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Material from Anger Management (TV series) was split to List of Anger Management episodes on January 29, 2013. The former page's history now serves to provide attribution for that content in the latter page, and it must not be deleted so long as the latter page exists. Please leave this template in place to link the article histories and preserve this attribution. |
There is no TBS here in Latin America, but there is a cable channel equivalent to FX. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 181.50.10.42 ( talk) 04:00, 24 May 2012 (UTC)
Per the show's own website and its press releases: "Bruce Helford serves as Executive Producer/Showrunner. Joe Roth, Mark Burg, Dave Caplan, Bob Kushell and Vince Totino are Executive Producers. Anger Management is produced by Lionsgate Television and distributed by Debmar-Mercury." -- Tenebrae ( talk) 22:13, 17 June 2013 (UTC)
I see here and on the opening/closing titles of the show itself that it says it's based on the film of the same name. I don't see that at all. Charlie's character shares nothing with Jack Nicholson's other than their job title. Jack's character was something of a nutjob with wild ideas and methods and underhand tactics. Charlie's is as normal as you can imagine an anger management therapist being. The film has the therapist living in his patient's house and engulfing himself in the life of his patient, Charlie just does his job. Weird they'd say it was based on the film. I think the most credit that would be due is something like "having watched the film about a crazy anger management therapist, we decided to make a sitcom about one who wasn't in any way crazy". — Preceding unsigned comment added by 93.104.185.236 ( talk) 19:03, 12 July 2013 (UTC)
The fact Season 2 officially is to have 90 episodes should in theory be some sort of record for a non-soap opera American series, considering that in the past it was not uncommon for TV series to air 30 or even 40 episodes in a season, but never 90. Any source out there support this? 70.76.69.162 ( talk) 17:13, 15 October 2013 (UTC)
Wattlebird has changed "The status of "Charlie and Kate Have Sex for Science" is unknown as all episodes with production codes up to, and including, 1040 (Blair's final episode) have aired" to "The episode was never filmed". [1] This episode was advertised at multiple websites but was withdrawn because of Selma Blair's "departure" from the series and its eventual disposition is unknown. There has never been a statement that it was not filmed at all so that is an unsourced claim and constitutes original research. Wattlebird's summary stated "episode was never filmed as has been stated over and over that the series filmed exactly 100 episodes", however a 90 episode order does not preclude production of additional episodes that have not been aired so I reverted noting that in my summary. Wattlebird has since reverted claiming "if the episode was merely just unaired, there would be a discrepency with the production codes, but there isn't". [2] This too constitutes original research, as the episode's production code was never stated. It was listed simply as "#10??" and no other episode used that production code. The situation is that we have no idea what happened to that episode so any statement as to what happened to it constitutes OR. The original text in the article says that the status of the episode is unknown and that is the most neutral way of addressing the mystery. -- AussieLegend ( ✉) 23:45, 23 December 2014 (UTC)
Is the category appropriate for this show? Because I don't think one secondary character is enough for it. My opinion is if some show dives deeper into such issues, only then it should have the category. So when is a show considered LGBT-related? -- Batman tas ( talk) 00:45, 6 June 2023 (UTC)