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Wikipedia

Judge Judy

Judge Judy is an American arbitration-based reality court show presided over by former Manhattan Family Court Judge Judith Sheindlin.[3] The show featured Sheindlin as she adjudicated real-life small-claims disputes within a simulated courtroom set.[4] Prior to the proceedings, all involved parties signed arbitration contracts agreeing to Sheindlin's ruling. The show aired in first-run syndication. As it was during its active years in production, it continues to be distributed by CBS Media Ventures in syndication, now in reruns that still draw notably high ratings.[5][6]

Judge Judy
GenreArbitration-based reality court show
Created byKaye Switzer
Sandi Spreckman
Directed byRandy Douthit[1]
Presented by
Narrated byMichael J. Stull
Jerry Bishop[2]
Steve Kamer
Theme music composerFred Lapides
Bill Bodine
Non-Stop Music Productions
Opening themeSymphony No. 5, First movement by Ludwig van Beethoven (seasons 9–25)
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons25
No. of episodes6,280
Production
Executive producerRandy Douthit[1]
Camera setupMulti-camera
Running time22 minutes
Production companiesBig Ticket Television
Queen Bee Productions (CBS Primetime Special)
Original release
NetworkSyndication
ReleaseSeptember 16, 1996 (1996-09-16) –
July 23, 2021 (2021-07-23)
Related
Judy Justice (Sheindlin as judge)
Tribunal Justice (Byrd as bailiff, produced by Sheindlin)

The series premiered on September 16, 1996, and concluded on July 23, 2021.[7] The court show ended with its 25th season after Sheindlin and CBS renewed their contract for the final time in 2017.[8] During its run in new episodes, the show did not release airings in the order they were taped. Thus the final filmed case of the series aired on June 8, 2021.[9] While latter seasons of the show currently rerun in syndication, the first and second seasons stream on Paramount Global's Pluto TV "Courtroom" channel as well as the "Judge Judy" channel.[10][11]

Judge Judy Sheindlin in 2012

Judge Judy had an impact on courtroom programming, reviving the genre as a whole.[12] It was the highest Nielsen-rated court show for the entirety of its 25-year run in original episodes, also frequently ranking as highest-rated television broadcast in daytime television and syndication. Of the court shows with a single series run (without on-and-off production from cancellation turned series revivals/recasting), Judge Judy had the most seasons. The series also won three Emmy Awards; earned Sheindlin a Guinness World Records recognition for longest serving television arbitrator; and originated many courtroom programming trends, from use of eponymous show titles to cold open trailers.

Two court spin-offs have been generated from Judge Judy: Judy Justice, starring Sheindlin as judge;[13][14] and upcoming Tribunal Justice, featuring Byrd as bailiff. Like Judy Justice, Tribunal Justice is created by Sheindlin and will stream on Amazon Freevee.[15]

Background edit

Origins and development edit

After Joseph Wapner was released from The People's Court on May 21, 1993, Sheindlin called up the program's producers, Ralph Edwards-Stu Billett Productions and Warner Bros. Television, and offered to do the show in his place. The receptionist who answered the phone responded "Are you crazy, lady?" before directly hanging up on Sheindlin.[16] Earlier that same year in February 1993, a Los Angeles Times article on Sheindlin's reputation as one of the toughest family court judges in the country,[17][18] written by Josh Getlin (inspired by his wife, Heidi, both of whom Sheindlin credits with her stardom[2]) caught the attention of 60 Minutes, which aired a segment on her on October 24, 1993.[19] The segment brought her national recognition, and days later from its airing, led to Sheindlin receiving an offer from a literary agent to write her first book.[20] Sheindlin accepted the offer, writing Don't Pee On My Leg and Tell Me It's Raining, published on February 7, 1996.[21] Its publisher, HarperCollins, expressed disapproval of her book title, claiming no one would promote it under that kind of name. Sheindlin stood her ground on the use of the title and ended up selling 216,709 copies.[20]

In March 1995, two talent scouts (before that, former People's Court producers) from a talent agency that was later entitled "Rebel Entertainment", Kaye Switzer and Sandi Spreckman, asked Sheindlin if she would like to preside over her own courtroom series. Sheindlin eventually accepted,[22][23][24] and the "Rebel" talent agency used a pilot episode to pitch to then-Big Ticket Television president Larry Lyttle in 1995.[25][26][27] Switzer, Spreckman, along with Rebel Entertainment Owner Richard Lawrence later sued CBS and Sheindlin numerous times over allegedly owed profit shares for their part in commencing the program and introducing the two parties.[28][22]

Sheindlin originally desired the show title to be "Hot Bench",[29][30] and the network and various news publications even promoted it as Hot Bench for some time prior to débuting,[31] but Big Ticket Television ultimately decided on "Judge Judy".[32] The Hot Bench title was eventually used by Sheindlin, however, for a different court show she later created (2014–present), which does not feature Sheindlin herself, but rather a panel of judges she cast for the series.

Petri Hawkins-Byrd, referred to on the program simply as Byrd or Officer Byrd, was the bailiff on Judge Judy for the show's entire 25-season run, making him the longest-serving bailiff in court television history.[33] Byrd's professional relationship with Sheindlin predates Judge Judy as he was her bailiff throughout her career in the Manhattan family court system. When Byrd found out about Sheindlin's show, he sent her a congratulatory letter, stating, "If you ever need a bailiff, I still look good in uniform."[34] She phoned Byrd at his home in California to accept his offer, and he ended up replacing the unaired pilot episode bailiff.[34] Sheindlin has stated that the show's producers desired different individuals for the role of bailiff, but she refused.

Sheindlin has revealed that from the start, she only envisioned her courtroom program lasting 2 to 3 seasons, rationalizing that most TV ventures fail.[35] Sheindlin appeared again on 60 Minutes on April 30, 2003. During the interview, Sheindlin stated:

I have a contract with the company to do the program through the 2006 season. At that point, we will have produced this program for 10 years. Right now, I would be satisfied with a good 10-year run. I think that would really be phenomenal. It would be lovely if we could end on a high note and for me to say "10 years and I still had people watching and I had a second career that was a blast."[29]

On September 14, 2015, Sheindlin began celebrating her 20th season anniversary presiding on Judge Judy. The program is the first in the court show genre to make it to 20 seasons without cancellation, as well as the first to make it to this extent under one arbitrator. Three years later by September 2018, the Judge Mathis court show entered its 20th season and became the second and only other court show to accomplish this feat. Sheindlin's distinction as television's longest-serving judge or arbitrator won her a place in the Guinness World Records on September 14, 2015.[36] Judge Judy completed its series run at 25 seasons. In honor of the 25th and final season of the program, Josh Getlin published another article on Sheindlin. The Los Angeles Times article, published on June 8, 2021 (the same day as the airing of the final filmed case), shared background details about the 1993 article that catapulted Sheindlin's television career and his relationship with Sheindlin.[2]

On-air format edit

Each episode of Judge Judy began with a cold open trailer of the main case, sensationalizing various moments of the case with brief soundbites accompanied with dramatic music, voice-over commentary, graphics, etc. This was followed by the show's title sequence music video. At the beginning of each court proceeding, information regarding who is suing whom and what for was revealed by voice-over commentary. When Sheindlin made her entrance, the courtroom audience was brought to order and instructed to rise by Byrd. He then informed Sheindlin of the docket number on the court calendar in the midst of providing Sheindlin a file of legal statements about the case, and directing audience members to be seated.

Sheindlin typically began each case by summarizing the disputed matters brought before her. This was followed by preliminary questioning of the parties as to dates, times, locations, and other scene-setting facts before addressing the crux of the lawsuit. Governing the discourse throughout the cases, Sheindlin typically allowed only brief portions of each of the testimonies; having read the parties' sworn statements before the taping, she was quick to reply, impose her spiel, and disallow responses that were not concise or which interrupted her.[37] Less frequently, Sheindlin allowed one or both of the opposing litigants to recount the entirety of their testimony. During the proceedings, Sheindlin coerced the parties to adhere to her strict management:[38] participants were not allowed to tuck hands in pockets,[39] drink water (unless they ask first), fold arms,[40] chew gum,[39] appear for court dressed at all revealingly or casually,[41][42] speak out of turn,[43] hesitate in answering questions,[44] offer statements of hearsay,[45] assert to the knowledge and thoughts of others, and had to maintain eye contact with Sheindlin while relaying testimony, among other things.[46] If Sheindlin deemed that children were not needed to testify, she directed Byrd to escort them out of the courtroom at the outset of the proceedings. If children testified, occasionally teens as well, Sheindlin would have them sit on the witness stand next to her, which Byrd typically stood in front of.

Like most modern court shows, cases on Judge Judy imitated small claims court cases in which civil trials (non-criminal cases) were heard and ruled on. Typically Sheindlin handled cases among former lovers, disputing neighbors, couples, or family and friend relations.[47] Disputes generally revolved around issues such as broken engagements, unpaid personal loans, contract breaches, personal injuries from other litigants or their pets, minor property damages (e.g., fender benders, carpet stains, etc.), the fate of jointly purchased household appliances, and rightful ownership of property.[47] As is standard practice in small claims court and most reality court shows alike, Judge Judy proceedings operated in the form of a bench trial (as opposed to its more common counterpart, the jury trial). Moreover, lawyers were not present, and litigants had to represent themselves.[48] Generally each show presented two cases, but infrequently, an episode would present a single long case, three shorter ones, or even four shorter ones.

After expressing her views of the circumstances and behaviors of the litigants with regards to their testimonies, Sheindlin rendered the judgment either by finding for the plaintiff (typically by stating, "Judgement for the plaintiff in the amount of x dollars," and a closing exclamation, such as "That's all," "We're done," or "Goodbye!"), or by dismissing the case specifically with or without prejudice. After she ruled and exited the courtroom, Byrd was heard stating: "Parties are excused. You may step out," after which he escorted the litigants out of the courtroom. Any counterclaims filed were handled similarly.

At the end of each case, there was typically a fourth-wall–breaking segment during which litigants, and sometimes their witnesses, expressed their feelings regarding the case directly to broadcast viewers. Sometimes, however, these segments were omitted, especially after cases involving resentful litigants, too upset over the circumstances to remain in the studio and provide comments.[49]

Inside details and inner workings edit

The producers of Judge Judy hired extras from an audience service who composed the entire studio. Paid audience members were easier to control due to contracts and employment. Producers also looked for a certain demographic of individuals and sat them strategically throughout their audience. Most of these paid extras were aspiring actors.[18][50] Though tickets were not offered for the show, arrangements could sometimes be made with Sheindlin's production staff to allow fans of the show into the audience. The extras could not dress casually, and no logos or brand names could be visible on their clothing. Extras were also instructed to appear as if they were having discussions with each other before and after each case, so Byrd made such announcements as "Order! All rise."[51]

To acquire cases, the show generally used one of the following three options:

  • Its 60 to 65 researchers, spread out across the country, entered small claims courts and photocopied numerous cases. These photocopied cases were then sent to Judge Judy producers, who reviewed them all in search of lawsuits they believed made for good television. According to the show's producers, only 3% of the photocopied cases were worthy enough for television.[18]
  • Its telephone number posting/announcement presented on each episode where interested individuals could call in with lawsuits.
  • Its website whereby lawsuits could be written out and submitted to the show.[52]

After one of these three processes, if the producers were interested, their employees would then call both parties and ask them questions relating to their lawsuit, making sure they were suitable for Judge Judy. If the parties agreed to be on the show and signed an arbitration contract, agreeing that arbitration in Sheindlin's court was final and couldn't be pursued elsewhere (unless Sheindlin dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice), their case would air on Judge Judy.[53]

The award limit on Judge Judy, as on most "syndi-court" shows (and most small claims courts in the U.S.), was $5,000. The award for each judgment was paid by the producers of the show from a fund reserved for the purpose.[54] Sheindlin ruled by either A.) issuing a verdict of a specific dollar amount (not always in the full amount of what is requested and rarely if ever more than what was requested even if she believed complainants were deserving of more) or B.) by dismissing the lawsuit altogether. When ruled on in these manners, cases couldn't be refiled or retried elsewhere. However, if Sheindlin specifically dismissed the lawsuit "without prejudice", that lawsuit could be refiled and retried in another forum. In some instances, Sheindlin dismissed cases without prejudice deliberately so that complainants pursued defendants in an actual court of law so that the defendants themselves were held financially accountable as opposed to the show. In such cases, Sheindlin had expressed particular aversion to the defendants in question.[55] Further, Sheindlin dismissed cases without prejudice when she suspected both the plaintiff(s) and defendant(s) of conspiring together to gain monetary rewards from the program.[55]

Both the plaintiff(s) and the defendant(s) also received an appearance fee. The appearance fee amount had varied between different litigants of the show: certain litigants had reported receiving a $500 appearance fee while others had reported receiving $100, and others $250.[56][57] In addition to the appearance fee amount, reportedly (at least some) litigants were paid $35 a day by the show.[57] The litigants' stay lasted for the number of days that the show did taping for that week, which was two or three days.[58] In addition, the airfare (or other means of travel) and hotel expenses of the litigants and their witnesses were covered by the show, and the experience was generally treated as an all-expense-paid vacation outside of the actual court case.[57] If there was an exchange of property, Sheindlin signed an order, and a sheriff or marshal oversaw the exchange.[59] Sheindlin saw only a half-page complaint and a defense response before the taping of the cases, sometimes only moments before.[16] Most of the cases, not including any footage deleted to meet the time constraints of the show, usually lasted anywhere from twelve to forty-five minutes.[60][61]

Judge Judy, like most court programs, was inexpensive to produce and thus created considerable income. A budget for a week's worth of Judge Judy episodes was half the cost of a single network sitcom episode.[62]

Recordings and airings edit

Three days every other week (two weeks a month), Sheindlin and her producers taped the court show.[32] They usually produced ten to twelve cases for each day they taped the show. This made for about a week's worth of episodes, all done within one day. Anywhere from thirty to thirty-six cases were taped over three days during the week. Sheindlin appeared as a guest on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on September 13, 2011. When asked by Kimmel how many days a month she works, Sheindlin replied, "Five days."[63] Sheindlin and her producers sometimes taped only five cases per day and two days per week.[64][65] The show had fifty-two taping days a year.[66] For each season, some 650 claims were brought to the set to be "presided" over by Judge Judy.[64] This means approximately 16,250 claims had been brought to Judy Sheindlin's Hollywood set by the show's completion.

For the most part, cases were taped throughout the year except for two breaks Sheindlin and all of the staff members of her show had for the year. One of the two breaks included an extra week off in December, as the show was only taped one week out of that month because of the holidays. The other break was from mid-July (only taping one week in July) and all through August. According to members of the show, the reason for this break was that people were more interested in taking vacations than in filing lawsuits around that time.[16] When the seasons premiered in September, only episodes perceived as the best by program staff of the ones taped before Sheindlin's break were selected to start the season. Thus, the first few weeks (the first week in particular) would consist of what the show felt to be its best episodes. In Sheindlin's words, "It's like drinking wine. You don't serve the really good bottle of wine third."[67]

Altogether, there were 260 new episodes each season. There was at least one new episode for every weekday, except a few hiatuses during most of the summer, a couple of holidays, and in the latter seasons of the show, early spring as well (much of March and April).[68] The cases were all pre-recorded for editing purposes and would usually air one to three months after being taped. The cases were mixed up and not shown in order of when they were recorded.[69] While the cases taped in March (sometimes April) ended the seasons, the cases taped throughout April, May, June, and July started each season in September and lasted through October.[70] Throughout the very beginning of each season, two new Judge Judy episodes aired per day. After two weeks, this was reduced to one new airing a day, followed by a repeat. There were also various other moments throughout the year where two new episodes were shown for a few weeks. This had sometimes included January when the show returned from its winter hiatus. Two new episodes were also shown daily during the "sweeps" months of November, February, and May. Unlike other television programs, the Judge Judy season finale did not air in April or May; rather, it aired in June, July, August, or sometimes even very early September just before the following season. When the season finale was extended to July, August, or September, most of the summer episodes preceding it were repeats with new episodes that were few and far in between.

Two DVDs, featuring "memorable cases", were released by the show: the first in 2007, "Judge Judy: Justice Served," and the second in 2008, "Judge Judy: Second To None."[71]

Location edit

 
Sunset Bronson Studios is where "Judge Judy" was taped for its entire series run (though only partially during COVID-19 season 25)

For its entire 25-season run, Judge Judy taped at the Sunset Bronson Studios on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles, California.[72] In alternating weeks, Sheindlin, who owns a home in New York among other cities/states, flew out on her private jet to tape her show, typically Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday.[32]

From 2014 through the conclusion of Judge Judy in 2021, the show's courtroom set was located directly beside the set of the courtroom series Sheindlin created and produces, Hot Bench. Hot Bench remains in production at the Sunset Bronson Studios. Previous to that, the space directly beside Sheindlin's set was used for the courtroom series Paternity Court, only for the 2013–14 television season (that court show's 1st season).[73] Prior to that, the space was used for Judge Judy's sister show Judge Joe Brown until Judge Joe Brown's 2013 cancellation. Like Judge Judy, Judge Joe Brown was also produced by Big Ticket Entertainment.[60] The two shows alternated taping weeks.

Despite the show being taped primarily in California, it displayed various images of New York City during the incoming commercial bumpers (audio and visuals shown returning from commercial breaks), including New York subways, parks, monuments, etc. In addition, the words "State of New York" and "Family Court" (Sheindlin was previously a New York family court judge in addition to being a native of New York)[74] scrolled back and forth within the letterbox-like graphics that appeared during the show's outgoing and incoming commercial bumpers, lasting from season 9 through 25. The set also featured a New York state flag (positioned across from an American flag) situated behind Judge Judy Sheindlin's chair.

Program remodeling and restyling updates edit

Over the show's 25-year existence, it saw very few restyling updates from season to season, that is, outside of seasons 1, 2, 9, and 25 (season 25 due to COVID-19).[75] Outside of initial seasons and the final season, most modifications to the program had been done in minute detail, such as to the show's bookshelf display seen near the courtroom entrance. Aesthetically, the show's theme song, graphics, and color scheme were the only aspects that had changed repeatedly throughout its lifespan.[76]

Original format, seasons 1 through 8 edit

Season 1, and specifically its initial episodes, took a strikingly contrasting presentation from the latter seasons of the show. The courtroom set design and stage props vastly differed from what would become commonplace for the court show. The first episodes of season 1 also used music composed by Fred Lapides: a piano-based melody for the title sequence and closing credits. This theme music was never to be used again outside of the early stages of season 1 in 1996. The show's season 1 voice-over artist Michael Stull was heard narrating this intro theme, stating: "This is Judge Judy. Real people—in real cases—in real conflict. She's a real judge with over 15 years of courtroom experience."[77][78]

After numerous episodes towards the beginning of season one, the show's theme music was completely revamped to a percussive drum-like, ascending melody composed by Bill Bodine. Integrated into the modified theme music, the narration during the title sequence was also updated with Michael Stull announcing, "You are about to enter the courtroom of Judge Judith Sheindlin. The people are real. The cases are real. The rulings are final. This is her courtroom. This is Judge Judy." This narration lasted through season 8 of the program, though Jerry Bishop took over the narration by season 2.[77]

When the show switched to the melody composed by Bill Bodine in season 1, the opening music video was updated to motioning scenes of Sheindlin from the bench, gesticulating as though presiding over cases. These motioning images moved freely until colliding with an image of the Judge Judy courthouse logo, emphasized by a striking cymbal-like sound effect. The background scene for this title sequence music video was originally depicted in navy blue for a short portion of season 1 before switching to a sea green that same season through the 4th season.[77]

In season 4, the entire courtroom set was redesigned while retaining the sea green and saffron graphics and intro.

