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Night Flight was a variety show on the USA Network. An eclectic mix of short films, cartoons, B movies, stand up comedy, documentaries, music videos and more, Night Flight was broadcast, in various incarnations, from 1981 to 1996. Broadcast historyIt originally ran from 1981-1988, for four hours on Friday and Saturday evenings. USA's Up All Night starring Caroline Schlitt and Gilbert Gottfried (and, later, Rhonda Shear) would replace it in 1988. It was later revived through syndication in 1990, with a single season of new episodes before the format was changed to "best of" shows from the USA years with host Tom Juarez. These shows were seen as late as 1996. On October 11, 2007, television producer Stuart S. Shapiro announced that he had acquired the Night Flight library, copyrights and trademarks, and that he is preparing for a relaunch of the show both online and on television. Format and contentsNight Flight was one of the first places to see films and shorts not generally aired on broadcast television or on the pay-per movie channels such as HBO. It was the first place many Americans were able to see music documentaries like Another State of Mind, The Grateful Dead Movie, and Word, Sound and Power. Night Flight was also one of the first American television shows to display the music video as an art form, rather than purely as a promotional tool for the artists. And, with the freedom had by them on early (and late-night) cable television, they would at times show portions of videos that were censored (or in some cases, banned) by MTV and other outlets. In the original format of the show, there was no formal host. Voice-over introductions were made by Pat Prescott before segments started. Recurring segments included:
Bela Lugosi's Monogram films were recurring features. Other segments included condensed parodies of low-quality, out-of-copyright black-and-white-era movies and serials, as well as letters from viewers. The show would also highlight movies that were regarded as cult hits. Examples include:
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