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5* The [[GameShows Quiz Show]] was discredited for about fifteen years in the US after [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiz_show_scandals a series of scandals]] in TheFifties, in which it was learned that a number of popular quiz shows (most notably ''Series/TwentyOne'' and ''Series/{{Dotto}}'') were being [[ExecutiveMeddling rigged]] in order to increase tension, bring in ratings, and to give the victory to the contestant the producers wanted to win. After the scandals, the focus of questions generally shifted from knowledge to word games and puzzles, and low-stakes panel games like ''Series/ToTellTheTruth'' were at their peak. ''Series/{{Jeopardy}}'' helped America trust ''quiz'' shows again in 1964, but it was not until about 1973 and ''[[Series/{{Pyramid}} The $10,000 Pyramid]]'' when game shows really began offering five-figure sums again [[note]](and note the change in name from "quiz show" to "game show"; the former name was still associated with rigged challenges)[[/note]]. Even after the genre came back into vogue, the effects of the scandals left a permanent mark; these new game shows had winnings caps and somewhat smaller amounts of money to be won, and it wouldn't be until 1998 when '''really''' big-money games returned in the form of ''Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire''
6** The return to more "traditional" game shows in the 70s and 80s brought new shows that actually had ''game'' to them, like the aforementioned ''Pyramid'', along with ''Series/ThePriceIsRight'', ''Series/TicTacDough'', ''Series/TheJokersWild'', and ''Series/FamilyFeud'', and thus helped kill off panel games in TheSeventies and TheEighties. That particular death was culminated in 1990 with a short-lived revival of ''To Tell the Truth'' that [[TroubledProduction went through five hosts]] in the course of one season.
7** And then the nighttime syndicated versions of ''Series/WheelOfFortune''[[note]]which ran on daytime from 1975-1991[[/note]] and ''Jeopardy!'' (which began in 1983 and 1984, respectively, and aren't going anywhere anytime soon), as well as competition from syndicated talk/"trash TV" shows (and network affiliates increasingly pre-empting network supplied game shows to air such programming) killed off the concept of daytime game shows by TheNineties — between January 1994 and October 2009, ''Price'' was the ''only'' game show on daytime network television.
8** And on that topic, the saturation of ''Millionaire'', as well as [[WhoWantsToBeWhoWantsToBeAMillionaire several big-name copycats]], mostly killed off the big-money prime-time game show genre by the mid to late 2000s. It was given a shot in the arm with ''Series/DealOrNoDeal'' (and the 2007 WGA strike helped to extend that shot), but ''Deal'' quickly devolving into a gimmick-fest (making its ultra-bare-bones format all the more blatantly obvious) while concurrently falling into ''Millionaire''-esque WolverinePublicity, combined with the failure of ''Series/MillionDollarMoneyDrop'' and ''Series/MillionSecondQuiz'', put the finishing touches on the genre. While the game show genre had another resurgence from about 2016 onward, this was largely due to back-to-basics formats in revivals of ''Series/MatchGame'' and ''Series/{{Pyramid}}'' that play things fairly straight with nostalgia for their 70's incarnations, without rampantly inflated jackpots, melodrama, or unnecessary gameplay changes (the ''Series/PressYourLuck'' revival in 2019 would subvert this by adding an extended million-dollar BonusRound, although the main game is relatively unchanged). A few melodramatic big-money shows linger on network lineups, however, such as Creator/{{NBC}}'s ''Series/TheWall'' and Creator/{{Fox}}'s clone ''Series/SpinTheWheel''.
