All Nickelodeon shows have too many laugh tracks, for jokes that aren't funny. Watch an episode of Nick's Sam and Cat and see.
I get so sick and tired of people complaining about THE BIG BANG THEORY's "laugh track" when it doesn't have one... but then again, there's unfortunate stigma that's been given to a lot of sitcoms today (lookin' at you Drtooth... just sayin...) where if there's laughter heard on the show, live or simulated, it's a "laugh track sitcom"... this is apparently to distinguish it from non-laugh sitcoms like all these mockumentary-style sitcoms... and WHY is this trend STILL going on? It got really old really fast, it doesn't work well for television.Big Bang Theory has a live audience but sometimes it sounds like a laugh track.....just sayin...
Producers can never really rely on live audiences for desires reactions, which is one of the reasons why a laugh track can be more effective.I went to a Comedy Central taping once and they told us before hand to laugh and act like we're having fun...even if the jokes weren't funny, lol.
Cool, you know a lot about this. Well if you ever do go to New York or California, you could try getting an Internship at The Paley Center.It depends on who, specifically, is supplying the laughs.
But yes, laughs have kind of gone through cycles and rotations since the 60s or so. Some laughs that were used in the early and mid 60s started resurfacing again in the late 70s, and in some cases, more recent shows like FRASIER and BECKER have a few laughs that originated in the 60s.
The original Laff Man himself, Charley Douglass, started recording laughs in the early 50s, but his business didn't really snowball until the late 50s, and over the years, he would record new laughs and other reactions, retire older laughs, then in a number of cases, retire newer reactions and revive older ones. And originally, his was the only company supplying sitcoms with laugh tracks, up till the late 70s, when one of his proteges, Carroll Pratt, spun off into his own company, since Charley's technology was growing outdated: this explains why it doesn't matter what studio produced the show, or what network it was one, they all had the same laugh tracks back in those days.
I get so sick and tired of people complaining about THE BIG BANG THEORY's "laugh track" when it doesn't have one... but then again, there's unfortunate stigma that's been given to a lot of sitcoms today (lookin' at you Drtooth... just sayin...) where if there's laughter heard on the show, live or simulated, it's a "laugh track sitcom"... this is apparently to distinguish it from non-laugh sitcoms like all these mockumentary-style sitcoms... and WHY is this trend STILL going on? It got really old really fast, it doesn't work well for television.