By seasons 5 through 8, the title sequence commenced with an approaching scene towards a computer animated courthouse display up until that scene entered the courthouse. From there, several shots of Sheindlin gesticulating from her bench—as though presiding over various cases—were displayed in motion. These motioning images eventually developed into the courthouse logo that represents the program (the logo is always displayed within the letter "D" in "Judy") by the end of this opening music video.[77] The graphics were also changed to blue and saffron along with this change.[77]

In the seventh season, while the theme song remained, the instrumentals were updated. In addition, the font for the short closing credits and litigants font was updated but the long closing credits retained the original font. By the eighth season, the font was completely changed and the returning from commercial break scenes were replaced with New York City scenes.[77]

Strikingly atypical to most of the show's run, the first few seasons saw litigators and their witnesses readily speaking out of turn, bickering between each other and taking to misbehaviors without Sheindlin exacting the strict measures for which later became a staple of the program.[citation needed]

Season 9 edit

The ninth season (2004–05) was one of the few seasons in which the show underwent major remodeling when music for the show's opening, closing, and to/from commercial portions were modified. A remixed version of a melody from Beethoven's 5th Symphony was then adopted as the show's title sequence and closing music. This arrangement was composed by Non-Stop Music Productions. During the program's outgoing commercial bumpers (short portions of the program that took each episode to a commercial break, in the case of this program, adding previews of the remainder of the case or cases to be featured in the episode) a dramatic violin-like melody sounded in contrast to the Beethoven remix. When the program resumed with its incoming commercial bumper, the Beethoven remix once again played. Additionally, solemn violin-like striking tones sounded directly following Sheindlin's final verdict of each episode, lasting from season 9 through the remainder of the show's run.[79] The graphics also began showing up in falu red.

The intro was also changed for the ninth season as well. For its scenes, the Lady Justice statue is shown followed by a split screen of Sheindlin and the Statue of Liberty (over a blue background) followed by Sheindlin approaching the camera folding her arms and smiling. This is followed by shots of her presiding over different cases (which are shown in the scales of the Lady Justice statue in cubes).

For much of the series outside of the initial episodes, the opening music video consisted of voice-over artist Jerry Bishop stating: "You are about to enter the courtroom of Judge Judith Sheindlin. The people are real. The cases are real. The rulings are final. This is Judge Judy."[80] Originally between the statements "The rulings are final" and "This is Judge Judy" was the statement, "This is her courtroom."[81] This line was dropped in 2004 when season 9 began.

Seasons 10 through 23 edit

Beginning in September 2012, the show made a switch to high definition with its 17th season. The bumpers between commercials are also in HD, although most on-screen graphics such as plaintiff and defendant descriptions are framed to fit a 4:3 aspect ratio.[82]

Late into the show's 23rd season, Sheindlin drastically altered her hairstyle by abandoning the bouffant hairdo that she had sported since the show's beginnings; she replaced that with a new style created from her hair pulled back and bounded by a clip-on hair bun at the back of her head. Her new hairstyle sparked widespread attention, and considerable negative reviews from viewers (media spectators alike) to the point that the show's Facebook moderator admonished posters that negative commentary about the clip-on bun would be deleted.[83]

Her bailiff, Petri Hawkins-Byrd, admitted to a preference for the original hairdo. Asked about the change in hairstyle, Sheindlin described the former as "a lot of goop and teasing and product and fussing around by somebody else. This is so much easier. And as each hour in every day we have becomes more precious, the less you want to spend time patshkeing over the way you look."[84]

COVID-19, seasons 24 and 25 edit

In March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused the 24th season production of Judge Judy to end prematurely at only 199 episodes, 61 episodes fewer than the show's typical season number of 260.

When Judge Judy returned for season 25, its final season, a multitude of COVID-19 precautionary measures were in place, vastly distinguishing this season of the show from previous seasons. Sheindlin presided remotely from New York;[85] producers built a partial makeshift set there for her, with a different set design behind her and a larger, darker executive chair. Byrd and the litigants (and witnesses, if any) participated from the Los Angeles studio, now devoid of audience members. Sheindlin interacted with the litigants through a live Internet link. Because Byrd could not physically convey evidence between her and the litigants, evidence was scanned with a document camera at the litigant lecterns, allowing Sheindlin to view it remotely.[86][87] In addition, litigant afterthoughts following the case were shared at the podiums, instead of in the hallway set used pre-COVID.

Steve Kamer took over as voice-over announcer for the 25th season after Jerry Bishop's death on April 21, 2020.

Episodes edit

Season Episodes Originally aired
First aired Last aired
1 220 September 16, 1996 September 5, 1997
2 205 September 8, 1997 July 6, 1998
3 260 September 14, 1998 September 10, 1999
4 233 September 13, 1999 August 25, 2000
5 261 September 11, 2000 August 17, 2001
6 260 September 10, 2001 August 23, 2002
7 260 September 9, 2002 August 21, 2003
8 261 September 8, 2003 August 19, 2004
9 260 September 13, 2004 August 18, 2005
10 260 September 12, 2005 August 24, 2006
11 261 September 11, 2006 July 13, 2007
12 260 September 10, 2007 July 4, 2008
13 260 September 8, 2008 July 10, 2009
14 260 September 14, 2009 June 17, 2010
15 260 September 13, 2010 June 17, 2011
16 260 September 12, 2011 June 15, 2012
17 260 September 10, 2012 June 28, 2013
18 260 September 9, 2013 July 4, 2014
19 260 September 8, 2014 September 11, 2015
20 260 September 14, 2015 September 9, 2016
21 260 September 12, 2016 September 8, 2017
22 260 September 11, 2017 September 7, 2018
23 260 September 10, 2018 September 6, 2019
24 199 September 9, 2019 June 9, 2020
25 200 September 14, 2020 July 23, 2021

Series pilot and finale, final taped case edit

On May 21, 2021, Sheindlin was asked by USA Today what she recalled of her unaired Judge Judy pilot episode, used to sell the series to Big Ticket Television. Sheindlin responded by expressing great disfavor of the pilot episode, indicating that Judge Judy producers only set up fictionalized cases and steered her to dramatized reactions and behaviors. This ultimately ended up in Sheindlin's production team sending only bits and pieces of the pilot to CBS for approval of the show's broadcast. During the interview, Sheindlin recounted:

I remember that somebody then was trying to fit me into a sort of cookie cutter (mold). They had seen the 60 minutes [documentary], and they thought the approach that they saw in 60 minutes could be almost a caricature, and I'm not a caricature of that person, I am that person. So the cases that they brought to me to do the pilot were not genuine, and I couldn't react to things that weren't genuine. Because when I'm trying to figure out the truth of a case, and there really is no truth, I can't work. So they took little snippets of the pilot and created a sizzle reel, along with 60 Minutes tape and sold that."[88]

Sheindlin taped the final case of the series on April 15, 2021. The case, described by media spectators as mundane, saw a general contractor suing his customer over unpaid work.[89][90] In this final taped case of the series, Sheindlin also made no farewell remarks nor gave any attention to it being the series' close. While this final filmed case (episode 179 of season 25, "Judge Judy Makes a Call!/Mother vs. Son"[91]) aired on June 8, 2021, cases taped before that point continued to air for the first time through the series finale episode,[92][93] which aired on July 23, 2021 (episode 200 of season 25, "Architecture Barter Gone Bad").[94] Worthy to note, only one detail made Sheindlin's final filmed case of the series on June 8 stand out among other episodes since it was not featured in the series finale episode: that is a glittery, bee-shaped clip that Sheindlin wore in her hair. Sheindlin explained that this was a wink to her Judge Judy fans and a nod to her Queen Bee production company at the end of a 25-year reign over daytime television.

Sheindlin addressed that never once throughout 25 years of filming her courtroom series did her appeal for the job wane. "I was as enthusiastic and rigorous in the last case that I taped as I was at the beginning," Sheindlin pointed out. On her final day of taping, Sheindlin was not in low spirits. Rather, she was reflective on her tenure on the show as "a job well done", with excitement about her new spin-off series, Judy Justice. Of her thoughts on ending the program, Sheindlin added:

I think that one of the reasons why I wasn't teary is because I wasn't going into a vast unknown. I wasn't going to do a cooking show. I was gonna be doing exactly what I was doing, exactly what I do, but in a different format.[95]

Judge Judy Primetime edit

On May 20, 2014, CBS aired a one-hour special called Judge Judy Primetime which aired at 8 p.m. ET/PT. The special was a combination of reshown clips from the 1993 60 Minutes Special on Sheindlin, as well as a few never before seen cases. The special marked Judge Judy's first airing in primetime, a landmark for court shows which are typically limited to daytime or late night hours.[96][97] It brought in 5.66 million viewers, enough to make it the night's top-rated show on CBS. In addition, the special came in just behind American Idol, which brought in 6.61 million viewers.[98]

Contrived case edit

At least one case in the series was allegedly contrived by the litigants just to receive monetary payment from the program.

In April 2013, former litigants from a 2010 airing of the show revealed they conspired together in fabricating a lawsuit in which the logical outcome would be to grant payment to the plaintiff. The operation, devised by musicians Kate Levitt and Jonathan Coward, was successful: Sheindlin awarded the plaintiff (Levitt) $1,000. The litigants involved also walked away with an appearance fee of $250 each and an all-expense-paid vacation to Hollywood, California. In reality, all the litigants in question—plaintiffs and defendants alike—were friends who split the earnings up among each other. It was also reported that the show's producers were suspicious of the sham all along, but chose to look the other way. The lawsuit was over the fictitious death of a cat as a result of a television crushing it.[99]

Judge Judy in external media edit

Curb Your Enthusiasm edit

Sheindlin and her program appeared on the November 26, 2017, broadcast of Curb Your Enthusiasm, presiding over a sketch comedy court case with Larry David as the plaintiff who unsuccessfully sued the previous owner of his house over custody of a sick ficus plant she left behind when she moved out, but later stole back. The pseudo-Judge Judy case assumed the appearance of an actual case from Sheindlin's program, taking place from the show's courtroom set with trademarked voice-over briefs, theme music, and audience response.[100]

CHiPs '99 edit

Sheindlin appeared as herself, presiding judge on her Judge Judy courtroom program in the 1998 American made-for-television crime drama film, CHiPs '99. Leading up to her cameo, Officer Francis (Frank) Llewelyn Poncherello "Ponch" (played by Erik Estrada) twists the arm of Captain Jonathan Baker (played by Larry Wilcox) into appearing on her television courtroom program. Uneasy about the idea of humiliating himself on national television, Baker acquiesces and ends up suing Nyeman (played by Googy Gress). The case saw Baker accusing Nyeman of failure to practice proper dog-walking etiquette, Nyeman was accused of allowing his dog to poop on his private property resulting in financial damage.[101]

Judge Judy show cast edit

Judge Judy edit

 
Judge Judy Sheindlin

Judge Judy Sheindlin was born on October 21, 1942, in Brooklyn, New York, to German-Jewish parents Murray and Ethel Blum.

Sheindlin had gained a reputation for although sporting a "grannyish" lace collar, having a deceivingly tough judicial approach, both in the Manhattan family court and her simulated televised courtroom.[102] Sheindlin also became widely known for her no-nonsense fact-finding process that limited litigants to concise and relevant statements,[102] restiveness for litigants to move things along quickly, and forthright interjections that cut through the parties' attempts at arguments and excuse-making with her.[102] In line with these attributes, her program had been touted as "a show where justice is dispensed at the speed of light."

Strict in her management of the proceedings,[103] Sheindlin coerced precise compliance with her many courtroom rules and expectations.[38] To that end, Sheindlin was especially sudden with scolding and punishing what she perceived as insolence, disobedience, misbehavior or even annoyance.

As a result of her crusty disposition,[104] volatile temper,[105] and cheeky treatment,[106] taglines such as "Justice with an Attitude" had been used to characterize the program.[107] Sheindlin became known for her regular catchphrases on the program, which became known as "Judyisms".[108] Some she most commonly used are:

  • "The answer is either 'yes' or 'no'".[38]
  • "'Um/Uh is not an answer," or "Uh-huh/uh-uh is not an answer," or "Yep/nope is not an answer".[109]
  • "Shoulda', woulda', coulda'".[38]
  • "I don't give a rat's what you disagree with, sir!"[110]
  • "That's baloney!"[111]
  • "Clearly, you are not wrapped too tight."[112]
  • "That's a whole lot of 'who shot John'".[113]
  • "If you tell the truth, you don't have to have a good memory."[114][115]

Sheindlin used the position of television arbitrator to impart guidance, direction, and life lessons not only to her litigants but her viewers and public at large. An example of guidance often stressed by Sheindlin was to be independent through employment, especially to not live off the government where unwarranted or other people directly where oppression from or friction with the provider may eventuate. In the former, Sheindlin could often be quoted as stating, "No, you aren't supporting yourself. Byrd and I [or "We," as she pointed at herself and Byrd] are supporting you."[116][117] Sheindlin had stated that the main message she wanted viewers to take away from her program is that people must take responsibility for their actions and do the right thing.[68][118]

Bailiff Byrd edit

Petri Adonis Byrd was born on November 29, 1957, in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York. Byrd had his middle name legally changed to "Hawkins" when he joined the Judge Judy program as a salute to his late mother, whose maiden name was also Hawkins.[110] In the program, Sheindlin referred to him simply as "Byrd," or less frequently "Officer Byrd."[110]

Byrd took on the role of Sheindlin's courtroom bailiff.[119] His main duties in the program consisted of introducing the cases by calling the parties forward and swearing them in, delivering evidence back and forth, and excusing the parties once the case was complete.[120] Full of running gags, Byrd point-blankly disagreed with and corrected Sheindlin in moments when she bounced questions off him for his agreement. He was also noted for his preoccupation with crosswords during the proceedings.[120] In addition, Byrd routinely delivered evidence to Sheindlin while having his head and eye contact directed away from her.[121] A staple of the program, Sheindlin relied on Byrd's sophistication and academic knowledge base, with Byrd frequently having to interject in areas to which she struggled: mathematics, new media, social media, current fads and vernacular, etc.[120]

Sheindlin often comically incorporated Byrd amid her critiques and reprimands of litigants, such as by sharing with the parties Byrd's disapproving thoughts of them or expanding upon case details, specifically for the benefit of Byrd's understanding, without any actual communication at all from Byrd about said litigants or details. Sheindlin has stated "We're like two old married people who have reached an accord. I can rely on [Byrd] to be my protector. We don't have to exchange words—he knows what I'm thinking. People who watch us sense we have a history, and that is very important."[122] Byrd described Sheindlin as "Blunt, witty, and sharp as a tack." However, when asked if he'd like to appear as a litigant before her, he answered candidly (laughing), "Hell no. And I don't advise any of my friends to do so. Not if they want to maintain their love of the judicial system."[123]

Byrd has been described by the Los Angeles Times as "the guard dog to the pit bull."[120]

Salary, raise non-negotiation, and contract renewals edit

By 1999, Sheindlin began earning salaries reflective of her court show's success. For every roughly three years from that point forward, Sheindlin handed over her salary wishes to CBS management representatives in a sealed envelope during contract renewals. She communicated her wishes as nonnegotiable, that otherwise she would take her talents elsewhere and produce the program herself.[124][125]

In early 2000 during the show's 4th season, Sheindlin's annual salary from Judge Judy was reported as $7.8 million.[126] In January 2003 during the 7th season, Sheindlin's annual salary was increased to $25 million when she signed a contract to preside over Judge Judy through its 10th season (2005–06). For the first time, she was put in the top pay ranks for TV performers.[127] In September 2005, just before Sheindlin's 10th season anniversary, it was reported that her contract was extended 2 seasons further, promising the program through its 12th season (2007–08). As part of the deal, Sheindlin's annual salary would be increased to $30 million for the then-upcoming 2 seasons.[64][128] In January 2008 (during show's 12th season), Sheindlin's annual salary was increased to $45 million when her contract was renewed through the 2013-14 television season (its 17th season).[129][130][131]

Her next contract renewal, in May 2011 (during the show's 15th season), saw her program extended to the 2014-15 television season (the show's 19th) and Sheindlin's Judge Judy salary increase to its peak of $47 million.[132][133][134] Producing vast sums of wealth for CBS, Sheindlin's courtroom series brought in $230 million in advertising in 2012 alone.[135] Sheindlin's $47 million per year Judge Judy salary translated into just over $900,000 per workday (she worked 52 days per year), reportedly making her the highest paid television star in 2013 and 2014.[136][137]

Sheindlin's next Judge Judy contract renewal signing with CBS transpired in March 2015 during the 19th season of her program. As part of the annual $47 million contract deal, Sheindlin has furnished ownership of the entire Judge Judy episode library (including all past and then future episodes) in exchange for extending the program to its 24th season.[132] The renewal also included a first-look production deal for CBS with Sheindlin's television production company, Queen Bee Productions (which produces syndicated courtroom series Hot Bench), allowing CBS to have first viewing exposure to any material that her production company engineered.[138]

Sheindlin's final contract renewal signing with CBS was in August 2017 (late in the show's 21st season), extending the show for one additional season to its 25th.[8] The terms of the agreement also included Sheindlin's submission of the Judge Judy episode library back to CBS, which has allegedly furnished Sheindlin with an additional annual income of $100 million. The move allows CBS to replay the show (at the time, as many as 5,200 episodes) without limitations on any platform they choose. Before Sheindlin's alleged contractual sell of the episode library back to CBS, she reportedly had her team shop the episode library around the entertainment industry for a much higher amount, as much as $200 million annually.[132]

Forbes named Sheindlin the highest paid host in November 2018 stemming from her $47 million per year Judge Judy salary combined with the annual income from her Judge Judy episode library.[139] In 2018, Sheindlin earned $147 million between the $100 million from the alleged sale of the present and then future episode library of her show to CBS, in addition to her $47 million arbitration handling salary.[139] In 2020 and 2021, Sheindlin's net worth was reportedly $440 million and $460 million, respectively.[140][141]

Reception edit

Nielsen ratings by seasons for series original run (1996-2021) edit

1996–1998

When Judge Judy launched in September 1996, it went on the air with little media attention and publicity.[12] By the end of October of that year, the show was averaging only a 1.5 rating, putting it in the mid-rank of the 159 syndicated shows on the air. At that time, it was never expected that the show's ratings would ever compete with highly successful daytime TV shows of that era, such as The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Rosie O'Donnell Show and The Jerry Springer Show.[68] According to Biography's documentary film on Sheindlin, "Judge Judy: Sitting in Judgment" (aired February 21, 2000),[142] producers of Judge Judy were disappointed that the show was barely making it on the radar. However, it did not take long for the court show to pick up momentum as Judge Judy rose to a 2.1 rating by the end of that first season. By the starting point of her 2nd season, it was observed that Sheindlin's guest presence at public venues had already generated avid recognition and fanfare, her reaction characterized as "overwhelmed by her success, as if it was something she didn't expect."[12] Season 2 (1997–98) of the program saw the court show already rise into the 4 ratings ranges, averaging a 4.3.[143]

The 3rd season (1998–99) of Judge Judy was the show's first season as the highest-rated program in daytime television, having surpassed the highly rated Jerry Springer Show and even then daytime powerhouse The Oprah Winfrey Show for the first time[144] (King World Productions which launched Oprah was folded into CBS Television Distribution in 2007, which distributed Judge Judy): the program's ratings more than doubled to a 5.6 for that season, marking Judge Judy as an early success.[16]

It was due, in part, to this early success that daytime television began to feature more court programming, such as a revival of The People's Court that re-debuted in fall 1997. In 1999, Judge Judy moved from Worldvision Enterprises to Paramount Domestic Television, which also distributed her stablemate Judge Joe Brown and eventually Judge Mills Lane. Many other former judges were given their own court shows in syndication due in large part to Sheindlin's popularity. Examples include Greg Mathis, Glenda Hatchett, Alex Ferrer, Maria Lopez, Karen Mills-Frances, Cristina Perez, David Young, and many others. In addition, the series helped to spawn various nontraditional court programs. These include the reality-based revival of Divorce Court, which was originally presided over by Mablean Ephriam (1999–2006), Lynn Toler (2006–2020), Faith Jenkins (2020-2022), and currently helmed by Star Jones; the short-lived Power of Attorney, capturing various high-profile attorneys arguing cases for litigants in front of Andrew Napolitano; Street Court, which took litigation outside of the courtroom; Jury Duty, featuring an all-celebrity jury hearing cases presided over by Bruce Cutler; etc. Furthermore, Judge Judy's rise in popularity enabled several non-real life judges to preside over courts, such as Nancy Grace, Larry Joe Doherty, and Gloria Allred.