9* The VarietyShow's demise in the US has been linked to one show in particular as well as changes in television broadcasting and technology:
10** The abject failure of Creator/{{NBC}}'s ''Series/PinkLadyAndJeff'' in 1980. The genre (much like the movie musical) had already spent most of the decade on life support (becoming relegated to "summer filler" material) as audiences became too jaded by Watergate and Vietnam to enjoy such light entertainment anymore, a change of tastes that led to the emergence of edgier SketchComedy shows like ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'', ''Series/{{SCTV}}'', [[Series/TheTraceyUllmanShow and many]] [[Series/InLivingColor others to]] [[Series/AllThat this day]]. ''Pink Lady'' was a HotterAndSexier take on the format to make it marketable for TheEighties, but they pushed it too far, especially in a time when [[MoralGuardians religious and watchdog groups]] started massive "Clean Up TV" campaigns. While there have been several attempts to revive the genre, critics and audiences have been largely indifferent. Meanwhile, TV execs still remember ''Pink Lady and Jeff'' as one of the worst shows of all time, even managing to make David Hofstede's 2004 book ''Literature/WhatWereTheyThinkingThe100DumbestEventsInTelevisionHistory'', which also took [[TakeThat potshots]] at Fred Silverman, who greenlighted ''Pink Lady'' and [[CreatorKiller got fired from NBC]] shortly after the show tanked.
11** The death of the variety show could also be attributed to the decreasing cost of televisions. Back in TheFifties and TheSixties when variety programs were at their most popular, a television set was an expensive investment and there would typically be only one TV per household, if the household had a TV to begin with. When televisions became much less expensive, the need for specialized programming to appeal to the various members of a household became much more apparent as households acquired multiple sets starting in TheSeventies. Then cable television and home video took off in TheEighties and put the final nail in variety's coffin by offering even more niche programming. Though this is a story that largely played out in the U.S. Abroad, [[GermansLoveDavidHasselhoff the format remained popular]], either due to lower disposable incomes and smaller houses meaning fewer TV sets per household or over-the-air programming remaining dominant.
12* Between TheSixties and TheEighties, Creator/TheBBC's Saturday evening programming was headed by variety shows such as ''Series/TheTwoRonnies'' and ''The Morecambe & Wise Show''; a blend of sketches, stand-up comedy[[note]]In the case of Creator/RonnieCorbett, more "sitting-down" comedy[[/note]] and musical interludes by safe [=MoR=] artistes. Most commentators would agree there was nothing wrong with this and it had some superlatively funny moments. Then the satirical sketch show ''Series/NotTheNineOClockNews'' came along and skewered the format with a parody called ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oVG4_k7Hbc The Two Ninnies]]'', which depicted Barker and Corbett's brand of humour (largely based on the music hall staples of double entendres, dressing up as women, and performing silly songs) as stale and outdated in an age of alternative comedy.[[note]]This was apparently not the intention of ''Not the Nine O'Clock News''[='=]s writers, who were reacting to what they thought were hypocritical comments Ronnie Barker had made expressing distaste for the (in his view) ribald content of their programme by observing that his own act had relied on innuendo for decades by 1981.[[/note]] Between this the expensive failure of ''Bruce Forsyth's Big Night'', broadcast by rival network Creator/{{ITV}} in 1978, the variety show format was pretty much done for in the UK, with the Rons retiring in 1987 (Morecambe and Wise had retired in 1984 with the former's death). By the 2000s however, light entertainment saw a revival in Britain.
13* ''Series/MarriedWithChildren'', and to an initially lesser extent ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'', killed off the functional family sitcom boom of the late '80s heralded by ''Series/TheCosbyShow''. Even shows inspired by Cosby, like ''Series/HomeImprovement'' or ''Series/EverybodyLovesRaymond'', are more cynical than ''The Cosby Show''. Averted however for many [[BlackSitcom black family sitcoms]] of the '90s which came about because of Cosby, such as ''Series/FamilyMatters'' and ''Series/TheFreshPrinceOfBelAir'' (see MinorityShowGhetto).
