Judge Jeanine Pirro Explained

Alt Name:Judge Pirro
Genre:Court show
Starring:Jeanine Pirro
Narrated:William Price (seasons 2-3)
Theme Music Composer:Norman Arnold
Country:United States
Language:English
Num Seasons:3
Num Episodes:382
Camera:Multiple
Company:Telepictures Productions
Related:Judge Mathis
Channel:The CW

Syndication

Judge Jeanine Pirro (known simply as Judge Pirro since the premiere of its second season) is an American arbitration-based reality court show, presided over by retired Westchester County, New York, District Attorney Jeanine Pirro. The series debuted on The CW on September 22, 2008 and ended in May 2011.[1]

Synopsis

As with other court shows, such as Judge Mathis and Judge Judy, a former judge serves as neutral arbitrator, and awards the litigants monetary judgments, of up to $5000, which is paid in full by the program's producers. However, this program dealt more with the emotional aspect of each case, which was one of the show's benchmarks.[2] [3]

Production

Judge Jeanine Pirro was recorded in Chicago at NBC Tower, the NBC network's Chicago broadcast base and home to the related courtroom series Judge Mathis, and was produced by Telepictures Productions, distributed in syndication by Warner Bros. Greg Mathis, who presides over the aforementioned Judge Mathis, served as this series' consultant.

Upon its premiere, Judge Pirro was made part of The CW Daytime programming block; meaning that, while technically a syndicated series, it only aired on CW affiliates.[4] Following its first season, The Tyra Banks Show, another show by Telepictures Productions, was pulled from national syndication and took over Judge Pirro's place in the CW Daytime lineup, resulting in the series moving to Fox-owned stations, along with regular syndication outside of Fox O&O markets.[4]

In the spring of 2011, due to low ratings, Judge Pirro was cancelled, ending its run in May.[5] Also, in 2011, shortly before the show's cancellation, it was nominated for its second Daytime Emmy Award following a 2010 nomination and won the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Legal/Courtroom Program.

Notable appearances

Some reality television stars, along with a wrestler, appeared on the show during its run.

Honky Tonk Man was a witness for a defendant in a case; the others listed were plaintiffs in their respective cases.

Controversy

One of the bailiffs, Jimmie Akins,[6] was fired after he was arrested for attempted extortion charges.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Former NY DA Pirro gets TV show. WABC-TV/DT New York. November 24, 2013. May 5, 2008.
  2. Web site: Bauder. David. Ex-New York DA Jeanine Pirro joins TV bench. KPNX-TV. November 24, 2013. September 16, 2008.
  3. Web site: Peters. Jeremy. A Mellowed Pirro, but No Less Blunt on TV. The New York Times. November 24, 2013. September 28, 2008.
  4. Web site: Albiniak. Paige. 'Pirro' Preps for Fall Launch. Broadcasting & Cable. November 24, 2013. February 9, 2009.
  5. Web site: Albiniak. Paige. 'Dr. Phil' Becomes Syndie's Top-Talker as 'Oprah' Waves Goodbye. Broadcasting & Cable. June 14, 2011.
  6. Web site: Carpenter. John. Longtime Chicago cop moonlights as bailiff on TV's 'Judge Pirro'. Chicago Tribune. November 24, 2013. September 24, 2010.
  7. Web site: Heinzmann. David. Cop who resigned over FBI probe gets boot from TV show over extortion charge. Chicago Tribune. November 24, 2013. January 30, 2009.