Also, partly due to Judge Judy's popularity, the producers of The People's Court decided to replace Ed Koch with Judy's husband, Jerry Sheindlin, as their presiding judge during The People's Court's present incarnation 3rd season/overall series 15th season (1999–2000). This meant that husband and wife would be either part of the same afternoon lineup or competing for ratings against each other. The experiment, however, did not last long as midway through The People's Court's 4th season (2000–01), Jerry was replaced by the show's current judge, Marilyn Milian.[16][145]

1999–2006

For its 4th season (1999–2000), Judy's ratings exploded to its highest for its 25 season lifespan, peaking at a 9.3 rating. At this point, Sheindlin's courtroom series was still more than ever the highest rated program in daytime. It was also at this point that Judge Judy held a record of increasing its ratings for each successive season since its debut. Because of the program's success, Judge Judy began airing at better time periods.[16]

It was by the show's 5th season (2000–01) that Judy's streak of growing in ratings from season to season since its debut had ceased. However, the court show still remained the highest-rated program in daytime that season with a 5.6 rating.[76] By the 6th season (2001–02), Judy was no longer the highest-rated program in daytime, beaten out by The Oprah Winfrey Show. The court show averaged a 5.0 rating that season.[76] Likewise, for her 7th season (2002–03), she also averaged a 5.0.[76] For her 8th season (2003–04), Sheindlin finally reversed the season-to-season downward turn in her ratings by averaging a 7.1.[16] Of the seven running court shows during the 2004–05 season, most of them earned a 3.63 rating; however, Judge Judy remained court genre leader with a 7.5 ratings score for that season (the show's 9th).[16] For her 10th season (2005–06), Judge Judy averaged a 4.8 rating.[146] Judge Judy averaged 4.6 rating for her 11th season (2006–07). Meanwhile, other programs in the genre were trailing Sheindlin from a vast distance: Judge Joe Brown averaged a 2.9 rating; The People's Court averaged a 2.7; Judge Mathis averaged a 2.4; Divorce Court averaged a 2.0; Judge Alex averaged 1.9; Judge Hatchett averaged a 1.5; rookies—Cristina's Court averaged a 1.4, and Judge Maria Lopez came in last, averaging a 1.0 rating.[147]

2007–2012

For its 12th season (2007–08), Judge Judy averaged a 4.8 rating (4.8 HH AA%/7.4 HH GAA% rating) and 9.9 million average daily viewers.[71] Judy was the only first-run syndication program to increase in ratings for that season from the previous, leading CBS to immediately extend her contract through the 2012–13 season.[148] For its 13th season (2008–09), the show averaged a 4.2 rating (4.2 HH AA%/6.5 HH GAA% rating) and 9.02 million average daily viewers.[149] Its 14th season (2009–10) marked the first season in nearly a decade since the 2000–01 season that any daytime television program had been able to surpass The Oprah Winfrey Show's ratings (Judge Judy is also the show in question that during the 2000–01 television season surpassed The Oprah Winfrey Show in daytime TV ratings): Judy broke Winfrey's near decade-long streak with a 4.4 rating (4.4 HH AA%/6.9 HH GAA% rating) and 9.6 million average daily viewers.[150] It was also at that point that Sheindlin's courtroom series became the highest rated show in all of daytime television programming.[149] Judy secured this title in its 15th season (2010–11) as the program remained ahead of Oprah in her [Oprah] final season and the highest-rated daytime television offering, averaging a 5.11 rating[151] and 9.6 million viewers.[152] During this season, Judy also became the highest rated show in first-run syndication.[153] Late that same season in May 2011, as a result of continued high ratings, CBS again extended Sheindlin's contract, this time through the 2014–15 season (the show's 19th).[154]

In the first post-Oprah television season, the court show continued its reign as the most dominant show in daytime and also became the top-rated show in all of syndication, its 16th season (2011–12) racking up a 7.0 rating and 9.29 million average daily viewers.[155] As the top-rated show in all of syndication at this point, Sheindlin defeated first-run syndication programs and off-network syndication programs (rerun episodes of programs off their original network).[151] The title of overall syndication leader was previously held by off-network syndicated program Two and a Half Men (2010–11) and before that, first-run syndicated program Wheel of Fortune (2009–10).[156][157]

Judge Judy's ratings boost in its 16th season and late into the show's 15th season was at least partly due to Nielsen's change in methodology, in April 2011. This variation benefits programs that air multiple, differing episodes a day. The updated method is totalling ratings points through adding all viewings for each daily episode–even if one of those viewings come from an individual already counted in as having watched another of the show's daily episodes. For example, as Judge Judy airs two different episodes per day, two ratings points are counted for every one person who has watched both the first and second daily airings. This is as opposed to one person's viewing of the two daily episodes amounting to only one ratings point. Prior to the convert, the latest method was only used in GAA numbers, while the previous method was used in average audience measure. Some court shows air in one hour blocks and thus do not benefit at all from the updated method.[151] Worth noting, however, is that shows airing multiple daily episodes may not directly benefit monetarily as the rating system that local stations use to sell to advertisers is based upon the prior method.[158]

2012–2016

For its 17th season (2012–13), Judge Judy once again pulled in a 7.0 household rating.[153][159] The series delivered 9.63 million average daily viewers that season, growing by +32,000 viewers over the prior season.[160] Despite this, Judy lost its 1st place spot as the ratings leader in all of syndication that season, descending to 2nd place, only a tad behind The Big Bang Theory (off-network syndicate) which took home a 7.1 for that season. Still and all, this was the 3rd season in a row that Judy earned the title of ratings leader in all of first-run syndication.[153] Moreover, this was the 4th consecutive season that Judy was the ratings leader in all of daytime television programming.[161] For the 18th season (2013–14), Judy rose to a 7.2 household rating and brought in 9.94 million viewers, gaining 8% over its prior season. Also for this season, the show reclaimed the title as highest rated program in all of daytime (5th consecutive time, 8th time overall) and all of syndication (3rd time).[162][163] The show's 19th season (2014–15) pulled in a 7.0 household rating and remained the highest rated program in both daytime television as well as all of syndication.[164] The 20th season (2015–16) was Judy's 3rd consecutive year as syndication's top strip, the court show averaging a 7.0 full-season household rating.[165]

2017–2021

For its 21st season (2016–17), Judge Judy trounced all of its competitors in daytime and all of syndication. The court show scored a 6.8 household rating for its 21st season.[166][167] For the 22nd season (2017–18), Judy attained a 6.9 live plus same day household average, well ahead of anything else in syndication. It marked the show's 5th straight year as the leader in all of syndication ratings and the 9th straight year as the leader in first-run syndication ratings.[168] For the 23rd season (2018–19), it was reported by Nielsen that Judy topped first-run syndication ratings for the 10th straight year with 6.8 household rating.[169] According to Nielsen's ratings, the court show finished out its penultimate season (2019–20) at the top of first-run syndication for an 11th straight year, Judy taking home a 6.2 household rating. The program's closest competitors were Family Feud at 6.1, Jeopardy! at 6.0, and Wheel of Fortune at 5.8.[170] Going out on top for its 25th anniversary, Judge Judy boasted its 12th year as top Nielsen rated program in first-run syndication,[171] ending its run with an estimated 7.8 million viewers for that final season (2020–21).[86] Judge Judy also lasted its entire 25 year first-run as the highest Nielsen rated court show, outperforming all other courtroom series broadcasts and by vast margins.[172]

Pioneering effect, longevity and accolades edit

Judge Judy, which premiered on September 16, 1996, reportedly revitalized the court show genre.[173] Acclaiming the program's impacts on courtroom television programming, Daytime Emmy Awards Senior Vice President and Executive Producer David Michaels was quoted as stating, "Daytime television wouldn't be what it is today without Judy Sheindlin. Judge Judy redefined and reinvigorated the courtroom format propelling the genre to new heights."[174] Only two other arbitration-based reality court shows preceded it, The People's Court (its first 12-season incarnation canceled in 1993 from low ratings) and Jones & Jury (lasting only the 1994–95 season, short-lived from low ratings).[173] Sheindlin has been credited with introducing the "tough" adjudicating approach into the judicial genre, which has led to several imitators.[175]

The only two court shows that outnumber Judge Judy's seasons, The People's Court and Divorce Court, have both built longevity on series cancellations/revival reincarnations and multitudes of judge-role recasting moves (in its pre-1999 form, the latter program was scripted via court transcripts of past proceedings). Thus Sheindlin's span as a television jurist or arbitrator has lasted longer than any other—a distinction that earned her a place in the Guinness World Records in September 2015. With no cancellations or temporary endings in its series run, Judge Judy also had the longest-lasting individual production life of any court show during its entire run.[176][177] With Judge Judy off the air, The People's Court's current/2nd production incarnation now boasts the longest single production continuance of any court show, having reached 26 seasons by the 2022-23 television year—though having gone through 3 judges during this 26 year production incarnation.

Starring on Judge Judy earned Sheindlin a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in February 2006,[178] the Gracie Allen Tribute Award from the Alliance for Women in Media in 2006,[179] induction into Broadcasting & Cable's Hall of Fame in October 2012,[180][181] election as vice president of the UCD Law Society in April 2013,[182] and given the Mary Pickford Award by the Hollywood Chamber Community Foundation at the 2014 Heroes of Hollywood.[183]

By 2011, Sheindlin's series had been nominated for 14 consecutive years for the Daytime Emmy Award without ever winning. While part of that 14 years had the court show categorized into other television genre categories by the Emmys, it also includes failures to win once the Outstanding Legal/Courtroom Daytime Emmy category was introduced in 2008.[184][185] By 2012, an article from the New York Post reported that Judge Judy was snubbed by the award show in having never won and not even being nominated into the Outstanding Legal/Courtroom Emmy category that year—despite Judy's status as highest Nielsen-rated court show for its entire series run.[186] In a followup interview with Entertainment Tonight on May 3, 2013, Sheindlin was questioned about the "snub" and her court show's failure to ever win up to that point, responding:

I don't know. You know, somehow it would sort of break the spell. The show has been such a tremendous success that I'm almost afraid to think about winning—because so many of those [court] shows that did win are no longer with us. So I say to myself 'you want the Emmy or you want a job? (laughing) Which one do you want?'[187]

On June 14, 2013, however, Judge Judy won its first Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Legal/Courtroom Program, having received its 15th nomination.[188] The program won again in 2016[189] and 2017.[190]

Audience makeup edit

Judge Judy's daytime audience was reportedly composed of approximately seventy-five percent women and twenty-five percent men.[16] In February 2014, it was reported that Judge Judy's audience was mostly composed of older women, African Americans and Latinos.[191]

Criticisms edit

Despite her widespread acclaim, Sheindlin's behavior and treatment of the parties that have appeared before her have often been the subject of criticism. Regular viewers of the program have also been criticized as "sadistic" for their delight in watching Sheindlin engage in her typical behaviors.[192] One such example of criticism has come from the first star of arbitration-based reality court shows, Joseph Wapner. Wapner, who presided over The People's Court from 1981 to 1993, was a long-time critic of Sheindlin. On November 26, 2002, Wapner criticized Judge Judy's courtroom behavior, stating "She is not portraying a judge as I view a judge should act. Judge Judy is discourteous, and she's abrasive. She's not slightly insulting. She's insulting in capital letters."[193]

Judge Judy replied through her publicist, stating, "I refuse to engage in similar mud slinging. I don't know where or by whom Judge Wapner was raised. But my parents taught me when you don't have something nice to say about someone, say nothing. Clearly, Judge Wapner was absent on the day that lesson was taught."[193]

Since then, Wapner has stated, "She is a disgrace to the profession. She does things I don't think a judge should do. She tells people to shut up. She's rude. She's arrogant. She demeans people. If she does this on purpose, then that's even worse. Judges need to observe certain standards of conduct. She just doesn't do it and I resent that. The public is apt to gain the impression that this is how actual judges conduct themselves. It says 'judge' on the nameplate on the bench and she's wearing a robe."[194]

Sheindlin later stated, "As a young person, when I had watched The People's Court. . . I said 'you know what, I could do that.' And at least as well because while Joe Wapner is a very good judge, [he] didn't have much of a sense of humor. And I always knew from a very practical perspective that you have to marry those two things in order to be successful in entertainment."[24]

In a November 2013 interview with Larry King, Sheindlin was asked whether she enjoyed watching Wapner on The People's Court. She replied, "Meh! Oatmeal!" Following this, King asked her what if any other television judges then did she enjoy, to which Sheindlin answered "Mills Lane" of Judge Mills Lane.[195]

Acclaim edit

In a September 2014, Rickey Smiley Morning Show interview, Greg Mathis of Judge Mathis (second longest reigning court show arbitrator, three seasons behind Sheindlin during her Judge Judy series run) was asked what three other court show judges he'd most enjoy sharing a meal with. For his first choice, he answered (laughing) "Are you kidding?! It would be Judge Judy at the head of the table. Oh my goodness, that Judge Judy is something else." His second choice was Judge Marilyn Milian, and his third was Judge Mills Lane.[196]

In August 2010, rapper, singer, and songwriter Nicki Minaj stated that one of her favorite television programs is Judge Judy and when asked what she likes to do in her spare time, she replied that one of her favorite things to do is watch Judge Judy's show.[197]

In February 2013, the head football coach for the San Francisco 49ers, Jim Harbaugh, was asked about the importance of truthfulness and enthusiastically remarked, "Somebody that's not truthful? That's big to me. I'm a big fan of the Judge Judy show. When you lie in Judge Judy's courtroom, it's over. Your credibility is completely lost, and you stand no chance of winning that case. So I learned that from her. It's very powerful and true. If somebody lies to you, how can you trust anything they ever say after that?"[198][199][200][201]

A couple of months later, Harbaugh would even attend tapings of Judge Judy along with his father as audience members. As part of the experience, Harbaugh and his father had lunch with Sheindlin and visited with her both before and after tapings. After meeting Sheindlin and seeing cases in person, Harbaugh stated, "I've never seen Judy adjudicate one improperly. She is so smart. She is so good. I could sit there and watch those cases all day. I really could. It's fun to watch somebody that does their job well. I could watch Judge Judy do cases all day. I could watch people play football who do their job really well. People who direct traffic. I get a real kick out of watching people who direct traffic do it. I've done it for hours. I like football the most, but Judge Judy is right up there. She's the best."[198][199]

Brad Adgate, senior vice president of research for Horizon Media, said "Judge Judy is the new Oprah of daytime TV-actually, she was [already] beating Oprah while Oprah was still on."[202]

While he was President and CEO of CBS Corporation, Leslie Moonves stated, "Over the last few decades, there have been very few shows that have achieved the remarkable success that she has. Not only has Judy sustained that success year after year, how many shows grow in their 15th or 16th year in syndication? She started as a fresh voice and she's been a remarkable presence in daytime television ever since."[75]

Many regular viewers and supporters of Judge Judy had defended Sheindlin's treatment of the parties that have appeared before her by describing the parties as an "endless parade of idiots" that Sheindlin had to put up with.[203][204][205]

Lawsuits edit

Judge Judy Executive producer Randy Douthit had been sued numerous times by former staff members of the Judge Judy program for alleged wrongful termination, discriminatory practice, mismanagement, etc., while on the job. While only two of those lawsuits went public during the course of the show's original run, many other lawsuits and allegations against Douthit were brought to light following the program's conclusion.

Ageism lawsuit edit

On November 13, 2007, the show's former associate producer Karen Needle was fired. She later sued Douthit, claiming that she was wrongfully terminated because she was too old, 64 at the time. Sheindlin was not named as a defendant. Needle, who helped book audiences for the program, stated the reason she was given for being fired was "unspecified conflict from her audience work." Needle said she began suffering from back pain, sometimes even resorting to lying on the ground in pain, and when she asked her bosses for a new chair, nothing was done. According to the complaint, two weeks before Needle was fired, she took off four days to assist her ailing 88-year-old mother. Needle later stated, "There is a lot of terrible stuff going on if two people file separate lawsuits (referencing Jonathan Sebastien's suit). It's a toxic situation over there. This is supposed to be Judge Judy, the voice of justice, and yet her own staff isn't treated well. What is she getting paid all that money for if her own staff is treated with such little decency?"[206] The case was dismissed following a jury trial on January 26, 2009.[207]

Racism termination lawsuit edit

On December 26, 2007, Jonathan Sebastien, a former producer of the Judge Judy show of seven years, filed a lawsuit against the production company in L.A. County Superior Court for wrongful termination. Sebastien claimed that when he proposed certain cases for the show involving black litigants, Douthit turned them down with his alleged reasons being he did not want to see any more black people; their behaviors were too ghetto and more suited for former television jurist Joe Brown; and they needed more pretty, upscale white people. Sebastien claimed that in January 2007, he objected to the alleged discrimination in a meeting and was verbally abused by Douthit. Three months later on March 30, Sebastien stated he was fired with the reason given that rating numbers were down. Sebastien claimed that the real reason he was fired was that he opposed his boss's alleged "discriminatory selection process".[208][206] On June 26, 2009, Sebastian filed a request for dismissal with the courts after a settlement was offered to him by the defendant for an undisclosed amount.[209][210]

Conspiracy/fraud allegations edit

In March 2013, a lawsuit was filed against Sheindlin by Patrice Jones, the ex-wife of Douthit. Jones alleged Douthit and Sheindlin had conspired to permit Sheindlin to buy Christofle fine china and Marley cutlery owned by Jones. She said Sheindlin had paid Douthit $50,815 for the items without her knowledge to deprive her of her valuables,[211] and she sought $514,421 from Sheindlin. The suit ended after Sheindlin returned the tableware to Douthit and Jones agreed to pay Douthit $12,500 and have the tableware handed back to her.[212]

Copyright infringement lawsuit by production against YouTube user edit

On October 17, 2013, Big Ticket Television and the producers of Judge Judy filed a lawsuit against Ignacio De Los Angeles. The suit was made against the individual for posting an episode of Judge Judy on YouTube. Ignacio ignored the command.[213][214]

Publicity rights lawsuit filed by Judge Judy Sheindlin edit

On March 12, 2014, Sheindlin filed a lawsuit against Hartford, Connecticut, personal injury lawyer John Haymond, and his firm. In the lawsuit, Sheindlin accused Haymond and his firm of using her television image without consent in advertisements that falsely suggested she endorsed him and his firm. In March 2013, Sheindlin's producer allegedly told the firm that the use of her image was not permitted, but ads continued. The lawsuit filed in federal court sought more than $75,000 in damages. Sheindlin said in her statement that any money she wins through the lawsuit will go toward college scholarships through the Her Honor Mentoring Program. Sheindlin described the unauthorized use of her name as "outrageous", stating, "Mr. Haymond is a lawyer and should know better."[215][216][217] Haymond later filed a countersuit for punitive damages and attorney's fees, alleging defamation of him and his firm by Sheindlin.[218] Haymond insisted that local affiliates asked him to appear in Judge Judy promos to promote Sheindlin for which he obliged.[219][220] On August 8, 2014, it was reported that the case between Sheindlin and Haymond settled out of court in a resolution that favored Sheindlin. Haymond will be donating money to Sheindlin's charity, Her Honor Mentoring Program.[221]

