., legal comedy dramas like
Ally McBeal and
Boston Legal, and the musical comedy drama
Glee.
Sketch comedy Sketch comedy programs differ from sitcoms in that they do not basically feature recurring characters (though some characters and scenarios may be repeated) and often draw upon current events and emphasize
satire over character development. Sketch comedy was pioneered by
Sid Caesar, whose
Your Show of Shows debuted in 1950 and established many conventions of the genre. American sketch comedy reached a later peak in the mid-1970s with the debut han
Saturday Night Live, originally a variety program but soon devoted mostly to sketches. In the UK, two of the more successful examples are ''
Monty Python's Flying Circus and Little Britain''.
Animated cartoon Animated cartoons have long been a source of comedy on television. Early children's programming often recycled theatrical cartoons; later, low-budget animation produced especially for television dominated Saturday-morning network programming in the US. == Impact on society ==