14** ''Fresh Prince''[='=]s chaotic [[TheOtherDarrin re-casting]] of Aunt Viv, with Janet Hubert-Whitten being replaced by Daphne Maxwell Reid and Hubert-Witten being visibly pissed off over this, eventually killed the "gentle family sitcom", as other stories of [[HostilityOnTheSet hellish backstage tensions]] in those shows featuring near-perfect families began to spring up, making audiences very cynical about such scenarios (tellingly, ''Fresh Prince'' is nowadays remembered for its [[CerebusSyndrome melodramatic later seasons]] instead of the goofy tone of its early episodes). Creator/BillCosby's own [[RoleEndingMisdemeanor sexual assault scandal that ultimately sent him behind bars]] merely [[CondemnedByHistory pounded more nails into the coffin]].
15* Though critically acclaimed and considered a CultClassic today, the ratings failure and early cancellation of ''Series/{{Action}}'' basically assured that the TV-MA rating is more or less a kiss of death for a network show and there has never been an attempt by the Big Four since for a truly adult-aimed comedic series. It's a different story on cable, where less restrictive rules allow for more creative freedom.
16* The failure of ''Pablo y Andrea'' (2005) caused Televisa to stop producing telenovelas aimed at children. By the time that telenovela came out, most of the target audience had lost interest in the limited plots said novelas offered, most of which were of the "kids having magical and musical adventures with a bit of drama" variety that were over-commercialized.
17** Similarly, the lukewarm reception of ''Niña de mi corazón'' (2010) caused the same network to stop producing novelas aimed at a teenage audience, even though the genre had been very popular for Televisa since the late 80s. Both examples can be explained due to the fact that most children and teenagers prefer to play video games or be on the Internet nowadays instead of watching novelas (or TV in general).
18* The massive failure of ''The Magic Hour'' (and to a lesser extent, ''The Keenan Ivory Wayans Show'' and ''Vibe'' a season prior) killed the trend of urban-oriented, syndicated, late-night talk shows (and syndicated late-night talk shows in general). The failure of Arsenio Hall's revived [[Series/TheArsenioHallShow talk show]] in 2013-2014 confirmed that a comeback of this trend isn't happening, at least for the foreseeable future.
19* A temporary example: The failure of ''Series/CriminalMindsSuspectBehavior'' put a halt on shows getting random spin-offs despite the success of shows like ''Series/NCISLosAngeles''. It was a combination of a lackluster show and a fandom revolt since to fund the show, they had to end the contracts of two main female characters on ''Series/CriminalMinds''. This outraged not only the fans, but the actresses and the entire production team. It's no surprise that after ''Suspect Behavior'' ended, Creator/{{CBS}} rehired Creator/PagetBrewster and Creator/AJCook.\
20Another factor in the death of spin-offs was the show ''Series/TorchwoodMiracleDay''. The show was already in trouble when [[Creator/TheBBC BBC]] had to sell production rights to Creator/{{Starz}} Entertainment, however the show was met with overwhelmingly negative reception from fans and critics. ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' was already a divisive show seeing as it was a more adult-oriented spin-off from the (generally) family-friendly ''Series/DoctorWho'', but added Americanization in addition to Jack Harkness and Gwen Cooper being reduced to a side-story in their own show and an unnecessary RomanticPlotTumor with Jack having a new boyfriend didn't help matters either. The negative reception of the show was also enough to put ''Torchwood'' as a whole on hiatus, and its future remains uncertain (it can't have a FullyAbsorbedFinale in ''Doctor Who'' due to its adults-only nature, especially after all this time, but it's not popular enough to warrant closure on its own). [[spoiler:Notably, when Jack Harkness returns in the Doctor Who episode "Fugitive of the Judoon", there's no mention of Torchwood.]]