Contract breach lawsuits by Rebel Entertainment edit

On March 14, 2016, talent agency Rebel Entertainment Partners Inc. and its president, Richard Lawrence, filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against CBS Television Distribution, claiming the media giant failed to pay the agency its contractually-agreed-to share of the show's profits, totaling millions of dollars. Rebel claimed they were owed for their contributions to launching the program and introducing Sheindlin and CBS through their terminated employees Kaye Switzer and Sandi Spreckman. The lawsuit alleged that CBS hadn't paid Rebel for the past six years, claiming that the show operated at a loss primarily due to Sheindlin's annual salary boost to $45 and then $47 million. The lawsuit went on to attack Sheindlin's salary as being far too high. Rebel described it as "exorbitant" and "grossly inconsistent with customary practice in the television industry" and claimed that similarly successful talk show hosts weren't paid nearly as much. Further, Rebel claimed they were entitled to be consulted before any spin-offs of the show were produced, but were not when Hot Bench (another courtroom-arbitrated show) was launched by Sheindlin and her producers in 2014.[222][223] In response to the lawsuit, Sheindlin had stated:

The fact that Richard Lawrence is complaining about my salary is actually hilarious. I met Mr. Lawrence for 2 hours some 21 years ago. Neither I nor anyone involved in the day-to-day production of my program has heard from him in 20 years. Not a card, not a gift, not a flower, not a congratulations. Yet he has somehow received over $17,000,000 from my program. My rudimentary math translates that into $8,500,000 an hour for Mr. Lawrence. Not a bad payday. Now complaining about not getting enough money, that's real chutzpah.[222]

When Sheindlin was deposed for the case in the summer of 2016, she said "CBS had no choice but to pay me what I wanted because otherwise I could take it wherever I wanted to take it or do it myself. Their backs to the wall. They pay me the money that they do because they have no choice. They can't find another one."[224]

In an April 2018 verdict on this case, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Joanne O'Donnell found that Sheindlin was not grossly overpaid and that her salary did not constitute a breach of contract, rather her salary is a result of the "resounding success of her program and without its namesake star would not continue". That being said, Judge O'Donnell ruled partially in Rebel's favor, agreeing that it was a breach of contract for the defendants to have failed to consult Lawrence before launching the "spin-off" series, Hot Bench. Dissatisfied with being granted one part of their motion while denying the other, Bryan Freedman (Lawrence's attorney) stated that the plaintiffs intended to appeal Judge O'Donnell's verdict. Freedman was quoted as stating, "As for admitting and then ignoring Rebel's uncontroverted expert opinion evidence that frontloading the 45 million dollar salary of Ms. Sheindlin was not consistent with the United States television industry, the court committed a reversible error. That issue will be decided by the court of appeal."[225]

Although CBS attempted to come to a settlement with Rebel Entertainment in February 2020, Rebel issued a second and simultaneous lawsuit in early August 2020 that named not only ViacomCBS as a defendant but Sheindlin as well. The lawsuit filing was for more than $5 million over Sheindlin's submitting the show's profitable episode library back over to CBS (CBS previously granted Sheindlin the episode library in March 2015 as part of a Judge Judy contract renewal deal), Rebel alleging this exchange as a "sell" that they never benefited financially from.[226] That same month, Sheindlin and her attorneys filed a countersuit for $22 million against Rebel Entertainment over unlawful/unfair business practices and unjust enrichment. Sheindlin promised to donate to a cancer charity any money that she won in the lawsuit. In February 2021, Judge Richard Burdge ruled that legal protocols enforced Sheindlin to name CBS as a defendant along with Rebel if she wished to pursue her countersuit. Sheindlin refused and thus her counterclaim was dismissed.[227] On June 12, 2021, it was reported that Sheindlin and her attorneys' demurrer to have Rebel's over $5 million lawsuit dismissed through summary judgment (a verdict rendered early so that a case doesn't have to go to trial) was denied by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Patricia Nieto. When asked to share her thoughts about this ruling, Sheindlin remarked, "Richard Lawrence has garnered 22 plus million dollars [from my program], although I have seen him only once in an elevator since our program began 25 years ago. I look forward to a trial".[228] In September 2022, however, another Los Angeles Superior Court judge, Kristin Escalante, granted a motion by Sheindlin and ViacomCBS to have Rebel's two-year-old, over $5 million lawsuit dismissed. Following their court loss, however, Rebel Attorney Freedman remarked on how they intend to keep appealing failed lawsuits until Lawrence gets what he wants.[229]

On July 30, 2021, the California Courts of Appeal upheld Judge Joanne O'Donnell's 2018 ruling that CBS did not breach its contract with Rebel by increasing Sheindlin's salary to $45 million (and later $47 million), consequently zeroing out Rebel's earnings at around the same time in 2009. At the crux of the legal hearing was the contract agreement signed by CBS and Rebel in 1995 when Rebel sold CBS the court show. The contract that was signed outlined that CBS would compensate Rebel 5% of gross proceeds from Judge Judy for the duration of its series run, but minus production expenses. CBS contended that profit share deductions were a direct result of production expenses, that is, Sheindlin's intent to terminate employment with the network if her salary demands weren't met. Sheindlin corroborated these claims in her testimony, stating that she laid down rigid salary terms for CBS every three years otherwise resignation. Accordingly, the court rejected Rebel's legal claim and granted CBS a summary judgment, finding that CBS Television Distribution properly deducted profits from Rebel Entertainment as a production expense.[230]

Added contract breach lawsuit filed by ex-employees of Rebel edit

On January 19, 2018, a breach-of-contract lawsuit—similar and loosely related to the case filed by Rebel Entertainment—was filed in the Los Angeles Superior Court against Sheindlin, CBS Corporation, CBS Studios, and Big Ticket Television by Kaye Switzer, and the trust of the now deceased Sandi Spreckman.[231] Switzer and Spreckman are former employees of Rebel Entertainment, terminated by the employer. Switzer and Spreckman's trustee, Jay Robinson, claimed they "discovered" and introduced Sheindlin to producer Larry Little, asserting that if not for this move that there never would have been any Judge Judy and thus they were owed monetary royalties for the entirety of the court show's series run. The lawsuit also claimed that Sheindlin sold "The Judge Judy Library" (a collection of all episodes of Judge Judy) to CBS Television Distribution for over $95,000,000. Switzer and the Spreckman's trustee contend that they were not paid any monetary royalties by Sheindlin, CBS, or Big Ticket related to this transaction.[232] The two women have a long history of filing lawsuits over the same matter against Sheindlin and CBS dating back to the year 2000.[233]

An insider claimed that Sheindlin was not concerned about the lawsuit, regards the subject of "who is owed what as just background noise", and believed that the success of her show came from nothing more than the "sweat of her brow" and the force of her personality. According to the same insider, Sheindlin said that while she "was always fond of Kaye and Sandi", the pair were terminated by Rebel Entertainment before her show ever even made it on the air and that she "never entered a contract with Kaye and Sandi personally."[234]

In March 2021, defendants Judith Sheindlin, Big Ticket Pictures, Her Honor, and CBS Studios petitioned the courts for a summary judgment (an early verdict from a judge based on enough evidence gathered during discovery so that a case does not have to move to trial).[235] In February 2022, the court granted the defendants their petition for a summary judgment, effectively dismissing the case filed by plaintiffs Switzer and the trust of Spreckman. The defendants contended that the plaintiffs were unable to prove that any money was earned by Sheindlin for her submission of the Judge Judy episode library back to CBS, adding that details of the contract regarding that exchange have been kept confidential through contractual protections.[235] To that end, in August 2017 when CBS Television Distribution President at that time, Paul Franklin, shared the news that Sheindlin submitted her Judge Judy episode library back to CBS, Franklin was quoted as describing the exchange as CBS "acquiring" the episode library as opposed to "buying" the episode library.[236]

Series departure details edit

In February 2020, CBS attempted to come to a settlement with Rebel Entertainment (despite this, there have been numerous additional failed attempts at winning lawsuits filed against Sheindlin and ViacomCBS by Rebel, even after the show ran into the present).[229] Less than a week after CBS's February 2020 settlement attempt with Rebel, Sheindlin announced on The Ellen DeGeneres Show that her Judge Judy series would end that following television year, 2020–21, at 25 seasons. In announcing this news, Sheindlin also shared that she would prepare to shop a new spin-off series, Judy Justice, around to other distributors. The news of Sheindlin announcing the end of her series caught CBS off guard. Although CBS had some idea that the show would conclude at around 25 seasons, nothing was set in stone.[237] Sheindlin later signed a deal with Amazon Studios to stream the new Judy Justice court show. The deal with Amazon allows Sheindlin full ownership rights over her new program and what was described as a lucrative salary—Sheindlin stated that salary negotiations were effortless because of how public her $47 million Judge Judy salary and $440 million net worth (for the year 2020) were.[238] According to later released media reports, Sheindlin's annual Judy Justice salary is 25 million.[239]

After Judge Judy completed its series run at 25 seasons, the program officially ending on July 23, 2021, Sheindlin rationalized that "25 is a good round number" to go out on top with.[35] In June 2021, however, Sheindlin issued public statements that her tensions with CBS and feeling disrespected by the network posed the basis for her show's end. According to reports, Sheindlin had taken exception to CBS's management of her program ever since the resignation of Les Moonves from the role as chief executive over the network in 2018, resulting from a multitude of scandals.[240] In particular, Sheindlin resented CBS's ownership rights to the Judge Judy episode library, a position that allowed CBS to air numerous seasons of Judge Judy without having to pay Sheindlin as much for new episodes (at least as she had been receiving at that time, which was $47 million annually).[241] Sheindlin further resented CBS's demotion of the court show Hot Bench in airing timeslots (a series that although does not feature Sheindlin, is produced and created by her).[242]

Addressing her relationship with the network, Sheindlin commented, "We had a nice marriage. It's going to be a Bill and Melinda Gates divorce."[242] In a formal press release response to Sheindlin's statements issued by CBS Ventures President Steven Locascio, he was quoted as stating, "The network has had an incredibly successful relationship with Judy over the last 25 years. It has been an honor representing her show, and just like there has never been another Oprah, there will never be another Judge Judy."[242]

Post-series run publicity edit

Fan criticism over Bailiff Byrd not returning for Judge Judy spin-off edit

Sheindlin's Judge Judy spin-off, Judy Justice, garnered significant criticism from disgruntled Judge Judy show fans and media outlets alike over Judge Judy program's Bailiff Byrd not returning to Sheindlin's side nor having any participation.[243] According to sources close to Sheindlin's programs, the vast majority of her Judge Judy crew was invited back and treated well for the successor. Byrd, on the other hand, later revealed in October 2021 that when he finally had a discussion with Sheindlin by the time her new series was in production, she explained that he was omitted due to the show's budget, that they couldn't afford him. The discussion was also said to have resulted from Byrd having to call Sheindlin. Byrd expressed that he was "dismayed" and "perplexed" as no one had ever previously discussed the new series with him. In a public response to Byrd and Judge Judy fans, Sheindlin praised Byrd as "terrific", sharing that the two had a great 25-season run, but concluded that the new show required a fresh, exciting direction. Byrd ultimately expressed appreciation for the opportunities provided to him by Sheindlin, wishing her all the best with Judy Justice and stating to hold no grudges.[121]

Byrd later added in November 2021 that he also felt snubbed by the Emmys when he was not allowed to present Sheindlin's Lifetime Achievement Award to her at the Daytime Emmy ceremony in 2019. Byrd stated that he was seated 15 to 20 rows back while Sheindlin sat with Judge Judy Executive Producer Randy Douthit in the front rows. Questioned about the matter, Sheindlin shared that it was Amy Poehler who called up the Television Academy and requested to present her with the award because she was a big fan. According to Byrd, however, Poehler later shared with him that she was equally perplexed over his exclusion from the ceremony.[121]

On April 28, 2022, it was announced that Byrd would return to his televised bailiff duties for another courtroom series, entitled Tribunal. Sheindlin created the upcoming court show and will also produce it. Like Judy Justice, Tribunal will be streamed on Amazon Freevee. The program, currently in development, will be presided over by now former Hot Bench judges, Tanya Acker and Patricia DiMango, along with Sheindlin's son, former district attorney Adam Levy.[244]

Media scrutiny of alleged toxic Executive Producer Randy Douthit edit

While Judge Judy Sheindlin is not accused of any workplace misconduct, Judge Judy and Judy Justice Executive Producer Randy Douthit has come under fire over years of lawsuits and allegations about creating a toxic workplace behind the scenes of Judge Judy. Discovered were multitudes of allegations leveled at Douthit by 16 former Judge Judy producers that run the gamut, involving workplace drunkenness, sexual harassment, body shaming, ageism, ableism, anti-blackness and misogyny.[245][210][246]

According to the allegations made by former Judge Judy staff dating back from 2001 through the remainder of the show's run, Douthit frequently sexually harassed employees who reported to him[247] and reviled female litigants while directing from the control room, referring to them as "too fat", "too ugly", "hos", uttering pig and cow vocalizations, sharing of which of them he most desired to sleep with, etc. Judge Judy Producer Kurstin Haynes revealed, "He'd make comments about their weight, he'd make comments about their teeth, or if they were disabled." According to Judge Judy employees, the process of proposing cases to Douthit for his approval required submitting photography of the litigants involved. Several revealed that Douthit was particularly concerned with the teeth of the show's guests, employees citing getting into "big trouble" with Douthit over the selection of such "disgusting" litigants. Throughout Judge Judy's run, all lawsuits filed against Douthit were dismissed. However, when questioned about the various allegations, court filings quote Douthit as answering, "I don't believe so. I hope not. I may have, but I hope not."[248][210][246]

According to a media publicized lawsuit filed against Douthit in 2009 by former Senior Producer Jonathan Sebastien, Douthit announced, "We're not doing any more Black shows. I don't want to hear Black people arguing." Asked whether he remembered telling producers to screen out Black litigants, court filings quote Douthit as answering that he could not recall. After objecting to Douthit's behavior, Sebastien was later fired, allegedly for that reason. Sebastien later reached a settlement for an undisclosed amount. In November 2021, six Judge Judy staffers confirmed Sebastien's claims, additionally alleging that this behavior from Douthit continued through season 25 in 2020-21. Douthit's lawyers have denied all charges, claiming that they emanate from disgruntled former employees, also citing Douthit as fostering a supportive, inclusive workplace.[248][210][246] Sheindlin's leadership was consequently called into question, criticized over turning a blind eye to the matters and allowing Douthit as well as other allegedly problematic Judge Judy Executive Producers Amy Freisleben and Victoria Jenest to resume their roles in Judy Justice.[249] Expressing resentment over how her leadership was portrayed in media reports, Sheindlin was quoted as stating:

To author a piece which speculates that I 'was untouchable,' 'don't care how the show gets made,' 'that I don't trust anyone,' 'didn't like cases involving dogs, dog bites or strippers,' 'by and large didn't interact with staffers,' 'wasn't worried about the coronavirus,' is appalling and untrue.[249]

Success in post–series production reruns edit

In April 2022, it was computed that Judge Judy reruns have vastly outperformed Judy Justice season one (2021–22) in viewership quantities.[250] It was also reported in August 2022 that with Judge Judy out of production for over a year by this point, the court show remained one of the highest-rated programs in all of daytime television and syndication.[6] Moreover, the series still dominates the court show genre as the highest-rated broadcast and by significant margins.[5][251] Questioned about her concluded court show's enduring success and timelessness in reruns during a November 2022 interview, Sheindlin answered, "My mind is still blown away by the fact, that in the second year of its afterlife, Judge Judy is still number one in daytime."[252]

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  252. ^ Starr, Michael (November 4, 2022). "Judy Sheindlin dishes on starring with granddaughter Sarah Rose on 'Judy Justice'". New York Post. United States. Retrieved November 5, 2022.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Judge Judy at IMDb  

