CrowdedTV
CrowdedTV is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at CrowdedTV.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who founded CrowdedTV?
CrowdedTV was founded by Adryenn Ashley (Founder).
CrowdedTV is a company.
Key people at CrowdedTV.
CrowdedTV was founded by Adryenn Ashley (Founder).
CrowdedTV was founded by Adryenn Ashley (Founder).
Key people at CrowdedTV.
CrowdedTV refers to *Crowded*, an American sitcom television series that aired on NBC from March 15 to May 22, 2016.[1][3][4][5] Created by Suzanne Martin and executive produced by Martin, Sean Hayes, and Todd Milliner through Hazy Mills Productions in association with Universal Television, the multi-camera show was filmed in front of a live studio audience and centered on an empty-nest couple, Mike (Patrick Warburton) and Martina Moore (Carrie Preston), whose adult daughters Stella (Mia Serafino) and Shea (Miranda Cosgrove) move back home after college, alongside Mike's retired father Bob and stepmother Alice.[1][2][5] The series explored post-college life struggles, family dynamics, and generational clashes in a Seattle-area setting, but was canceled after one 13-episode season due to low ratings.[1][3]
The show featured queer characters among its regulars and tackled relatable modern family issues like unemployment and unconventional jobs (e.g., one daughter as a webcam performer), though critics panned it as dated and lacking laughs despite a talented cast.[2][4][5]
*Crowded* was greenlit by NBC on May 7, 2015, as a mid-season entry for the 2015–16 television season with a 13-episode order.[1] Creator Suzanne Martin, known for *Hot in Cleveland*, drew from real-life "boomerang" family trends where adult children return home amid economic uncertainty.[1][2] Executive producers Sean Hayes and Todd Milliner's Hazy Mills Productions handled production alongside Universal Television, filming at Stage 41, Universal Studios.[1][5]
The premise emerged from the cultural shift of millennials delaying independence, with early episodes airing to mixed fan reception—some praised its realism on everyday family tensions, while networks cut it short without time to develop.[1][5]
Critics noted its "dated feel," but fans valued the grounded take on modern households.[4][5]
*Crowded* had no direct role in tech or startups; search results confirm it as a 2016 NBC sitcom, not a company, investment firm, or tech entity—possibly a user misconception from "Crowded" branding in media or unrelated Valley Talks videos on social TV trends.[1][2][3][4][5][8] It reflected early 2010s cultural shifts like the gig economy and delayed adulthood, indirectly nodding to tech-disrupted job markets (e.g., entry-level food service, online content creation).[1][2]
In TV's evolution, it highlighted network struggles against streaming rise, canceled amid cord-cutting and binge-model shifts—market forces favoring platforms like Netflix over traditional sitcoms.[1][4]
*Crowded* ended after one season in 2016, with no revivals, reboots, or ongoing impact noted in available data up to 2026.[1][3] Streaming archives (e.g., via IMDb, Rotten Tomatoes) keep it accessible for nostalgic viewing, but its influence remains niche among fans of multi-cam comedies.[4][5] Future trends like AI-driven content personalization may resurface such shows, yet without tech ties, it won't shape startup ecosystems—tying back, it's a snapshot of family life in a pre-streaming TV era, not the company implied.