TeleTales 25…My How Thing$ Have Changed

TeleTales 25…My How Thing$ Have Changed

As you look at these numbers, consider this. What cost $100,000 in 1975 dollars now costs $440,030. If you remember from a few days back, “Miami Vice” cost almost $1.3 million per episode when it debuted in 1984. Anyone have a chart like this for today’s shows? Enjoy and share. -Bobby Ellerbee

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13 thoughts on “TeleTales 25…My How Thing$ Have Changed

  1. I would guess that much of the increases shown over the years for any given show were due to increased costs for lead actors (producers wanting to keep their stars, in order to keep the show on the air), particularly when looking at the final year of a show.

  2. Gregg Garrison kept the budget tight on Dean’s show. All the stars that appeared probably went in for “scale” because they just wanted to be on Dean’s show to have fun and didn’t need the money.

  3. Dean Martin’s show costs probably related more to the rights to use the songs he sang. One of the reasons a lot of singing-related shows died out was the licensing.

  4. If I remember it right, Miami Vice was the first show to break a million an episode on a regular basis, partly for the expensive props like Ferraris, but also for the music rights. The next show to break a million was the original Battlestar Galactica, those costs were all in the special effects.

  5. A contemporary 1-hour American scripted network drama typically costs about $3 million per episode in 2015; cable shows are about half that. Sitcoms start at about $1M. Reality shows are typically $200K-$500K, depending on the network (and some are much less). Above-the-line talent is still the biggest factor, not the physical production.

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