judge, judy, this, article, about, court, show, eponymous, judge, show, judy, sheindlin, american, arbitration, based, reality, court, show, presided, over, former, manhattan, family, court, judge, judith, sheindlin, show, featured, sheindlin, adjudicated, rea. This article is about the court show For the eponymous judge of the show see Judy Sheindlin Judge Judy is an American arbitration based reality court show presided over by former Manhattan Family Court Judge Judith Sheindlin 3 The show featured Sheindlin as she adjudicated real life small claims disputes within a simulated courtroom set 4 Prior to the proceedings all involved parties signed arbitration contracts agreeing to Sheindlin s ruling The show aired in first run syndication As it was during its active years in production it continues to be distributed by CBS Media Ventures in syndication now in reruns that still draw notably high ratings 5 6 Judge JudyGenreArbitration based reality court showCreated byKaye SwitzerSandi SpreckmanDirected byRandy Douthit 1 Presented byJudge Judy Sheindlin Bailiff Petri Hawkins ByrdNarrated byMichael J StullJerry Bishop 2 Steve KamerTheme music composerFred LapidesBill BodineNon Stop Music ProductionsOpening themeSymphony No 5 First movement by Ludwig van Beethoven seasons 9 25 Country of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons25No of episodes6 280ProductionExecutive producerRandy Douthit 1 Camera setupMulti cameraRunning time22 minutesProduction companiesBig Ticket TelevisionQueen Bee Productions CBS Primetime Special Original releaseNetworkSyndicationReleaseSeptember 16 1996 1996 09 16 July 23 2021 2021 07 23 RelatedJudy Justice Sheindlin as judge Tribunal Justice Byrd as bailiff produced by Sheindlin The series premiered on September 16 1996 and concluded on July 23 2021 7 The court show ended with its 25th season after Sheindlin and CBS renewed their contract for the final time in 2017 8 During its run in new episodes the show did not release airings in the order they were taped Thus the final filmed case of the series aired on June 8 2021 9 While latter seasons of the show currently rerun in syndication the first and second seasons stream on Paramount Global s Pluto TV Courtroom channel as well as the Judge Judy channel 10 11 Judge Judy Sheindlin in 2012Judge Judy had an impact on courtroom programming reviving the genre as a whole 12 It was the highest Nielsen rated court show for the entirety of its 25 year run in original episodes also frequently ranking as highest rated television broadcast in daytime television and syndication Of the court shows with a single series run without on and off production from cancellation turned series revivals recasting Judge Judy had the most seasons The series also won three Emmy Awards earned Sheindlin a Guinness World Records recognition for longest serving television arbitrator and originated many courtroom programming trends from use of eponymous show titles to cold open trailers Two court spin offs have been generated from Judge Judy Judy Justice starring Sheindlin as judge 13 14 and upcoming Tribunal Justice featuring Byrd as bailiff Like Judy Justice Tribunal Justice is created by Sheindlin and will stream on Amazon Freevee 15 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Origins and development 1 2 On air format 1 3 Inside details and inner workings 1 4 Recordings and airings 1 5 Location 2 Program remodeling and restyling updates 2 1 Original format seasons 1 through 8 2 2 Season 9 2 3 Seasons 10 through 23 2 4 COVID 19 seasons 24 and 25 3 Episodes 3 1 Series pilot and finale final taped case 3 2 Judge Judy Primetime 3 3 Contrived case 4 Judge Judy in external media 4 1 Curb Your Enthusiasm 4 2 CHiPs 99 5 Judge Judy show cast 5 1 Judge Judy 5 2 Bailiff Byrd 6 Salary raise non negotiation and contract renewals 7 Reception 7 1 Nielsen ratings by seasons for series original run 1996 2021 7 2 Pioneering effect longevity and accolades 7 3 Audience makeup 7 4 Criticisms 7 5 Acclaim 8 Lawsuits 8 1 Ageism lawsuit 8 2 Racism termination lawsuit 8 3 Conspiracy fraud allegations 8 4 Copyright infringement lawsuit by production against YouTube user 8 5 Publicity rights lawsuit filed by Judge Judy Sheindlin 8 6 Contract breach lawsuits by Rebel Entertainment 8 6 1 Added contract breach lawsuit filed by ex employees of Rebel 9 Series departure details 10 Post series run publicity 10 1 Fan criticism over Bailiff Byrd not returning for Judge Judy spin off 10 2 Media scrutiny of alleged toxic Executive Producer Randy Douthit 10 3 Success in post series production reruns 11 References 12 External linksBackground editOrigins and development edit After Joseph Wapner was released from The People s Court on May 21 1993 Sheindlin called up the program s producers Ralph Edwards Stu Billett Productions and Warner Bros Television and offered to do the show in his place The receptionist who answered the phone responded Are you crazy lady before directly hanging up on Sheindlin 16 Earlier that same year in February 1993 a Los Angeles Times article on Sheindlin s reputation as one of the toughest family court judges in the country 17 18 written by Josh Getlin inspired by his wife Heidi both of whom Sheindlin credits with her stardom 2 caught the attention of 60 Minutes which aired a segment on her on October 24 1993 19 The segment brought her national recognition and days later from its airing led to Sheindlin receiving an offer from a literary agent to write her first book 20 Sheindlin accepted the offer writing Don t Pee On My Leg and Tell Me It s Raining published on February 7 1996 21 Its publisher HarperCollins expressed disapproval of her book title claiming no one would promote it under that kind of name Sheindlin stood her ground on the use of the title and ended up selling 216 709 copies 20 In March 1995 two talent scouts before that former People s Court producers from a talent agency that was later entitled Rebel Entertainment Kaye Switzer and Sandi Spreckman asked Sheindlin if she would like to preside over her own courtroom series Sheindlin eventually accepted 22 23 24 and the Rebel talent agency used a pilot episode to pitch to then Big Ticket Television president Larry Lyttle in 1995 25 26 27 Switzer Spreckman along with Rebel Entertainment Owner Richard Lawrence later sued CBS and Sheindlin numerous times over allegedly owed profit shares for their part in commencing the program and introducing the two parties 28 22 Sheindlin originally desired the show title to be Hot Bench 29 30 and the network and various news publications even promoted it as Hot Bench for some time prior to debuting 31 but Big Ticket Television ultimately decided on Judge Judy 32 The Hot Bench title was eventually used by Sheindlin however for a different court show she later created 2014 present which does not feature Sheindlin herself but rather a panel of judges she cast for the series Petri Hawkins Byrd referred to on the program simply as Byrd or Officer Byrd was the bailiff on Judge Judy for the show s entire 25 season run making him the longest serving bailiff in court television history 33 Byrd s professional relationship with Sheindlin predates Judge Judy as he was her bailiff throughout her career in the Manhattan family court system When Byrd found out about Sheindlin s show he sent her a congratulatory letter stating If you ever need a bailiff I still look good in uniform 34 She phoned Byrd at his home in California to accept his offer and he ended up replacing the unaired pilot episode bailiff 34 Sheindlin has stated that the show s producers desired different individuals for the role of bailiff but she refused Sheindlin has revealed that from the start she only envisioned her courtroom program lasting 2 to 3 seasons rationalizing that most TV ventures fail 35 Sheindlin appeared again on 60 Minutes on April 30 2003 During the interview Sheindlin stated I have a contract with the company to do the program through the 2006 season At that point we will have produced this program for 10 years Right now I would be satisfied with a good 10 year run I think that would really be phenomenal It would be lovely if we could end on a high note and for me to say 10 years and I still had people watching and I had a second career that was a blast 29 On September 14 2015 Sheindlin began celebrating her 20th season anniversary presiding on Judge Judy The program is the first in the court show genre to make it to 20 seasons without cancellation as well as the first to make it to this extent under one arbitrator Three years later by September 2018 the Judge Mathis court show entered its 20th season and became the second and only other court show to accomplish this feat Sheindlin s distinction as television s longest serving judge or arbitrator won her a place in the Guinness World Records on September 14 2015 36 Judge Judy completed its series run at 25 seasons In honor of the 25th and final season of the program Josh Getlin published another article on Sheindlin The Los Angeles Times article published on June 8 2021 the same day as the airing of the final filmed case shared background details about the 1993 article that catapulted Sheindlin s television career and his relationship with Sheindlin 2 On air format edit Each episode of Judge Judy began with a cold open trailer of the main case sensationalizing various moments of the case with brief soundbites accompanied with dramatic music voice over commentary graphics etc This was followed by the show s title sequence music video At the beginning of each court proceeding information regarding who is suing whom and what for was revealed by voice over commentary When Sheindlin made her entrance the courtroom audience was brought to order and instructed to rise by Byrd He then informed Sheindlin of the docket number on the court calendar in the midst of providing Sheindlin a file of legal statements about the case and directing audience members to be seated Sheindlin typically began each case by summarizing the disputed matters brought before her This was followed by preliminary questioning of the parties as to dates times locations and other scene setting facts before addressing the crux of the lawsuit Governing the discourse throughout the cases Sheindlin typically allowed only brief portions of each of the testimonies having read the parties sworn statements before the taping she was quick to reply impose her spiel and disallow responses that were not concise or which interrupted her 37 Less frequently Sheindlin allowed one or both of the opposing litigants to recount the entirety of their testimony During the proceedings Sheindlin coerced the parties to adhere to her strict management 38 participants were not allowed to tuck hands in pockets 39 drink water unless they ask first fold arms 40 chew gum 39 appear for court dressed at all revealingly or casually 41 42 speak out of turn 43 hesitate in answering questions 44 offer statements of hearsay 45 assert to the knowledge and thoughts of others and had to maintain eye contact with Sheindlin while relaying testimony among other things 46 If Sheindlin deemed that children were not needed to testify she directed Byrd to escort them out of the courtroom at the outset of the proceedings If children testified occasionally teens as well Sheindlin would have them sit on the witness stand next to her which Byrd typically stood in front of Like most modern court shows cases on Judge Judy imitated small claims court cases in which civil trials non criminal cases were heard and ruled on Typically Sheindlin handled cases among former lovers disputing neighbors couples or family and friend relations 47 Disputes generally revolved around issues such as broken engagements unpaid personal loans contract breaches personal injuries from other litigants or their pets minor property damages e g fender benders carpet stains etc the fate of jointly purchased household appliances and rightful ownership of property 47 As is standard practice in small claims court and most reality court shows alike Judge Judy proceedings operated in the form of a bench trial as opposed to its more common counterpart the jury trial Moreover lawyers were not present and litigants had to represent themselves 48 Generally each show presented two cases but infrequently an episode would present a single long case three shorter ones or even four shorter ones After expressing her views of the circumstances and behaviors of the litigants with regards to their testimonies Sheindlin rendered the judgment either by finding for the plaintiff typically by stating Judgement for the plaintiff in the amount of x dollars and a closing exclamation such as That s all We re done or Goodbye or by dismissing the case specifically with or without prejudice After she ruled and exited the courtroom Byrd was heard stating Parties are excused You may step out after which he escorted the litigants out of the courtroom Any counterclaims filed were handled similarly At the end of each case there was typically a fourth wall breaking segment during which litigants and sometimes their witnesses expressed their feelings regarding the case directly to broadcast viewers Sometimes however these segments were omitted especially after cases involving resentful litigants too upset over the circumstances to remain in the studio and provide comments 49 Inside details and inner workings edit The producers of Judge Judy hired extras from an audience service who composed the entire studio Paid audience members were easier to control due to contracts and employment Producers also looked for a certain demographic of individuals and sat them strategically throughout their audience Most of these paid extras were aspiring actors 18 50 Though tickets were not offered for the show arrangements could sometimes be made with Sheindlin s production staff to allow fans of the show into the audience The extras could not dress casually and no logos or brand names could be visible on their clothing Extras were also instructed to appear as if they were having discussions with each other before and after each case so Byrd made such announcements as Order All rise 51 To acquire cases the show generally used one of the following three options Its 60 to 65 researchers spread out across the country entered small claims courts and photocopied numerous cases These photocopied cases were then sent to Judge Judy producers who reviewed them all in search of lawsuits they believed made for good television According to the show s producers only 3 of the photocopied cases were worthy enough for television 18 Its telephone number posting announcement presented on each episode where interested individuals could call in with lawsuits Its website whereby lawsuits could be written out and submitted to the show 52 After one of these three processes if the producers were interested their employees would then call both parties and ask them questions relating to their lawsuit making sure they were suitable for Judge Judy If the parties agreed to be on the show and signed an arbitration contract agreeing that arbitration in Sheindlin s court was final and couldn t be pursued elsewhere unless Sheindlin dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice their case would air on Judge Judy 53 The award limit on Judge Judy as on most syndi court shows and most small claims courts in the U S was 5 000 The award for each judgment was paid by the producers of the show from a fund reserved for the purpose 54 Sheindlin ruled by either A issuing a verdict of a specific dollar amount not always in the full amount of what is requested and rarely if ever more than what was requested even if she believed complainants were deserving of more or B by dismissing the lawsuit altogether When ruled on in these manners cases couldn t be refiled or retried elsewhere However if Sheindlin specifically dismissed the lawsuit without prejudice that lawsuit could be refiled and retried in another forum In some instances Sheindlin dismissed cases without prejudice deliberately so that complainants pursued defendants in an actual court of law so that the defendants themselves were held financially accountable as opposed to the show In such cases Sheindlin had expressed particular aversion to the defendants in question 55 Further Sheindlin dismissed cases without prejudice when she suspected both the plaintiff s and defendant s of conspiring together to gain monetary rewards from the program 55 Both the plaintiff s and the defendant s also received an appearance fee The appearance fee amount had varied between different litigants of the show certain litigants had reported receiving a 500 appearance fee while others had reported receiving 100 and others 250 56 57 In addition to the appearance fee amount reportedly at least some litigants were paid 35 a day by the show 57 The litigants stay lasted for the number of days that the show did taping for that week which was two or three days 58 In addition the airfare or other means of travel and hotel expenses of the litigants and their witnesses were covered by the show and the experience was generally treated as an all expense paid vacation outside of the actual court case 57 If there was an exchange of property Sheindlin signed an order and a sheriff or marshal oversaw the exchange 59 Sheindlin saw only a half page complaint and a defense response before the taping of the cases sometimes only moments before 16 Most of the cases not including any footage deleted to meet the time constraints of the show usually lasted anywhere from twelve to forty five minutes 60 61 Judge Judy like most court programs was inexpensive to produce and thus created considerable income A budget for a week s worth of Judge Judy episodes was half the cost of a single network sitcom episode 62 Recordings and airings edit Three days every other week two weeks a month Sheindlin and her producers taped the court show 32 They usually produced ten to twelve cases for each day they taped the show This made for about a week s worth of episodes all done within one day Anywhere from thirty to thirty six cases were taped over three days during the week Sheindlin appeared as a guest on Jimmy Kimmel Live on September 13 2011 When asked by Kimmel how many days a month she works Sheindlin replied Five days 63 Sheindlin and her producers sometimes taped only five cases per day and two days per week 64 65 The show had fifty two taping days a year 66 For each season some 650 claims were brought to the set to be presided over by Judge Judy 64 This means approximately 16 250 claims had been brought to Judy Sheindlin s Hollywood set by the show s completion For the most part cases were taped throughout the year except for two breaks Sheindlin and all of the staff members of her show had for the year One of the two breaks included an extra week off in December as the show was only taped one week out of that month because of the holidays The other break was from mid July only taping one week in July and all through August According to members of the show the reason for this break was that people were more interested in taking vacations than in filing lawsuits around that time 16 When the seasons premiered in September only episodes perceived as the best by program staff of the ones taped before Sheindlin s break were selected to start the season Thus the first few weeks the first week in particular would consist of what the show felt to be its best episodes In Sheindlin s words It s like drinking wine You don t serve the really good bottle of wine third 67 Altogether there were 260 new episodes each season There was at least one new episode for every weekday except a few hiatuses during most of the summer a couple of holidays and in the latter seasons of the show early spring as well much of March and April 68 The cases were all pre recorded for editing purposes and would usually air one to three months after being taped The cases were mixed up and not shown in order of when they were recorded 69 While the cases taped in March sometimes April ended the seasons the cases taped throughout April May June and July started each season in September and lasted through October 70 Throughout the very beginning of each season two new Judge Judy episodes aired per day After two weeks this was reduced to one new airing a day followed by a repeat There were also various other moments throughout the year where two new episodes were shown for a few weeks This had sometimes included January when the show returned from its winter hiatus Two new episodes were also shown daily during the sweeps months of November February and May Unlike other television programs the Judge Judy season finale did not air in April or May rather it aired in June July August or sometimes even very early September just before the following season When the season finale was extended to July August or September most of the summer episodes preceding it were repeats with new episodes that were few and far in between Two DVDs featuring memorable cases were released by the show the first in 2007 Judge Judy Justice Served and the second in 2008 Judge Judy Second To None 71 Location edit nbsp Sunset Bronson Studios is where Judge Judy was taped for its entire series run though only partially during COVID 19 season 25 For its entire 25 season run Judge Judy taped at the Sunset Bronson Studios on Sunset Boulevard in Los Angeles California 72 In alternating weeks Sheindlin who owns a home in New York among other cities states flew out on her private jet to tape her show typically Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday 32 From 2014 through the conclusion of Judge Judy in 2021 the show s courtroom set was located directly beside the set of the courtroom series Sheindlin created and produces Hot Bench Hot Bench remains in production at the Sunset Bronson Studios Previous to that the space directly beside Sheindlin s set was used for the courtroom series Paternity Court only for the 2013 14 television season that court show s 1st season 73 Prior to that the space was used for Judge Judy s sister show Judge Joe Brown until Judge Joe Brown s 2013 cancellation Like Judge Judy Judge Joe Brown was also produced by Big Ticket Entertainment 60 The two shows alternated taping weeks Despite the show being taped primarily in California it displayed various images of New York City during the incoming commercial bumpers audio and visuals shown returning from commercial breaks including New York subways parks monuments etc In addition the words State of New York and Family Court Sheindlin was previously a New York family court judge in addition to being a native of New York 74 scrolled back and forth within the letterbox like graphics that appeared during the show s outgoing and incoming commercial bumpers lasting from season 9 through 25 The set also featured a New York state flag positioned across from an American flag situated behind Judge Judy Sheindlin s chair Program remodeling and restyling updates editOver the show s 25 year existence it saw very few restyling updates from season to season that is outside of seasons 1 2 9 and 25 season 25 due to COVID 19 75 Outside of initial seasons and the final season most modifications to the program had been done in minute detail such as to the show s bookshelf display seen near the courtroom entrance Aesthetically the show s theme song graphics and color scheme were the only aspects that had changed repeatedly throughout its lifespan 76 Original format seasons 1 through 8 edit Season 1 and specifically its initial episodes took a strikingly contrasting presentation from the latter seasons of the show The courtroom set design and stage props vastly differed from what would become commonplace for the court show The first episodes of season 1 also used music composed by Fred Lapides a piano based melody for the title sequence and closing credits This theme music was never to be used again outside of the early stages of season 1 in 1996 The show s season 1 voice over artist Michael Stull was heard narrating this intro theme stating This is Judge Judy Real people in real cases in real conflict She s a real judge with over 15 years of courtroom experience 77 78 After numerous episodes towards the beginning of season one the show s theme music was completely revamped to a percussive drum like ascending melody composed by Bill Bodine Integrated into the modified theme music the narration during the title sequence was also updated with Michael Stull announcing You are about to enter the courtroom of Judge Judith Sheindlin The people are real The cases are real The rulings are final This is her courtroom This is Judge Judy This narration lasted through season 8 of the program though Jerry Bishop took over the narration by season 2 77 When the show switched to the melody composed by Bill Bodine in season 1 the opening music video was updated to motioning scenes of Sheindlin from the bench gesticulating as though presiding over cases These motioning images moved freely until colliding with an image of the Judge Judy courthouse logo emphasized by a striking cymbal like sound effect The background scene for this title sequence music video was originally depicted in navy blue for a short