21* [[https://web.archive.org/web/20181119041002/https://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/moviesandtv/columns/highdefinition/12756-Remembering-Comedy-Central-s-The-Colbert-Report This article]] by Creator/BobChipman argues that ''Series/TheColbertReport'' killed off the PompousPoliticalPundit TalkShow by parodying its form and style so effectively that it became impossible (especially for younger Gen-X and millennial viewers) to take seriously anymore. While ''The O'Reilly Factor'', the main show that Creator/StephenColbert was parodying, remained on the air for more than two years after ''Colbert'' ended, it and shows like it have notably ceased to be the dominant programming on the Fox News Channel, their viewerships notably trending much older while the new comparatively younger faces of the network (like Greg Gutfeld, Kimberly Guilfoyle, and Tucker Carlson) largely eschew the style. Glenn Beck's 2011 departure from the network followed by O'Reilly's firing in 2017 only furthered this trend. The comparatively low-octane panel discussion show "The Five" later ended up in one of the network's key primetime slots, with Sean Hannity the sole surviving "old school" blustery host.
22* ''Series/TheOfficeUK'', ''Series/{{Extras}}'', and ''Series/TheThickOfIt'', while not outright killing the classic BritCom format, made them seem like quaint relics of the 1960s and '70s, and resulted in critics generally losing respect for the classic style. Fewer and fewer of them have been produced as the 2000s and 2010s have progressed, and some are predicting that the horribly-received ''The Wright Way'', made by Brit Com mainstay Creator/BenElton, may prove to be the final nail in the coffin for it as an art form, with the few holdouts (most notably ''Mrs. Brown's Boys'') being critical failures, regardless of how popular they can be. Beyond the U.K. they're even deader: Cable networks/blocks like [[Creator/TheBBC BBC America]], Creator/ComedyCentral, and Creator/AdultSwim used to import/rerun popular British sitcoms and sketch comedy shows regularly, but completely gave up on them in TheNewTens. BBC America hasn't had any comedies on their schedule in years, preferring to focus on ''Series/TopGearUK'', ''Series/DoctorWho'', dramatic series/miniseries, documentary shows, and ''The Graham Norton Show''. (The last time they aired a British comedy series in any capacity was an after-hours run of the final season of ''Series/TheThickOfIt'' in 2015 -- and only because [[Creator/PeterCapaldi the lead actor]] went on to topline ''Doctor Who''.) Creator/{{PBS}} still imports a few comedies, such as ''Moone Boy'' and ''Vicious'', but none have received substantial critical attention or ratings.
23** However, some British comedies get a cult following in the US if they are available on Creator/{{Netflix}} or Creator/{{Hulu}}.
24* An episode of the very loved Belgian investigative journalism series ''Basta'' called ''De mol in het belspel'', known for bringing up the unfair practices of the Belgian phone-in game shows at the time by deconstructing or reconstructing all the phone-in game show formats that exist, allowed één, who already did not permit phone-in game shows on their own network, to have so much control over the phone-in game show format that Medialaan, the only company that aired those type of shows, was forced to cancel every single phone-in game show that they ever created. While it only had an effect on the game shows that were airing in Flanders, it killed off the entire phone-in game show genre there, to the point that some people think that the genre is banned in Belgium.
25* Soap operas may be popular in the US, the UK, Latin American and Asian countries among others, but one country they'll never be popular in is UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}, thanks to the 2000s notorious flop ''Train 48''. The show was an attempt at persuading networks in Canada to have their own soaps, however the show was, reception-wise and production-wise, a disaster. The show was a loosely-based remake of popular Australian improvised dramedy ''Going Home'', which was about a number of commuters chatting about popular topics at night on a commuter train.\
26The show had an admittedly novel production concept - the show would be (sort-of) written, filmed, edited and broadcast all in the same day, on an actual replica train traveling from UsefulNotes/{{Toronto}} to Burlington, with improvisation by the actors. This probably would have been a good idea had anyone had a clue what they were doing. The actors clearly had no idea how to make the improv flow, and the discussion topics were both incredibly dull, and inaccessible to people who had no idea what they were talking about. The show also had gotten criticism for its poor audio mixing (the actors couldn't even be heard at times over the trains' loud engines) and {{Jittercam}} (which did get better as the show neared its end, but not by much). When the writers heard about these criticisms, they attempted to spice things up in 2005 by bringing in comedy (which predictably failed - one such case was a mother being fooled into thinking the video game ''VideoGame/{{Halo}}'' [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids was a game about catching angel halos]]), "dramatic" storylines about outlandish concepts like a snake getting loose on the train, or someone getting shot, or hostage threats - none of these worked and after 2 years, the show was abruptly halted in 2005 due to an increasingly poor reception and ratings. Another criticism was that the show never made it clear where people were going, so the final scene showed the characters getting off the train in Burlington.\
27The poor ratings (the show was featured in the 7:30 death slot too - this was before digital cable and satellite with "Eastern time channels" were more popular), production costs of $45,000 per episode, and awful reception not only killed the idea as a whole, but also convinced some networks to drop their airings of American or British soaps too (aside from ''Series/CoronationStreet'', a staple of competing network Creator/CBC), and the show is seen as one of the worst Canadian TV shows of all time.
