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{{Short description|Television and radio programming technique.}}
{{Confusing|reason=it seems like this article is referring to a solid column on an hour-by-week chart that would be formed by running a show at (6:00) M-F, Sun-Sat, etc. Jeopardy, like the local news, would appear that way, but is specifically excluded in the first statement of the overview which mentions it|date=May 2014}}
'''Strip programming''' or '''stripping''' is a technique used for [[scheduling]] [[terrestrial television|television]] and [[radio broadcasting|radio]] [[broadcast programming|programming]] to ensure consistency and coherency. [[Television program|Television]] or [[radio program]]s of a particular style (such as a [[television series]]) are given a regular daily time slot during the week, so that it appears as a strip straight across the weekly schedule. For example, radio and television [[broadcasting|broadcasters]] may program a [[news]] program at [[rush hour]]s every day, or at least every weekday.
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Strip scheduling often applies to any program that airs on multiple consecutive days during the calendar week (most commonly Monday through Friday), whether carried through a [[television network]] (such as with a [[talk show]], news program, [[soap opera]], or [[telenovela]]) or in [[broadcasting syndication|syndication]]. It is commonly restricted to describing the airing of [[television program]]s that were originally broadcast on a weekly basis during their original run: ''[[The West Wing]]'' could be stripped but not ''[[Jeopardy!]]'', as ''Jeopardy!'' was originally intended to be run daily. It can also refer to shows in prime time that run daily, such as with the short-lived ''[[The Jay Leno Show]]'' in 2009 and 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.eonline.com/news/161301/leno-show-confirmed-canceled-nbc-late-night-schedule-questions-remain-unresolved |title=Leno Show Confirmed Canceled, NBC Late-Night Schedule Questions Remain Unresolved |first=Jennifer|last=Godwin|date=2010-01-10|publisher=[[E! Online]]|accessdate=2019-03-20}}</ref>
For much of the 1960s and into the early 1990s, stripping for syndication was one of, if not
[[Michael Grade]] was responsible for introducing '''stripped and stranded''' schedules to the [[BBC]]'s television service in the [[United Kingdom]] in his role as controller of [[BBC1]]: from February 18, 1985, onward,{{Citation needed|date=August 2007}} the weekday evening schedule has consisted almost entirely of half-hour or hour-long programs starting on the hour, or half-hour (the BBC channels never carried spot advertising). For example, Grade's new schedule provided at 19:00, the talk show ''[[Wogan]]'' thrice weekly and two episodes of ''[[EastEnders]]'' and fixed the national news at 18:00 and 21:00, and regional news at 18:30. Before this date, programs might start at almost any time and programs could have different times on consecutive weeks or even days, for example:<ref>{{cite web
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Stripping has also become an even more common practice on many [[United Kingdom|British]] channels since the introduction of multi-channel [[Cable television|cable]] and [[satellite television]] in the 1990s.
In many other countries,
In Australia, [[Network Ten]] and its sister station [[10 Peach|Eleven]] have stripped ''[[The Simpsons]]'' for many years, airing the show daily at 6:00 p.m., which is traditionally the news hour on rivals [[Seven Network]] and [[Nine Network]]. Despite some attempts to fill this slot with original programming, ''The Simpsons'' stripped at 6:00 p.m. remained a mainstay of Australian television, only ending when [[CBS Corporation]] took control of Ten and Eleven in 2017 and ended their output deal with [[20th Century Fox Television]]; [[7mate]] now carries it in various timeslots.
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