portion of season 1 before switching to a sea green that same season through the 4th season 77 In season 4 the entire courtroom set was redesigned while retaining the sea green and saffron graphics and intro By seasons 5 through 8 the title sequence commenced with an approaching scene towards a computer animated courthouse display up until that scene entered the courthouse From there several shots of Sheindlin gesticulating from her bench as though presiding over various cases were displayed in motion These motioning images eventually developed into the courthouse logo that represents the program the logo is always displayed within the letter D in Judy by the end of this opening music video 77 The graphics were also changed to blue and saffron along with this change 77 In the seventh season while the theme song remained the instrumentals were updated In addition the font for the short closing credits and litigants font was updated but the long closing credits retained the original font By the eighth season the font was completely changed and the returning from commercial break scenes were replaced with New York City scenes 77 Strikingly atypical to most of the show s run the first few seasons saw litigators and their witnesses readily speaking out of turn bickering between each other and taking to misbehaviors without Sheindlin exacting the strict measures for which later became a staple of the program citation needed Season 9 edit The ninth season 2004 05 was one of the few seasons in which the show underwent major remodeling when music for the show s opening closing and to from commercial portions were modified A remixed version of a melody from Beethoven s 5th Symphony was then adopted as the show s title sequence and closing music This arrangement was composed by Non Stop Music Productions During the program s outgoing commercial bumpers short portions of the program that took each episode to a commercial break in the case of this program adding previews of the remainder of the case or cases to be featured in the episode a dramatic violin like melody sounded in contrast to the Beethoven remix When the program resumed with its incoming commercial bumper the Beethoven remix once again played Additionally solemn violin like striking tones sounded directly following Sheindlin s final verdict of each episode lasting from season 9 through the remainder of the show s run 79 The graphics also began showing up in falu red The intro was also changed for the ninth season as well For its scenes the Lady Justice statue is shown followed by a split screen of Sheindlin and the Statue of Liberty over a blue background followed by Sheindlin approaching the camera folding her arms and smiling This is followed by shots of her presiding over different cases which are shown in the scales of the Lady Justice statue in cubes For much of the series outside of the initial episodes the opening music video consisted of voice over artist Jerry Bishop stating You are about to enter the courtroom of Judge Judith Sheindlin The people are real The cases are real The rulings are final This is Judge Judy 80 Originally between the statements The rulings are final and This is Judge Judy was the statement This is her courtroom 81 This line was dropped in 2004 when season 9 began Seasons 10 through 23 edit Beginning in September 2012 the show made a switch to high definition with its 17th season The bumpers between commercials are also in HD although most on screen graphics such as plaintiff and defendant descriptions are framed to fit a 4 3 aspect ratio 82 Late into the show s 23rd season Sheindlin drastically altered her hairstyle by abandoning the bouffant hairdo that she had sported since the show s beginnings she replaced that with a new style created from her hair pulled back and bounded by a clip on hair bun at the back of her head Her new hairstyle sparked widespread attention and considerable negative reviews from viewers media spectators alike to the point that the show s Facebook moderator admonished posters that negative commentary about the clip on bun would be deleted 83 Her bailiff Petri Hawkins Byrd admitted to a preference for the original hairdo Asked about the change in hairstyle Sheindlin described the former as a lot of goop and teasing and product and fussing around by somebody else This is so much easier And as each hour in every day we have becomes more precious the less you want to spend time patshkeing over the way you look 84 COVID 19 seasons 24 and 25 edit In March 2020 the COVID 19 pandemic caused the 24th season production of Judge Judy to end prematurely at only 199 episodes 61 episodes fewer than the show s typical season number of 260 When Judge Judy returned for season 25 its final season a multitude of COVID 19 precautionary measures were in place vastly distinguishing this season of the show from previous seasons Sheindlin presided remotely from New York 85 producers built a partial makeshift set there for her with a different set design behind her and a larger darker executive chair Byrd and the litigants and witnesses if any participated from the Los Angeles studio now devoid of audience members Sheindlin interacted with the litigants through a live Internet link Because Byrd could not physically convey evidence between her and the litigants evidence was scanned with a document camera at the litigant lecterns allowing Sheindlin to view it remotely 86 87 In addition litigant afterthoughts following the case were shared at the podiums instead of in the hallway set used pre COVID Steve Kamer took over as voice over announcer for the 25th season after Jerry Bishop s death on April 21 2020 Episodes editSeason Episodes Originally airedFirst aired Last aired1 220 September 16 1996 September 5 19972 205 September 8 1997 July 6 19983 260 September 14 1998 September 10 19994 233 September 13 1999 August 25 20005 261 September 11 2000 August 17 20016 260 September 10 2001 August 23 20027 260 September 9 2002 August 21 20038 261 September 8 2003 August 19 20049 260 September 13 2004 August 18 200510 260 September 12 2005 August 24 200611 261 September 11 2006 July 13 200712 260 September 10 2007 July 4 200813 260 September 8 2008 July 10 200914 260 September 14 2009 June 17 201015 260 September 13 2010 June 17 201116 260 September 12 2011 June 15 201217 260 September 10 2012 June 28 201318 260 September 9 2013 July 4 201419 260 September 8 2014 September 11 201520 260 September 14 2015 September 9 201621 260 September 12 2016 September 8 201722 260 September 11 2017 September 7 201823 260 September 10 2018 September 6 201924 199 September 9 2019 June 9 202025 200 September 14 2020 July 23 2021Series pilot and finale final taped case edit On May 21 2021 Sheindlin was asked by USA Today what she recalled of her unaired Judge Judy pilot episode used to sell the series to Big Ticket Television Sheindlin responded by expressing great disfavor of the pilot episode indicating that Judge Judy producers only set up fictionalized cases and steered her to dramatized reactions and behaviors This ultimately ended up in Sheindlin s production team sending only bits and pieces of the pilot to CBS for approval of the show s broadcast During the interview Sheindlin recounted I remember that somebody then was trying to fit me into a sort of cookie cutter mold They had seen the 60 minutes documentary and they thought the approach that they saw in 60 minutes could be almost a caricature and I m not a caricature of that person I am that person So the cases that they brought to me to do the pilot were not genuine and I couldn t react to things that weren t genuine Because when I m trying to figure out the truth of a case and there really is no truth I can t work So they took little snippets of the pilot and created a sizzle reel along with 60 Minutes tape and sold that 88 Sheindlin taped the final case of the series on April 15 2021 The case described by media spectators as mundane saw a general contractor suing his customer over unpaid work 89 90 In this final taped case of the series Sheindlin also made no farewell remarks nor gave any attention to it being the series close While this final filmed case episode 179 of season 25 Judge Judy Makes a Call Mother vs Son 91 aired on June 8 2021 cases taped before that point continued to air for the first time through the series finale episode 92 93 which aired on July 23 2021 episode 200 of season 25 Architecture Barter Gone Bad 94 Worthy to note only one detail made Sheindlin s final filmed case of the series on June 8 stand out among other episodes since it was not featured in the series finale episode that is a glittery bee shaped clip that Sheindlin wore in her hair Sheindlin explained that this was a wink to her Judge Judy fans and a nod to her Queen Bee production company at the end of a 25 year reign over daytime television Sheindlin addressed that never once throughout 25 years of filming her courtroom series did her appeal for the job wane I was as enthusiastic and rigorous in the last case that I taped as I was at the beginning Sheindlin pointed out On her final day of taping Sheindlin was not in low spirits Rather she was reflective on her tenure on the show as a job well done with excitement about her new spin off series Judy Justice Of her thoughts on ending the program Sheindlin added I think that one of the reasons why I wasn t teary is because I wasn t going into a vast unknown I wasn t going to do a cooking show I was gonna be doing exactly what I was doing exactly what I do but in a different format 95 Judge Judy Primetime edit On May 20 2014 CBS aired a one hour special called Judge Judy Primetime which aired at 8 p m ET PT The special was a combination of reshown clips from the 1993 60 Minutes Special on Sheindlin as well as a few never before seen cases The special marked Judge Judy s first airing in primetime a landmark for court shows which are typically limited to daytime or late night hours 96 97 It brought in 5 66 million viewers enough to make it the night s top rated show on CBS In addition the special came in just behind American Idol which brought in 6 61 million viewers 98 Contrived case edit At least one case in the series was allegedly contrived by the litigants just to receive monetary payment from the program In April 2013 former litigants from a 2010 airing of the show revealed they conspired together in fabricating a lawsuit in which the logical outcome would be to grant payment to the plaintiff The operation devised by musicians Kate Levitt and Jonathan Coward was successful Sheindlin awarded the plaintiff Levitt 1 000 The litigants involved also walked away with an appearance fee of 250 each and an all expense paid vacation to Hollywood California In reality all the litigants in question plaintiffs and defendants alike were friends who split the earnings up among each other It was also reported that the show s producers were suspicious of the sham all along but chose to look the other way The lawsuit was over the fictitious death of a cat as a result of a television crushing it 99 Judge Judy in external media editCurb Your Enthusiasm edit Sheindlin and her program appeared on the November 26 2017 broadcast of Curb Your Enthusiasm presiding over a sketch comedy court case with Larry David as the plaintiff who unsuccessfully sued the previous owner of his house over custody of a sick ficus plant she left behind when she moved out but later stole back The pseudo Judge Judy case assumed the appearance of an actual case from Sheindlin s program taking place from the show s courtroom set with trademarked voice over briefs theme music and audience response 100 CHiPs 99 edit Sheindlin appeared as herself presiding judge on her Judge Judy courtroom program in the 1998 American made for television crime drama film CHiPs 99 Leading up to her cameo Officer Francis Frank Llewelyn Poncherello Ponch played by Erik Estrada twists the arm of Captain Jonathan Baker played by Larry Wilcox into appearing on her television courtroom program Uneasy about the idea of humiliating himself on national television Baker acquiesces and ends up suing Nyeman played by Googy Gress The case saw Baker accusing Nyeman of failure to practice proper dog walking etiquette Nyeman was accused of allowing his dog to poop on his private property resulting in financial damage 101 Judge Judy show cast editJudge Judy edit Main article Judy Sheindlin nbsp Judge Judy SheindlinJudge Judy Sheindlin was born on October 21 1942 in Brooklyn New York to German Jewish parents Murray and Ethel Blum Sheindlin had gained a reputation for although sporting a grannyish lace collar having a deceivingly tough judicial approach both in the Manhattan family court and her simulated televised courtroom 102 Sheindlin also became widely known for her no nonsense fact finding process that limited litigants to concise and relevant statements 102 restiveness for litigants to move things along quickly and forthright interjections that cut through the parties attempts at arguments and excuse making with her 102 In line with these attributes her program had been touted as a show where justice is dispensed at the speed of light Strict in her management of the proceedings 103 Sheindlin coerced precise compliance with her many courtroom rules and expectations 38 To that end Sheindlin was especially sudden with scolding and punishing what she perceived as insolence disobedience misbehavior or even annoyance As a result of her crusty disposition 104 volatile temper 105 and cheeky treatment 106 taglines such as Justice with an Attitude had been used to characterize the program 107 Sheindlin became known for her regular catchphrases on the program which became known as Judyisms 108 Some she most commonly used are The answer is either yes or no 38 Um Uh is not an answer or Uh huh uh uh is not an answer or Yep nope is not an answer 109 Shoulda woulda coulda 38 I don t give a rat s what you disagree with sir 110 That s baloney 111 Clearly you are not wrapped too tight 112 That s a whole lot of who shot John 113 If you tell the truth you don t have to have a good memory 114 115 Sheindlin used the position of television arbitrator to impart guidance direction and life lessons not only to her litigants but her viewers and public at large An example of guidance often stressed by Sheindlin was to be independent through employment especially to not live off the government where unwarranted or other people directly where oppression from or friction with the provider may eventuate In the former Sheindlin could often be quoted as stating No you aren t supporting yourself Byrd and I or We as she pointed at herself and Byrd are supporting you 116 117 Sheindlin had stated that the main message she wanted viewers to take away from her program is that people must take responsibility for their actions and do the right thing 68 118 Bailiff Byrd edit Main article Bailiff Byrd Petri Adonis Byrd was born on November 29 1957 in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn New York Byrd had his middle name legally changed to Hawkins when he joined the Judge Judy program as a salute to his late mother whose maiden name was also Hawkins 110 In the program Sheindlin referred to him simply as Byrd or less frequently Officer Byrd 110 Byrd took on the role of Sheindlin s courtroom bailiff 119 His main duties in the program consisted of introducing the cases by calling the parties forward and swearing them in delivering evidence back and forth and excusing the parties once the case was complete 120 Full of running gags Byrd point blankly disagreed with and corrected Sheindlin in moments when she bounced questions off him for his agreement He was also noted for his preoccupation with crosswords during the proceedings 120 In addition Byrd routinely delivered evidence to Sheindlin while having his head and eye contact directed away from her 121 A staple of the program Sheindlin relied on Byrd s sophistication and academic knowledge base with Byrd frequently having to interject in areas to which she struggled mathematics new media social media current fads and vernacular etc 120 Sheindlin often comically incorporated Byrd amid her critiques and reprimands of litigants such as by sharing with the parties Byrd s disapproving thoughts of them or expanding upon case details specifically for the benefit of Byrd s understanding without any actual communication at all from Byrd about said litigants or details Sheindlin has stated We re like two old married people who have reached an accord I can rely on Byrd to be my protector We don t have to exchange words he knows what I m thinking People who watch us sense we have a history and that is very important 122 Byrd described Sheindlin as Blunt witty and sharp as a tack However when asked if he d like to appear as a litigant before her he answered candidly laughing Hell no And I don t advise any of my friends to do so Not if they want to maintain their love of the judicial system 123 Byrd has been described by the Los Angeles Times as the guard dog to the pit bull 120 Salary raise non negotiation and contract renewals editBy 1999 Sheindlin began earning salaries reflective of her court show s success For every roughly three years from that point forward Sheindlin handed over her salary wishes to CBS management representatives in a sealed envelope during contract renewals She communicated her wishes as nonnegotiable that otherwise she would take her talents elsewhere and produce the program herself 124 125 In early 2000 during the show s 4th season Sheindlin s annual salary from Judge Judy was reported as 7 8 million 126 In January 2003 during the 7th season Sheindlin s annual salary was increased to 25 million when she signed a contract to preside over Judge Judy through its 10th season 2005 06 For the first time she was put in the top pay ranks for TV performers 127 In September 2005 just before Sheindlin s 10th season anniversary it was reported that her contract was extended 2 seasons further promising the program through its 12th season 2007 08 As part of the deal Sheindlin s annual salary would be increased to 30 million for the then upcoming 2 seasons 64 128 In January 2008 during show s 12th season Sheindlin s annual salary was increased to 45 million when her contract was renewed through the 2013 14 television season its 17th season 129 130 131 Her next contract renewal in May 2011 during the show s 15th season saw her program extended to the 2014 15 television season the show s 19th and Sheindlin s Judge Judy salary increase to its peak of 47 million 132 133 134 Producing vast sums of wealth for CBS Sheindlin s courtroom series brought in 230 million in advertising in 2012 alone 135 Sheindlin s 47 million per year Judge Judy salary translated into just over 900 000 per workday she worked 52 days per year reportedly making her the highest paid television star in 2013 and 2014 136 137 Sheindlin s next Judge Judy contract renewal signing with CBS transpired in March 2015 during the 19th season of her program As part of the annual 47 million contract deal Sheindlin has furnished ownership of the entire Judge Judy episode library including all past and then future episodes in exchange for extending the program to its 24th season 132 The renewal also included a first look production deal for CBS with Sheindlin s television production company Queen Bee Productions which produces syndicated courtroom series Hot Bench allowing CBS to have first viewing exposure to any material that her production company engineered 138 Sheindlin s final contract renewal signing with CBS was in August 2017 late in the show s 21st season extending the show for one additional season to its 25th 8 The terms of the agreement also included Sheindlin s submission of the Judge Judy episode library back to CBS which has allegedly furnished Sheindlin with an additional annual income of 100 million The move allows CBS to replay the show at the time as many as 5 200 episodes without limitations on any platform they choose Before Sheindlin s alleged contractual sell of the episode library back to CBS she reportedly had her team shop the episode library around the entertainment industry for a much higher amount as much as 200 million annually 132 Forbes named Sheindlin the highest paid host in November 2018 stemming from her 47 million per year Judge Judy salary combined with the annual income from her Judge Judy episode library 139 In 2018 Sheindlin earned 147 million between the 100 million from the alleged sale of the present and then future episode library of her show to CBS in addition to her 47 million arbitration handling salary 139 In 2020 and 2021 Sheindlin s net worth was reportedly 440 million and 460 million respectively 140 141 Reception editNielsen ratings by seasons for series original run 1996 2021 edit 1996 1998When Judge Judy launched in September 1996 it went on the air with little media attention and publicity 12 By the end of October of that year the show was averaging only a 1 5 rating putting it in the mid rank of the 159 syndicated shows on the air At that time it was never expected that the show s ratings would ever compete with highly successful daytime TV shows of that era such as The Oprah Winfrey Show The Rosie O Donnell Show and The Jerry Springer Show 68 According to Biography s documentary film on Sheindlin Judge Judy Sitting in Judgment aired February 21 2000 142 producers of Judge Judy were disappointed that the show was barely making it on the radar However it did not take long for the court show to pick up momentum as Judge Judy rose to a 2 1 rating by the end of that first season By the starting point of her 2nd season it was observed that Sheindlin s guest presence at public venues had already generated avid recognition and fanfare her reaction characterized as overwhelmed by her success as if it was something she didn t expect 12 Season 2 1997 98 of the program saw the court show already rise into the 4 ratings ranges averaging a 4 3 143 The 3rd season 1998 99 of Judge Judy was the show s first season as the highest rated program in daytime television having surpassed the highly rated Jerry Springer Show and even then daytime powerhouse The Oprah Winfrey Show for the first time 144 King World Productions which launched Oprah was folded into CBS Television Distribution in 2007 which distributed Judge Judy the program s ratings more than doubled to a 5 6 for that season marking Judge Judy as an early success 16 It was due in part to this early success that daytime television began to feature more court programming such as a revival of The People s Court that re debuted in fall 1997 In 1999 Judge Judy moved from Worldvision Enterprises to Paramount Domestic Television which also distributed her stablemate Judge Joe Brown and eventually Judge Mills Lane Many other former judges were given their own court shows in syndication due in large part to Sheindlin s popularity Examples include Greg Mathis Glenda Hatchett Alex Ferrer Maria Lopez Karen Mills Frances Cristina Perez David Young and many others In addition the series helped to spawn various nontraditional court programs These include the reality based revival of Divorce Court which was originally presided over by Mablean Ephriam 1999 2006 Lynn Toler 2006 2020 Faith Jenkins 2020 2022 and currently helmed by Star Jones the short lived Power of Attorney capturing various high profile attorneys arguing cases for litigants in front of Andrew Napolitano Street Court which took litigation outside of the courtroom Jury Duty featuring an all celebrity jury hearing cases presided over by Bruce Cutler etc Furthermore Judge Judy s rise in popularity enabled several non real life judges to preside over courts such as Nancy Grace Larry Joe Doherty and Gloria Allred Also partly due to Judge Judy s popularity the producers of The People s Court decided to replace Ed Koch with Judy s husband Jerry Sheindlin as their presiding judge during The People s Court s present incarnation 3rd season overall series 15th season 1999 2000 This meant that husband and wife would be either part of the same afternoon lineup or competing for ratings against each other The experiment however did not last long as midway through The People s Court s 4th season 2000 01 Jerry was replaced by the show s current judge Marilyn Milian 16 145 1999 2006For its 4th season 1999 2000 Judy s ratings exploded to its highest for its 25 season lifespan peaking at a 9 3 rating At this point Sheindlin s courtroom series was still more than ever the highest rated program in daytime It was also at this point that Judge Judy held a record of increasing its ratings for each successive season since its debut Because of the program s success Judge Judy began airing at better time periods 16 It was by the show s 5th season 2000 01 that Judy s streak of growing in ratings from season to season since its debut had ceased However the court show still remained the highest rated program in daytime that season with a 5 6 rating 76 By the 6th season 2001 02 Judy was no longer the highest rated program in daytime beaten out by The Oprah Winfrey Show The court show averaged a 5 0 rating that season 76 Likewise for her 7th season 2002 03 she also averaged a 