28** In the UsefulNotes/UnitedStates, daytime soap operas have fallen victim to this trope. Back in TheSeventies and TheEighties, ratings for daytime soaps hit peaks of 30 million viewers for events like [[SuperCouple Luke and Laura's]] wedding on ''Series/GeneralHospital'', and ad revenues from them helped to fund the [[{{Networks}} networks']] elaborate, expensive, all-but-nonprofit [[NewsBroadcast news divisions]], as well as tide the whole network over in years when the Prime Time lineup was struggling. Due to ValuesDissonance and society marching on, themes that used to be considered 'taboo' are commonplace nowadays, and soaps are lucky to pull in three million. Some people recommend that the networks drop them altogether and replace them with [[TalkShow talk shows]] and other daytime fare — which some networks are already doing (Creator/{{ABC}} and Creator/{{NBC}} are down to one soap apiece, Creator/{{CBS}} has two). Nowadays, the phrase 'daytime soap opera' has come to be synonymous with [[{{Narm}} pure dreck]] in the minds of many TV fans, associated with bad writing, outrageous plots and [[LargeHam shoddy]] [[DullSurprise acting]], something that can be seen whenever [[invoked]][[FanDumb disgruntled fans]] of a UsefulNotes/PrimeTime series talk about how bad writers or actors "should never have been let out of daytime". A list of theories explaining this fall can be seen on the [[SoapOpera Soap Opera]] page. The fact that the {{cancellation}} of ''Series/GuidingLight'', [[LongRunner the longest running fictional TV show in the history of the medium]], was barely a footnote in ''Magazine/TVGuide'' and ''Entertainment Weekly'' just goes to illustrate how far soap operas have fallen in the public eye.
29* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' was such a success that no other American tokusatsu adaptation has been able to get too far off the ground. Usually they just end up viewed as rip-offs. This isn't helped with the creator of Power Rangers trying to cash in on the trend by creating similar shows using preexisting shows from Toei's wheelhouse. One of them, ''Series/MaskedRider'' tanked so bad that it killed any chances of any shows from [[Franchise/KamenRider the franchise it spawned from]] from appearing in the west for a long while.
