Long a Staple of Fox, âCopsâ Lands in the Eager Arms of Spike TV
âCops,â one of the original reality shows on television, is moving to cable after 24 years on network television.
Starting in September, new episodes of the show will be televised exclusively on Spike TV, the president of Spike, Kevin Kay, announced on Monday. Spike will also have the rights to some past episodes of the series.
The announcement came two days after âCopsâ had its hourlong season finale on the Fox network, which introduced the series in 1989 and has carried it ever since. Fox signaled to the producers of âCopsâ that it likely wouldnât renew the show for another season, thereby giving it time to sell it elsewhere.
Mr. Kay of Spike told TV Guide that for several years he had been interested in picking up âCopsâ and the opportunity arose this spring. âItâs the perfect show for Spike,â Mr. Kay said. âWe want the fans to just shift over hopefully effortlessly.â
Spike said the episodes would be shown Saturdays at 8 p.m., as they have been on Fox for years. In a statement, the creator of âCops,â John Langley, praised Spike for sticking with the time slot. He added, âIt may be bold to say, but we are looking for yet another record-breaking run with Spike!â
âCopsâ helped to distinguish Fox when it was a relatively new network in the late 1980s and early 1990s. But the network ordered fewer episodes of âCopsâ this season, and it televised sporting events on many Saturdays instead. The network will continue to play up sports programming on Saturdays next season.
Fox similarly canceled the âAmericaâs Most Wantedâ in 2011, after pairing that show with âCopsâ for over a decade. John Walsh, the host and producer of âAmericaâs Most Wanted,â moved it to the Lifetime cable channel, but Lifetime cancelled it in March. Mr. Walsh is now said to be shopping the show, or a spin-off of it, to other channels.
Other series have moved to cable from broadcast with more success.
TBS, for instance, continues to televise âCougar Town,â a sitcom that it picked up from ABC.
âCopsâ is a logical fit for Spike, which has a number of other crime-oriented reality shows and has positioned itself as a channel for 18- to 49-year-old men. The channel, while relatively small, can repeat the episodes many more times than a network like Fox ever could.
It is expected to use âCopsâ as an anchor on Saturday nights to introduce new shows in the time slot immediately after it.