5 0 76 For her 8th season 2003 04 Sheindlin finally reversed the season to season downward turn in her ratings by averaging a 7 1 16 Of the seven running court shows during the 2004 05 season most of them earned a 3 63 rating however Judge Judy remained court genre leader with a 7 5 ratings score for that season the show s 9th 16 For her 10th season 2005 06 Judge Judy averaged a 4 8 rating 146 Judge Judy averaged 4 6 rating for her 11th season 2006 07 Meanwhile other programs in the genre were trailing Sheindlin from a vast distance Judge Joe Brown averaged a 2 9 rating The People s Court averaged a 2 7 Judge Mathis averaged a 2 4 Divorce Court averaged a 2 0 Judge Alex averaged 1 9 Judge Hatchett averaged a 1 5 rookies Cristina s Court averaged a 1 4 and Judge Maria Lopez came in last averaging a 1 0 rating 147 2007 2012For its 12th season 2007 08 Judge Judy averaged a 4 8 rating 4 8 HH AA 7 4 HH GAA rating and 9 9 million average daily viewers 71 Judy was the only first run syndication program to increase in ratings for that season from the previous leading CBS to immediately extend her contract through the 2012 13 season 148 For its 13th season 2008 09 the show averaged a 4 2 rating 4 2 HH AA 6 5 HH GAA rating and 9 02 million average daily viewers 149 Its 14th season 2009 10 marked the first season in nearly a decade since the 2000 01 season that any daytime television program had been able to surpass The Oprah Winfrey Show s ratings Judge Judy is also the show in question that during the 2000 01 television season surpassed The Oprah Winfrey Show in daytime TV ratings Judy broke Winfrey s near decade long streak with a 4 4 rating 4 4 HH AA 6 9 HH GAA rating and 9 6 million average daily viewers 150 It was also at that point that Sheindlin s courtroom series became the highest rated show in all of daytime television programming 149 Judy secured this title in its 15th season 2010 11 as the program remained ahead of Oprah in her Oprah final season and the highest rated daytime television offering averaging a 5 11 rating 151 and 9 6 million viewers 152 During this season Judy also became the highest rated show in first run syndication 153 Late that same season in May 2011 as a result of continued high ratings CBS again extended Sheindlin s contract this time through the 2014 15 season the show s 19th 154 In the first post Oprah television season the court show continued its reign as the most dominant show in daytime and also became the top rated show in all of syndication its 16th season 2011 12 racking up a 7 0 rating and 9 29 million average daily viewers 155 As the top rated show in all of syndication at this point Sheindlin defeated first run syndication programs and off network syndication programs rerun episodes of programs off their original network 151 The title of overall syndication leader was previously held by off network syndicated program Two and a Half Men 2010 11 and before that first run syndicated program Wheel of Fortune 2009 10 156 157 Judge Judy s ratings boost in its 16th season and late into the show s 15th season was at least partly due to Nielsen s change in methodology in April 2011 This variation benefits programs that air multiple differing episodes a day The updated method is totalling ratings points through adding all viewings for each daily episode even if one of those viewings come from an individual already counted in as having watched another of the show s daily episodes For example as Judge Judy airs two different episodes per day two ratings points are counted for every one person who has watched both the first and second daily airings This is as opposed to one person s viewing of the two daily episodes amounting to only one ratings point Prior to the convert the latest method was only used in GAA numbers while the previous method was used in average audience measure Some court shows air in one hour blocks and thus do not benefit at all from the updated method 151 Worth noting however is that shows airing multiple daily episodes may not directly benefit monetarily as the rating system that local stations use to sell to advertisers is based upon the prior method 158 2012 2016For its 17th season 2012 13 Judge Judy once again pulled in a 7 0 household rating 153 159 The series delivered 9 63 million average daily viewers that season growing by 32 000 viewers over the prior season 160 Despite this Judy lost its 1st place spot as the ratings leader in all of syndication that season descending to 2nd place only a tad behind The Big Bang Theory off network syndicate which took home a 7 1 for that season Still and all this was the 3rd season in a row that Judy earned the title of ratings leader in all of first run syndication 153 Moreover this was the 4th consecutive season that Judy was the ratings leader in all of daytime television programming 161 For the 18th season 2013 14 Judy rose to a 7 2 household rating and brought in 9 94 million viewers gaining 8 over its prior season Also for this season the show reclaimed the title as highest rated program in all of daytime 5th consecutive time 8th time overall and all of syndication 3rd time 162 163 The show s 19th season 2014 15 pulled in a 7 0 household rating and remained the highest rated program in both daytime television as well as all of syndication 164 The 20th season 2015 16 was Judy s 3rd consecutive year as syndication s top strip the court show averaging a 7 0 full season household rating 165 2017 2021For its 21st season 2016 17 Judge Judy trounced all of its competitors in daytime and all of syndication The court show scored a 6 8 household rating for its 21st season 166 167 For the 22nd season 2017 18 Judy attained a 6 9 live plus same day household average well ahead of anything else in syndication It marked the show s 5th straight year as the leader in all of syndication ratings and the 9th straight year as the leader in first run syndication ratings 168 For the 23rd season 2018 19 it was reported by Nielsen that Judy topped first run syndication ratings for the 10th straight year with 6 8 household rating 169 According to Nielsen s ratings the court show finished out its penultimate season 2019 20 at the top of first run syndication for an 11th straight year Judy taking home a 6 2 household rating The program s closest competitors were Family Feud at 6 1 Jeopardy at 6 0 and Wheel of Fortune at 5 8 170 Going out on top for its 25th anniversary Judge Judy boasted its 12th year as top Nielsen rated program in first run syndication 171 ending its run with an estimated 7 8 million viewers for that final season 2020 21 86 Judge Judy also lasted its entire 25 year first run as the highest Nielsen rated court show outperforming all other courtroom series broadcasts and by vast margins 172 Pioneering effect longevity and accolades edit Judge Judy which premiered on September 16 1996 reportedly revitalized the court show genre 173 Acclaiming the program s impacts on courtroom television programming Daytime Emmy Awards Senior Vice President and Executive Producer David Michaels was quoted as stating Daytime television wouldn t be what it is today without Judy Sheindlin Judge Judy redefined and reinvigorated the courtroom format propelling the genre to new heights 174 Only two other arbitration based reality court shows preceded it The People s Court its first 12 season incarnation canceled in 1993 from low ratings and Jones amp Jury lasting only the 1994 95 season short lived from low ratings 173 Sheindlin has been credited with introducing the tough adjudicating approach into the judicial genre which has led to several imitators 175 The only two court shows that outnumber Judge Judy s seasons The People s Court and Divorce Court have both built longevity on series cancellations revival reincarnations and multitudes of judge role recasting moves in its pre 1999 form the latter program was scripted via court transcripts of past proceedings Thus Sheindlin s span as a television jurist or arbitrator has lasted longer than any other a distinction that earned her a place in the Guinness World Records in September 2015 With no cancellations or temporary endings in its series run Judge Judy also had the longest lasting individual production life of any court show during its entire run 176 177 With Judge Judy off the air The People s Court s current 2nd production incarnation now boasts the longest single production continuance of any court show having reached 26 seasons by the 2022 23 television year though having gone through 3 judges during this 26 year production incarnation Starring on Judge Judy earned Sheindlin a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in February 2006 178 the Gracie Allen Tribute Award from the Alliance for Women in Media in 2006 179 induction into Broadcasting amp Cable s Hall of Fame in October 2012 180 181 election as vice president of the UCD Law Society in April 2013 182 and given the Mary Pickford Award by the Hollywood Chamber Community Foundation at the 2014 Heroes of Hollywood 183 By 2011 Sheindlin s series had been nominated for 14 consecutive years for the Daytime Emmy Award without ever winning While part of that 14 years had the court show categorized into other television genre categories by the Emmys it also includes failures to win once the Outstanding Legal Courtroom Daytime Emmy category was introduced in 2008 184 185 By 2012 an article from the New York Post reported that Judge Judy was snubbed by the award show in having never won and not even being nominated into the Outstanding Legal Courtroom Emmy category that year despite Judy s status as highest Nielsen rated court show for its entire series run 186 In a followup interview with Entertainment Tonight on May 3 2013 Sheindlin was questioned about the snub and her court show s failure to ever win up to that point responding I don t know You know somehow it would sort of break the spell The show has been such a tremendous success that I m almost afraid to think about winning because so many of those court shows that did win are no longer with us So I say to myself you want the Emmy or you want a job laughing Which one do you want 187 On June 14 2013 however Judge Judy won its first Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Legal Courtroom Program having received its 15th nomination 188 The program won again in 2016 189 and 2017 190 Audience makeup edit Judge Judy s daytime audience was reportedly composed of approximately seventy five percent women and twenty five percent men 16 In February 2014 it was reported that Judge Judy s audience was mostly composed of older women African Americans and Latinos 191 Criticisms edit Despite her widespread acclaim Sheindlin s behavior and treatment of the parties that have appeared before her have often been the subject of criticism Regular viewers of the program have also been criticized as sadistic for their delight in watching Sheindlin engage in her typical behaviors 192 One such example of criticism has come from the first star of arbitration based reality court shows Joseph Wapner Wapner who presided over The People s Court from 1981 to 1993 was a long time critic of Sheindlin On November 26 2002 Wapner criticized Judge Judy s courtroom behavior stating She is not portraying a judge as I view a judge should act Judge Judy is discourteous and she s abrasive She s not slightly insulting She s insulting in capital letters 193 Judge Judy replied through her publicist stating I refuse to engage in similar mud slinging I don t know where or by whom Judge Wapner was raised But my parents taught me when you don t have something nice to say about someone say nothing Clearly Judge Wapner was absent on the day that lesson was taught 193 Since then Wapner has stated She is a disgrace to the profession She does things I don t think a judge should do She tells people to shut up She s rude She s arrogant She demeans people If she does this on purpose then that s even worse Judges need to observe certain standards of conduct She just doesn t do it and I resent that The public is apt to gain the impression that this is how actual judges conduct themselves It says judge on the nameplate on the bench and she s wearing a robe 194 Sheindlin later stated As a young person when I had watched The People s Court I said you know what I could do that And at least as well because while Joe Wapner is a very good judge he didn t have much of a sense of humor And I always knew from a very practical perspective that you have to marry those two things in order to be successful in entertainment 24 In a November 2013 interview with Larry King Sheindlin was asked whether she enjoyed watching Wapner on The People s Court She replied Meh Oatmeal Following this King asked her what if any other television judges then did she enjoy to which Sheindlin answered Mills Lane of Judge Mills Lane 195 Acclaim edit In a September 2014 Rickey Smiley Morning Show interview Greg Mathis of Judge Mathis second longest reigning court show arbitrator three seasons behind Sheindlin during her Judge Judy series run was asked what three other court show judges he d most enjoy sharing a meal with For his first choice he answered laughing Are you kidding It would be Judge Judy at the head of the table Oh my goodness that Judge Judy is something else His second choice was Judge Marilyn Milian and his third was Judge Mills Lane 196 In August 2010 rapper singer and songwriter Nicki Minaj stated that one of her favorite television programs is Judge Judy and when asked what she likes to do in her spare time she replied that one of her favorite things to do is watch Judge Judy s show 197 In February 2013 the head football coach for the San Francisco 49ers Jim Harbaugh was asked about the importance of truthfulness and enthusiastically remarked Somebody that s not truthful That s big to me I m a big fan of the Judge Judy show When you lie in Judge Judy s courtroom it s over Your credibility is completely lost and you stand no chance of winning that case So I learned that from her It s very powerful and true If somebody lies to you how can you trust anything they ever say after that 198 199 200 201 A couple of months later Harbaugh would even attend tapings of Judge Judy along with his father as audience members As part of the experience Harbaugh and his father had lunch with Sheindlin and visited with her both before and after tapings After meeting Sheindlin and seeing cases in person Harbaugh stated I ve never seen Judy adjudicate one improperly She is so smart She is so good I could sit there and watch those cases all day I really could It s fun to watch somebody that does their job well I could watch Judge Judy do cases all day I could watch people play football who do their job really well People who direct traffic I get a real kick out of watching people who direct traffic do it I ve done it for hours I like football the most but Judge Judy is right up there She s the best 198 199 Brad Adgate senior vice president of research for Horizon Media said Judge Judy is the new Oprah of daytime TV actually she was already beating Oprah while Oprah was still on 202 While he was President and CEO of CBS Corporation Leslie Moonves stated Over the last few decades there have been very few shows that have achieved the remarkable success that she has Not only has Judy sustained that success year after year how many shows grow in their 15th or 16th year in syndication She started as a fresh voice and she s been a remarkable presence in daytime television ever since 75 Many regular viewers and supporters of Judge Judy had defended Sheindlin s treatment of the parties that have appeared before her by describing the parties as an endless parade of idiots that Sheindlin had to put up with 203 204 205 Lawsuits editJudge Judy Executive producer Randy Douthit had been sued numerous times by former staff members of the Judge Judy program for alleged wrongful termination discriminatory practice mismanagement etc while on the job While only two of those lawsuits went public during the course of the show s original run many other lawsuits and allegations against Douthit were brought to light following the program s conclusion Ageism lawsuit edit On November 13 2007 the show s former associate producer Karen Needle was fired She later sued Douthit claiming that she was wrongfully terminated because she was too old 64 at the time Sheindlin was not named as a defendant Needle who helped book audiences for the program stated the reason she was given for being fired was unspecified conflict from her audience work Needle said she began suffering from back pain sometimes even resorting to lying on the ground in pain and when she asked her bosses for a new chair nothing was done According to the complaint two weeks before Needle was fired she took off four days to assist her ailing 88 year old mother Needle later stated There is a lot of terrible stuff going on if two people file separate lawsuits referencing Jonathan Sebastien s suit It s a toxic situation over there This is supposed to be Judge Judy the voice of justice and yet her own staff isn t treated well What is she getting paid all that money for if her own staff is treated with such little decency 206 The case was dismissed following a jury trial on January 26 2009 207 Racism termination lawsuit edit On December 26 2007 Jonathan Sebastien a former producer of the Judge Judy show of seven years filed a lawsuit against the production company in L A County Superior Court for wrongful termination Sebastien claimed that when he proposed certain cases for the show involving black litigants Douthit turned them down with his alleged reasons being he did not want to see any more black people their behaviors were too ghetto and more suited for former television jurist Joe Brown and they needed more pretty upscale white people Sebastien claimed that in January 2007 he objected to the alleged discrimination in a meeting and was verbally abused by Douthit Three months later on March 30 Sebastien stated he was fired with the reason given that rating numbers were down Sebastien claimed that the real reason he was fired was that he opposed his boss s alleged discriminatory selection process 208 206 On June 26 2009 Sebastian filed a request for dismissal with the courts after a settlement was offered to him by the defendant for an undisclosed amount 209 210 Conspiracy fraud allegations edit In March 2013 a lawsuit was filed against Sheindlin by Patrice Jones the ex wife of Douthit Jones alleged Douthit and Sheindlin had conspired to permit Sheindlin to buy Christofle fine china and Marley cutlery owned by Jones She said Sheindlin had paid Douthit 50 815 for the items without her knowledge to deprive her of her valuables 211 and she sought 514 421 from Sheindlin The suit ended after Sheindlin returned the tableware to Douthit and Jones agreed to pay Douthit 12 500 and have the tableware handed back to her 212 Copyright infringement lawsuit by production against YouTube user edit On October 17 2013 Big Ticket Television and the producers of Judge Judy filed a lawsuit against Ignacio De Los Angeles The suit was made against the individual for posting an episode of Judge Judy on YouTube Ignacio ignored the command 213 214 Publicity rights lawsuit filed by Judge Judy Sheindlin edit On March 12 2014 Sheindlin filed a lawsuit against Hartford Connecticut personal injury lawyer John Haymond and his firm In the lawsuit Sheindlin accused Haymond and his firm of using her television image without consent in advertisements that falsely suggested she endorsed him and his firm In March 2013 Sheindlin s producer allegedly told the firm that the use of her image was not permitted but ads continued The lawsuit filed in federal court sought more than 75 000 in damages Sheindlin said in her statement that any money she wins through the lawsuit will go toward college scholarships through the Her Honor Mentoring Program Sheindlin described the unauthorized use of her name as outrageous stating Mr Haymond is a lawyer and should know better 215 216 217 Haymond later filed a countersuit for punitive damages and attorney s fees alleging defamation of him and his firm by Sheindlin 218 Haymond insisted that local affiliates asked him to appear in Judge Judy promos to promote Sheindlin for which he obliged 219 220 On August 8 2014 it was reported that the case between Sheindlin and Haymond settled out of court in a resolution that favored Sheindlin Haymond will be donating money to Sheindlin s charity Her Honor Mentoring Program 221 Contract breach lawsuits by Rebel Entertainment edit On March 14 2016 talent agency Rebel Entertainment Partners Inc and its president Richard Lawrence filed a multimillion dollar lawsuit against CBS Television Distribution claiming the media giant failed to pay the agency its contractually agreed to share of the show s profits totaling millions of dollars Rebel claimed they were owed for their contributions to launching the program and introducing Sheindlin and CBS through their terminated employees Kaye Switzer and Sandi Spreckman The lawsuit alleged that CBS hadn t paid Rebel for the past six years claiming that the show operated at a loss primarily due to Sheindlin s annual salary boost to 45 and then 47 million The lawsuit went on to attack Sheindlin s salary as being far too high Rebel described it as exorbitant and grossly inconsistent with customary practice in the television industry and claimed that similarly successful talk show hosts weren t paid nearly as much Further Rebel claimed they were entitled to be consulted before any spin offs of the show were produced but were not when Hot Bench another courtroom arbitrated show was launched by Sheindlin and her producers in 2014 222 223 In response to the lawsuit Sheindlin had stated The fact that Richard Lawrence is complaining about my salary is actually hilarious I met Mr Lawrence for 2 hours some 21 years ago Neither I nor anyone involved in the day to day production of my program has heard from him in 20 years Not a card not a gift not a flower not a congratulations Yet he has somehow received over 17 000 000 from my program My rudimentary math translates that into 8 500 000 an hour for Mr Lawrence Not a bad payday Now complaining about not getting enough money that s real chutzpah 222 When Sheindlin was deposed for the case in the summer of 2016 she said CBS had no choice but to pay me what I wanted because otherwise I could take it wherever I wanted to take it or do it myself Their backs to the wall They pay me the money that they do because they have no choice They can t find another one 224 In an April 2018 verdict on this case Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Joanne O Donnell found that Sheindlin was not grossly overpaid and that her salary did not constitute a breach of contract rather her salary is a result of the resounding success of her program and without its namesake star would not continue That being said Judge O Donnell ruled partially in Rebel s favor agreeing that it was a breach of contract for the defendants to have failed to consult Lawrence before launching the spin off series Hot Bench Dissatisfied with being granted one part of their motion while denying the other Bryan Freedman Lawrence s attorney stated that the plaintiffs intended to appeal Judge O Donnell s verdict Freedman was quoted as stating As for admitting and then ignoring Rebel s uncontroverted expert opinion evidence that frontloading the 45 million dollar salary of Ms Sheindlin was not consistent with the United States television industry the court committed a reversible error That issue will be decided by the court of appeal 225 Although CBS attempted to come to a settlement with Rebel Entertainment in February 2020 Rebel issued a second and simultaneous lawsuit in early August 2020 that named not only ViacomCBS as a defendant but Sheindlin as well The lawsuit filing was for more than 5 million over Sheindlin s submitting the show s profitable episode library back over to CBS CBS previously granted Sheindlin the episode library in March 2015 as part of a Judge Judy contract renewal deal Rebel alleging this exchange as a sell that they never benefited financially from 226 That same month Sheindlin and her attorneys filed a countersuit for 22 million against Rebel Entertainment over unlawful unfair business practices and unjust enrichment Sheindlin promised to donate to a cancer charity any money that she won in the lawsuit In February 2021 Judge Richard Burdge ruled that legal protocols enforced Sheindlin to name CBS as a defendant along with Rebel if she wished to pursue her countersuit Sheindlin refused and thus her counterclaim was dismissed 227 On June 12 2021 it was reported that Sheindlin and her attorneys demurrer to have Rebel s over 5 million lawsuit dismissed through summary judgment a verdict rendered early so that a case doesn t have to go to trial was denied by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Patricia Nieto When asked to share her thoughts about this ruling Sheindlin remarked Richard Lawrence has garnered 22 plus million dollars from my program although I have seen him only once in an elevator since our program began 25 years ago I look forward to a trial 