30* Creator/VH1 released a host of popular "celebreality" dating shows in the mid- to late 2000s, starting with ''Series/FlavorOfLove'' (itself a spin-off of a spin-off), which ran for several seasons, and the next most popular series, ''Series/RockOfLove'', where contestants would compete to date celebrities Flavor Flav and [[Music/{{Poison}} Bret Michaels]], respectively. Popular losing bachelorettes from those shows ended up getting their own dating shows such as ''Series/ILoveNewYork'', ''Daisy of Love'', and ''Megan Wants a Millionaire,'' and losers from ''those'' shows even got their own spinoffs (''Real Chance of Love''). Popular contestants from ''Flavor of Love'' and eventually ''Rock of Love'' would end up on ''Series/CharmSchool'', while all contestants were eligible to compete for money on ''Series/ILoveMoney''. Though spin-offs kept multiplying, the genre itself was already suffering -- not only were ratings dipping lower as viewers started losing interest in Z-listers whose only claim to fame was being in a genre perceived as seedy and trashy, but many felt the channel was oversaturated with spin-offs, as well as the fact that the scripted nature of the apparent "reality" series, though always apparent, was getting more and more obvious. The death blow to the "celebreality" genre came at the close of the decade with a contestant named Ryan Jenkins, who was a competitor in ''Megan Wants a Millionaire'' and won the third season of ''I Love Money''. Jenkins' [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Jasmine_Fiore wife Jasmine was found dead]] and Jenkins immediately became the prime suspect in her death; he committed suicide while attempting to flee. [=VH1=] quickly pulled the plug on the remaining episodes of ''Megan'' and cancelled ''I Love Money'' without showing Jenkins's winning season, broadcasting only the already-filmed fourth season after a year. All future celebreality projects were shelved, including the third season of ''New York'' and future seasons of ''Flavor'' slated for the following year. The passing of time and the shock of the violent incident chilled most interest in the genre, and [=VH1=] has toned down reality programming in general to this day, with most of the celebreality contestants, the majority of whom failed to achieve fame outside of [=VH1=], fading into obscurity.
31* In the Philippines, celebrity gossip talk shows used to dominate the weekend afternoon time-slots and was a favorite pastime for celebrity-obsessed viewers. However, in the midst of social networking where many Filipinos would rather read gossip news online and many celebrities discuss their views on their social media accounts, these gossip talk shows slowly lost their purpose. As a result, the longest-running talk shows such as ABS-CBN's ''The Buzz'' and GMA Network's ''Startalk'' ended up being canceled in 2015 and the afternoon weekend timeslots are filled for Tagalog-dubbed Hollywood and Chinese movies instead. Meanwhile, most Filipino talk show hosts moved their platforms to Youtube and podcasts.
32** Also in the Philippines, the success of ''[[OurMermaidsAreDifferent Marina]]'' and ''[[BirdPeople Mulawin]]'' in the early 2000s spawned the genre of fantasy shows up to the 2010s. What killed the genre was the access to American and Korean series on streaming sites and TV writers running out of ideas to the point that the premises of these fantasy shows only became notorious for memes.
33* The murder of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Scott_Amedure Scott Amedure]] in 1995 and the subsequent legal fallout, in addition to serving as a wake-up call for the issue of homophobia in American society at the time, killed the kind of [[PointAndLaughShow trashy tabloid talk show]] that had become popular in the late '80s and early '90s. Before that, talk shows such as ''Geraldo'', ''The Montel Williams Show'', ''The Charles Perez Show'', ''Ricki Lake'', and ''The Jenny Jones Show'' were regularly staged for maximum sensationalism, openly inviting audiences to [[ComeToGawk gawk at the dysfunction on screen]]. After Amedure's murder (perhaps more specifically, the $25 million awarded after a lawsuit against ''The Jenny Jones Show''), many of these series either faced cancellation or promised to tone down the sleaze. Shortly thereafter however, ''Series/JudgeJudy'' came along and sparked the "court show" revolution- including the revival of ''Series/ThePeoplesCourt''. The final nail in the genre's coffin was the rise of reality television in the early 2000s, which provided similar content in a manner that many audience members considered far more accessible than the old TalkShow format. Only ''Series/TheJerrySpringerShow'''s established and unabashed commitment to full-sleaze survived the initial backlash.
34** While the PointAndLaughShow survived for a while in Britain with ''Series/TheJeremyKyleShow'', that show too was eventually cancelled in 2019 after the suicide of a guest one week after his episode was filmed, and subsequent revelations about abusive manipulation of other guests, and even crew on the show suffering from a very unpleasant environment and atmosphere.