228 In September 2022 however another Los Angeles Superior Court judge Kristin Escalante granted a motion by Sheindlin and ViacomCBS to have Rebel s two year old over 5 million lawsuit dismissed Following their court loss however Rebel Attorney Freedman remarked on how they intend to keep appealing failed lawsuits until Lawrence gets what he wants 229 On July 30 2021 the California Courts of Appeal upheld Judge Joanne O Donnell s 2018 ruling that CBS did not breach its contract with Rebel by increasing Sheindlin s salary to 45 million and later 47 million consequently zeroing out Rebel s earnings at around the same time in 2009 At the crux of the legal hearing was the contract agreement signed by CBS and Rebel in 1995 when Rebel sold CBS the court show The contract that was signed outlined that CBS would compensate Rebel 5 of gross proceeds from Judge Judy for the duration of its series run but minus production expenses CBS contended that profit share deductions were a direct result of production expenses that is Sheindlin s intent to terminate employment with the network if her salary demands weren t met Sheindlin corroborated these claims in her testimony stating that she laid down rigid salary terms for CBS every three years otherwise resignation Accordingly the court rejected Rebel s legal claim and granted CBS a summary judgment finding that CBS Television Distribution properly deducted profits from Rebel Entertainment as a production expense 230 Added contract breach lawsuit filed by ex employees of Rebel edit On January 19 2018 a breach of contract lawsuit similar and loosely related to the case filed by Rebel Entertainment was filed in the Los Angeles Superior Court against Sheindlin CBS Corporation CBS Studios and Big Ticket Television by Kaye Switzer and the trust of the now deceased Sandi Spreckman 231 Switzer and Spreckman are former employees of Rebel Entertainment terminated by the employer Switzer and Spreckman s trustee Jay Robinson claimed they discovered and introduced Sheindlin to producer Larry Little asserting that if not for this move that there never would have been any Judge Judy and thus they were owed monetary royalties for the entirety of the court show s series run The lawsuit also claimed that Sheindlin sold The Judge Judy Library a collection of all episodes of Judge Judy to CBS Television Distribution for over 95 000 000 Switzer and the Spreckman s trustee contend that they were not paid any monetary royalties by Sheindlin CBS or Big Ticket related to this transaction 232 The two women have a long history of filing lawsuits over the same matter against Sheindlin and CBS dating back to the year 2000 233 An insider claimed that Sheindlin was not concerned about the lawsuit regards the subject of who is owed what as just background noise and believed that the success of her show came from nothing more than the sweat of her brow and the force of her personality According to the same insider Sheindlin said that while she was always fond of Kaye and Sandi the pair were terminated by Rebel Entertainment before her show ever even made it on the air and that she never entered a contract with Kaye and Sandi personally 234 In March 2021 defendants Judith Sheindlin Big Ticket Pictures Her Honor and CBS Studios petitioned the courts for a summary judgment an early verdict from a judge based on enough evidence gathered during discovery so that a case does not have to move to trial 235 In February 2022 the court granted the defendants their petition for a summary judgment effectively dismissing the case filed by plaintiffs Switzer and the trust of Spreckman The defendants contended that the plaintiffs were unable to prove that any money was earned by Sheindlin for her submission of the Judge Judy episode library back to CBS adding that details of the contract regarding that exchange have been kept confidential through contractual protections 235 To that end in August 2017 when CBS Television Distribution President at that time Paul Franklin shared the news that Sheindlin submitted her Judge Judy episode library back to CBS Franklin was quoted as describing the exchange as CBS acquiring the episode library as opposed to buying the episode library 236 Series departure details editIn February 2020 CBS attempted to come to a settlement with Rebel Entertainment despite this there have been numerous additional failed attempts at winning lawsuits filed against Sheindlin and ViacomCBS by Rebel even after the show ran into the present 229 Less than a week after CBS s February 2020 settlement attempt with Rebel Sheindlin announced on The Ellen DeGeneres Show that her Judge Judy series would end that following television year 2020 21 at 25 seasons In announcing this news Sheindlin also shared that she would prepare to shop a new spin off series Judy Justice around to other distributors The news of Sheindlin announcing the end of her series caught CBS off guard Although CBS had some idea that the show would conclude at around 25 seasons nothing was set in stone 237 Sheindlin later signed a deal with Amazon Studios to stream the new Judy Justice court show The deal with Amazon allows Sheindlin full ownership rights over her new program and what was described as a lucrative salary Sheindlin stated that salary negotiations were effortless because of how public her 47 million Judge Judy salary and 440 million net worth for the year 2020 were 238 According to later released media reports Sheindlin s annual Judy Justice salary is 25 million 239 After Judge Judy completed its series run at 25 seasons the program officially ending on July 23 2021 Sheindlin rationalized that 25 is a good round number to go out on top with 35 In June 2021 however Sheindlin issued public statements that her tensions with CBS and feeling disrespected by the network posed the basis for her show s end According to reports Sheindlin had taken exception to CBS s management of her program ever since the resignation of Les Moonves from the role as chief executive over the network in 2018 resulting from a multitude of scandals 240 In particular Sheindlin resented CBS s ownership rights to the Judge Judy episode library a position that allowed CBS to air numerous seasons of Judge Judy without having to pay Sheindlin as much for new episodes at least as she had been receiving at that time which was 47 million annually 241 Sheindlin further resented CBS s demotion of the court show Hot Bench in airing timeslots a series that although does not feature Sheindlin is produced and created by her 242 Addressing her relationship with the network Sheindlin commented We had a nice marriage It s going to be a Bill and Melinda Gates divorce 242 In a formal press release response to Sheindlin s statements issued by CBS Ventures President Steven Locascio he was quoted as stating The network has had an incredibly successful relationship with Judy over the last 25 years It has been an honor representing her show and just like there has never been another Oprah there will never be another Judge Judy 242 Post series run publicity editFan criticism over Bailiff Byrd not returning for Judge Judy spin off edit Sheindlin s Judge Judy spin off Judy Justice garnered significant criticism from disgruntled Judge Judy show fans and media outlets alike over Judge Judy program s Bailiff Byrd not returning to Sheindlin s side nor having any participation 243 According to sources close to Sheindlin s programs the vast majority of her Judge Judy crew was invited back and treated well for the successor Byrd on the other hand later revealed in October 2021 that when he finally had a discussion with Sheindlin by the time her new series was in production she explained that he was omitted due to the show s budget that they couldn t afford him The discussion was also said to have resulted from Byrd having to call Sheindlin Byrd expressed that he was dismayed and perplexed as no one had ever previously discussed the new series with him In a public response to Byrd and Judge Judy fans Sheindlin praised Byrd as terrific sharing that the two had a great 25 season run but concluded that the new show required a fresh exciting direction Byrd ultimately expressed appreciation for the opportunities provided to him by Sheindlin wishing her all the best with Judy Justice and stating to hold no grudges 121 Byrd later added in November 2021 that he also felt snubbed by the Emmys when he was not allowed to present Sheindlin s Lifetime Achievement Award to her at the Daytime Emmy ceremony in 2019 Byrd stated that he was seated 15 to 20 rows back while Sheindlin sat with Judge Judy Executive Producer Randy Douthit in the front rows Questioned about the matter Sheindlin shared that it was Amy Poehler who called up the Television Academy and requested to present her with the award because she was a big fan According to Byrd however Poehler later shared with him that she was equally perplexed over his exclusion from the ceremony 121 On April 28 2022 it was announced that Byrd would return to his televised bailiff duties for another courtroom series entitled Tribunal Sheindlin created the upcoming court show and will also produce it Like Judy Justice Tribunal will be streamed on Amazon Freevee The program currently in development will be presided over by now former Hot Bench judges Tanya Acker and Patricia DiMango along with Sheindlin s son former district attorney Adam Levy 244 Media scrutiny of alleged toxic Executive Producer Randy Douthit edit While Judge Judy Sheindlin is not accused of any workplace misconduct Judge Judy and Judy Justice Executive Producer Randy Douthit has come under fire over years of lawsuits and allegations about creating a toxic workplace behind the scenes of Judge Judy Discovered were multitudes of allegations leveled at Douthit by 16 former Judge Judy producers that run the gamut involving workplace drunkenness sexual harassment body shaming ageism ableism anti blackness and misogyny 245 210 246 According to the allegations made by former Judge Judy staff dating back from 2001 through the remainder of the show s run Douthit frequently sexually harassed employees who reported to him 247 and reviled female litigants while directing from the control room referring to them as too fat too ugly hos uttering pig and cow vocalizations sharing of which of them he most desired to sleep with etc Judge Judy Producer Kurstin Haynes revealed He d make comments about their weight he d make comments about their teeth or if they were disabled According to Judge Judy employees the process of proposing cases to Douthit for his approval required submitting photography of the litigants involved Several revealed that Douthit was particularly concerned with the teeth of the show s guests employees citing getting into big trouble with Douthit over the selection of such disgusting litigants Throughout Judge Judy s run all lawsuits filed against Douthit were dismissed However when questioned about the various allegations court filings quote Douthit as answering I don t believe so I hope not I may have but I hope not 248 210 246 According to a media publicized lawsuit filed against Douthit in 2009 by former Senior Producer Jonathan Sebastien Douthit announced We re not doing any more Black shows I don t want to hear Black people arguing Asked whether he remembered telling producers to screen out Black litigants court filings quote Douthit as answering that he could not recall After objecting to Douthit s behavior Sebastien was later fired allegedly for that reason Sebastien later reached a settlement for an undisclosed amount In November 2021 six Judge Judy staffers confirmed Sebastien s claims additionally alleging that this behavior from Douthit continued through season 25 in 2020 21 Douthit s lawyers have denied all charges claiming that they emanate from disgruntled former employees also citing Douthit as fostering a supportive inclusive workplace 248 210 246 Sheindlin s leadership was consequently called into question criticized over turning a blind eye to the matters and allowing Douthit as well as other allegedly problematic Judge Judy Executive Producers Amy Freisleben and Victoria Jenest to resume their roles in Judy Justice 249 Expressing resentment over how her leadership was portrayed in media reports Sheindlin was quoted as stating To author a piece which speculates that I was untouchable don t care how the show gets made that I don t trust anyone didn t like cases involving dogs dog bites or strippers by and large didn t interact with staffers wasn t worried about the coronavirus is appalling and untrue 249 Success in post series production reruns edit In April 2022 it was computed that Judge Judy reruns have vastly outperformed Judy Justice season one 2021 22 in viewership quantities 250 It was also reported in August 2022 that with Judge Judy out of production for over a year by this point the court show remained one of the highest rated programs in all of daytime television and syndication 6 Moreover the series still dominates the court show genre as the highest rated broadcast and by significant margins 5 251 Questioned about her concluded court show s enduring success and timelessness in reruns during a November 2022 interview Sheindlin answered My mind is still blown away by the fact that in the second year of its afterlife Judge Judy is still number one in daytime 252 References edit a b Judge Judy Sheindlin Host of Daytime s 1 Rated Show Judge Judy Signs Multiyear Deal Through 2017 The Futon Critic Press release April 8 2013 Retrieved November 28 2014 a b c Getlin Josh June 8 2021 The improbable true story of Judge Judy and the reporter who made her a star The Los Angeles Times United States Retrieved June 9 2021 Strauss Robert May 3 2011 In Her TC Courtroom Judge Judy Makes Case For Personal Responsibility Philadelphia Inquirer Archived from the original on March 3 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from the original on December 3 2012 Retrieved April 7 2022 Judge Judy on Future Every Stage In Your Life Has A New Adventure HuffPost November 13 2012 Retrieved April 7 2022 Judge Judy honoured by UCD society The Irish Times April 9 2013 Retrieved May 5 2013 Heroes of Hollywood Honors Judge Judy Sheindlin NBC Southern California July 11 2014 Retrieved July 14 2014 Allumination Filmworks Is Proud to Release the First DVD From Everyone s Favorite No Nonsense Judge Judge Judy Sheindlin Sys con com Retrieved July 22 2009 Daytime Emmys 2011 nominations See full list 06 17 2011 Entertainment News from OnTheRedCarpet Archived from the original on August 19 2012 Retrieved December 13 2012 Emmys snub Judge Judy View ish girls New York Post May 10 2012 Retrieved April 7 2022 Judge Judy on Celebrities and the Justice System Entertainment Tonight April 29 2013 Archived from the original on January 29 2014 Retrieved May 5 2013 Daytime Emmy Awards 2013 The Ellen DeGeneres Show Sesame Street Judge Judy Win Awards TV Enstarz com October 22 2012 Retrieved June 17 2013 The 43rd Annual Daytime Creative Arts Emmy Award Winners PDF emmyonline org April 29 2015 Archived from the original PDF on August 21 2016 Retrieved April 29 2015 The 44th Annual Daytime Emmy Award Nominations PDF New York City emmyonline org and National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences March 22 2017 Archived from the original PDF on May 3 2020 Retrieved March 22 2017 Buckwalter Rebecca Judge Judy Is a National Treasure Pacific Standard Archived from the original on April 5 2018 Retrieved February 20 2014 Phyllis M Japp Mark Meister Debra K 2005 Communication Ethics Media amp Popular Culture Peter Lang ISBN 9780820471198 Retrieved January 16 2013 a b WAPNER IN JAB AT JUDY New York Post November 26 2002 Retrieved October 2 2020 Judge Wapner vs Judge Judy What A Match That Would Have Been Metnews com Archived from the original on November 7 2009 Retrieved July 22 2009 Judge Judy s Favorite TV Judge Judge Judy Larry King Now Ora TV YouTube December 5 2013 Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Retrieved December 21 2013 Judge Mathis On Why Judge Joe Brown Isn t One Of His Favorite TV Judges EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW September 11 2014 Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved September 2 2015 August 7 2010 Nicki Minaj Live Q amp A Pt 6 Cartoons Favorite Shows amp Spare Time Archived August 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine billboard com Retrieved July 24 2015 a b Brinson Will Jim Harbaugh appearing on Judge Judy Monday CBSSports com Retrieved June 18 2013 a b Harbaugh s verdict Judge Judy is the best CSN Bay Area June 4 2013 Archived from the original on June 8 2013 Retrieved June 18 2013 Jim Harbaugh Judge Judy Taught Me To Never Lie HuffPost February 20 2013 Archived from the original on February 27 2013 Retrieved April 7 2022 Jim Harbaugh connects with Judge Judy naturally NFL com Archived from the original on February 24 2013 Retrieved April 7 2022 Looking to Reach Women in Daytime TV Syndication Is a Solid Alternative NextTV November 7 2012 Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved June 25 2020 Jackson Kelly November 30 2006 Temporarily Disconnected iUniverse ISBN 9780595861781 Retrieved January 16 2013 via Google Books Newport Jerry September 1 2001 Your Life is Not a Label Future Horizons p 4 ISBN 1885477775 idiots on Judge Judy Erickson Hal October 21 2009 Encyclopedia of Television Law Shows Factual and Fictional Series About McFarland ISBN 9780786454525 Retrieved January 16 2013 via Google Books a b Baram Marcus January 3 2008 Disorder in the Court Judge Judy Show Sued ABC News Archived from the original on March 15 2013 Retrieved March 16 2013 KAREN NEEDLE VS THE JUDGE JUDY PROGRAM ET AL November 13 2007 Retrieved June 16 2021 Lawsuit Says Judge Judy Sends Blacks Packin TMZ December 31 2007 Archived from the original on March 16 2013 Retrieved March 16 2013 JONATHAN SEBASTIEN VS THE JUDGE JUDY PROGRAM ET AL December 26 2007 Retrieved June 16 2021 a b c d Johnson Jeroslyn November 5 2021 REPORT JUDGE JUDY PRODUCER DIDN T WANT TOO MANY BLACK LITIGANTS ON THE SHOW Black Enterprise United States Retrieved November 7 2021 Ex friend of Judge Judy I ll drop lawsuit if you give back my china set NY Daily News Archived from the original on March 17 2013 Retrieved March 15 2013 Judge Judy China Lawsuit SETTLES TMZ com Archived from the original on March 19 2013 Retrieved March 16 2013 Judge Judy Lawsuit I ve Been Jacked on the Internet TMZ Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved October 18 2013 OFF BEAT YouTube user gets legal book thrown at him over Judge Judy Business Insurance Archived from the original on September 27 2017 Retrieved April 7 2022 Judge Judy Sues P I Lawyer You Have Stupid on Your Forehead Stupid TMZ March 6 2014 Archived from the original on March 13 2014 Retrieved March 13 2014 Tables turned Judge Judy files suit against lawyer Usatoday com March 12 2014 Archived from the original on December 24 2016 Retrieved December 16 2016 Judge Judy Sues Local Personal Injury Lawyer Hartford Courant Articles courant com Archived from the original on March 13 2014 Retrieved March 13 2014 Judge Judy Connecticut Lawyer Settle Lawsuit August 8 2014 Judge Judy P I Lawyer Fires Back I Wasn t Promoting Me I Was Promoting You TMZ Archived from the original on March 13 2014 Retrieved March 14 2014 Hartford Attorney Fires Back at Judge Judy Courthouse News Service July 14 2014 Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 14 2014 Judge Judy Wins One for the Girls In Lawsuit against Lawyer TMZ Archived from the original on August 9 2014 Retrieved August 9 2014 a b Judge Judy at Center of Potential Multimillion Dollar Lawsuit ABC News March 16 2016 Archived from the original on March 16 2016 Retrieved March 16 2016 Patten Dominic March 14 2016 CBS Sued Over Judge Judy s 47M Salary amp Profits from Syndicated Series Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on March 16 2016 Retrieved March 16 2016 Patten Dominic January 22 2018 Judge Judy amp CBS Sued Again Over Profits For Syndication s Biggest Court Show Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on January 23 2018 Retrieved January 23 2018 Maddaus Gene April 5 2018 Judge Judy s 45 Million Salary Is Not Unreasonable Says New Ruling Variety Archived from the original on April 6 2018 Retrieved April 6 2018 Patten Dominic August 4 2021 Judge Judy Says She ll Eat Contract On National TV If It Can Be Produced In New Suit Over CBS 95M Purchase Of Syndicated Series Library Update United States Retrieved June 12 2021 Schuster Nikki February 24 2021 Judge Judy Suffers Loss In 22 Million Counterclaims Suit But Courtroom Drama In Profits Battle Continues United States Retrieved June 12 2021 Patten Dominic June 11 2021 Judge Judy Intent On Trial After Another Court Loss Attempt To Quash 5M Suit Over CBS Library Sale Rejected United States Retrieved June 12 2021 a b Patten Dominic September 29 2022 Judge Judy amp CBS Get 95M Series Library Sale Suit Dismissed Appeal Planned By Rebel Entertainment United States Retrieved October 10 2022 Judge Judy Producers Beat Lawsuit Over Star s 47 Million Pay Bloomberg law July 30 2021 Retrieved July 31 2021 Cullins Ashley January 23 2018 Judge Judy Library Sale Sparks Profits Lawsuit The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on September 13 2018 Retrieved September 12 2018 Patten Dominic April 15 2016 CBS Hits Back At Judge Judy Lawsuit Says 17M Paid To Agent Not Entitled Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on February 4 2018 Retrieved January 23 2018 Judge Judy Takes the Stand in Producers Lawsuit Los Angeles Times June 3 2000 Archived from the original on March 14 2018 Retrieved April 7 2022 Judge Judy Thinks Lawsuit Over Her Show s Syndication Profits Is Just Background Noise EXCLUSIVE Closeweekly January 31 2018 Archived from the original on February 4 2018 Retrieved February 4 2018 a b Patten Dominic March 29 2022 Judge Judy amp CBS Win Battle Over Profits From Sale Of Syndicated Series Library Deadline United States Retrieved May 17 2022 Petski Denise August 8 2017 CBS Acquires Judge Judy Library Rights Extends Deal Through 2021 Deadline United States Retrieved May 17 2022 Littleton Cynthia March 2 2020 Judge Judy Sets Sights on Streaming Cable Arena for Next Chapter With Judy Justice Variety United States Retrieved June 19 2021 Schonter Allison May 14 2021 Judge Judy Scheindlin Hints at Salary for New Amazon Show Popculture United States Retrieved June 12 2021 Einbender Nicole March 4 2020 Judge Judy was plagued by sexual harassment claims drinking on the job and racism former employees say They worry her new 25 million Amazon streaming show will be more of the same Business Insider United States Retrieved January 8 2022 Weiss Norman March 2 2020 Judy Sheindlin s feud with CBS led her to end Judge Judy after 25 years Primetimer United States Retrieved June 19 2021 Miller Matthew September 9 2021 Judge Judy will return to television with granddaughter Yahoo United States Retrieved September 11 2021 a b c Edmonds Lauren June 5 2021 Judge Judy says she s going to have a Bill and Melinda Gates divorce with CBS Insider United States Retrieved June 12 2021 Lovett Jamie October 10 2021 Judge Judy Fans Are Furious Original Bailiff Petri Hawkins Byrd Wasn t Asked To Be on New Show Combicbook com United States Retrieved October 11 2021 Amazon Freevee Orders Judy Sheindlin Court Show Tribunal with Judge Judy Bailiff Petri Hawkins Byrd Hot Bench s Patricia DiMango amp Tanya Acker April 28 2022 Jones Kiona November 7 2021 Ugly episodes Is Judge Judy s TV show a hotbed of racism and abuse Film Daily United States Retrieved November 7 2021 a b c Einbinder Nicole November 4 2021 Top Judge Judy producer once made pig noises when he found litigants unattractive and told producers he didn t want too many Black litigants former employees claimed Business Insider United States Retrieved November 7 2021 Einbinder Nicole November 2 2021 Judge Judy was plagued by sexual harassment claims drinking on the job and racism former employees say They worry the new 25 million Amazon streaming show will be more of the same Business Insider United States Retrieved November 8 2021 a b Wilson Shania November 5 2021 WHAT DID JUDGE JUDY EXECUTIVE PRODUCER ALLEGEDLY DO TO LITIGANTS HITC United States Retrieved November 7 2021 a b Barilla Chris November 4 2021 Allegations of a Toxic Workplace Plagued Judge Judy for Years Distractify United States Retrieved November 8 2021 Strategy Guy The Entertainment April 28 2022 Judge Judy v Amazon Judy The Verdict is In The Ankler United States Retrieved October 25 2022 Albiniak Paige October 11 2022 Syndication Ratings Rookie Talkers Hold Their Own in Face of Hurricane Ian Broadcasting amp Cable United States Retrieved October 13 2022 Starr Michael November 4 2022 Judy Sheindlin dishes on starring with granddaughter Sarah Rose on Judy Justice New York Post United States Retrieved November 5 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Judge Judy Official website Judge Judy at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judge Judy amp oldid 1203310037, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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