35* The 1987 Creator/{{ABC}} {{miniseries}} ''Series/{{Amerika}}'' didn't quite kill off the "epic" miniseries on American television, but it was arguably the turning point in the decline of its prestige. Premiering to great fanfare and controversy due to its daring premise (America being [[InvadedStatesOfAmerica invaded and conquered by the USSR]]), ratings started strong but proceeded to drop week after week as viewers found it boring due to its slow pace and focus on dense political drama. The following year, ABC's miniseries ''[[Literature/TheWindsOfWarAndWarAndRemembrance War and Remembrance]]'', [[AcclaimedFlop despite critical acclaim]], saw its premiere bungled due to [[UsefulNotes/TVStrikes the 1988 WGA strike]], turning it into an expensive flop that finished the job ''Amerika'' started. For the next twenty years, miniseries were seen as a disreputable format associated with over-the-top {{melodrama}}, UsefulNotes/{{sweeps}}-week {{ratings stunt}}s, and past-their-prime actors [[MoneyDearBoy slumming it for a paycheck]], only recovering with the rise of "prestige TV" on cable and streaming in the 2010s.
36* After ''Series/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' became popular in 1999, dinosaur documentaries were a regular feature on networks such as Creator/DiscoveryChannel and Creator/AnimalPlanet. Even Creator/TheHistoryChannel got in on the action with ''Series/JurassicFightClub''. By the late 2000s, however, they were beginning to decrease in number, and by 2013 there were none being produced. The "extinction" of the dinosaur documentary was a one-two punch. The first blow was probably the [[QuoteMine quote-mining]] controversy that surrounded ''Series/ClashOfTheDinosaurs'', in which paleontologist Matt Wedel asserted that the writers had taken his statements out of context to suggest the opposite of what he actually said. ''Clash of the Dinosaurs'' ended up being the last dinosaur documentary produced by Discovery (although NetworkDecay also played a part with that). The genre as a whole was killed a few years later, by the box-office and critical failure of the ''WesternAnimation/WalkingWithDinosaurs'' movie, which not only served as the FranchiseKiller for the ''Walking With...'' series, but also ensured that no major studio or TV network would ever produce another dinosaur documentary for over a decade, until the smash hit of ''Series/PrehistoricPlanet'' renewed interest in it.
37* Fundraising through digital and social media means like livestreaming, crowdfunding and Website/{{Facebook}} has all supplanted {{Telethon}}s as the desired avenue for [[WealthyPhilanthropist philanthropy]]. Prior to this, telethons such as the Creator/JerryLewis Labor Day Telethon, which benefited the Muscular Dystrophy Association, the post [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror 9/11]] telethon ''America: A Tribute to Heroes'', or ''Series/ChildrenInNeed'' in the [[Creator/TheBBC UK]] featured celebrities performing on camera and answering phone calls, all to raise money for a [[CharityMotivationSong charitable cause]]. With the rise of modern, digital-first forms such as video game streaming, funneling donations as opposed to calling in like participants did for telethons makes the fundraising process more instantaneous. Telethons such as ''Children in Need'' have in the past, been criticized for providing a [[SkewedPriorities skewed]] [[RealityIsUnrealistic perception of reality]] and adding to the societal stigma of those they are [[WhiteMansBurden trying to help]], by presenting them as weak or inferior. The Jerry Lewis telethon in particular, had long been accused of portraying people with neuromuscular diseases as [[DontYouDarePityMe objects of pity]], and viewers were told about all the things they couldn’t do. More to the point, the image of a much-loved celebrity bonding with and [[SenseLossSadness experiencing the sadness]] of their surroundings contributes to a [[GuiltComplex feeling of guilt]]. The final nail in the coffin for at least the Jerry Lewis Labor Day Telethon was the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge overtaking it in its popularity. Even with the 2015 Ice Bucket Challenge barely making a ripple in comparison to the 2014 one, it likely won't be enough to revive the telethon. Lewis departing the telethon in 2011 certainly [[NotHelpingYourCase didn't help matters]] though.
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