LOS ANGELES (CNS) — Several television shows have temporarily halted production in Southern California amid the COVID-19 surge.

Warner Bros. TV confirmed Thursday that the CBS series Mom, B Positive, Bob Hearts Abishola, along with the Showtime drama Shameless and Netflix's You will not resume filming next week as scheduled, Variety reported. The studio is aiming for a return the following week, but will evaluate as conditions evolve.


What You Need To Know

  • Several TV shows have temporarily halted production in Southern California amid the COVID-19 surge

  • Warner Bros. TV confirmed Thursday that several shows will not resume filming next week as scheduled

  • L.A. County public health officials are urging production companies to strongly consider going on temporary hiatus

  • Film activity is permitted to continue — with safety protocols — under state and local COVID-19 health restrictions

Universal TV has also halted filming on six shows, according to multiple media reports: NBC's Mr. Mayor, Kenan, Good Girls, and Brooklyn Nine-Nine, HBO Max's Hacks, and Netflix's Never Have I Ever. A January 11 return date is tentatively planned for those shows, with the exception of Brooklyn Nine-Nine, which is expected to resume shooting after January 18.

A total of 16 shows produced by Walt Disney-owned 20th Television and ABC Signature have extended production hiatuses. Those shows are Fox's 911, Lone Star, Last Man Standing, and The Orville, FX's American Crime Story: Impeachment, American Horror Story, and Mayans, ABC's American Housewife, Black-ish, Grey's Anatomy, Rebel, Station 19 and Mixed-ish, NBC's This is Us, Disney Plus' Big Shot, and Hulu's Love, Victor.

ABC's The Goldbergs and Netflix's Atypical, which were slated to resume production next week, will not restart until the following week. Those shows are produced by Sony Pictures Television. The popular syndicated game shows Jeopardy! and Wheel of Fortune — also produced by Sony — are planning to resume shooting the week of January 11 as previously scheduled.

Variety reported earlier this week that the CBS Studios productions NCIS, NCIS: Los Angeles, Seal Team, Why Women Kill, and Diary of a Future President extended their holiday hiatus by one week, until January 11.

Los Angeles County public health officials are urging production companies to strongly consider going on temporary hiatus amid a surge that has left hospitals struggling to keep up with coronavirus patients.

Film activity is permitted to continue — with safety protocols — under state and local COVID-19 health restrictions.

According to FilmLA, the nonprofit agency that coordinates film permitting in the Los Angeles area, health officials sent a letter to industry officials last week reminding them of the current surge in COVID cases and its impact on the emergency medical system.

While urging film companies to exercise caution, the letter asked industry leaders "to strong consider pausing work for a few weeks during this catastrophic surge in COVID cases. Identify and delay higher risk activities and focus on lower-risk work for now, if at all possible."

FilmLA was also asked by health officials to remind industry officials that "travel for production purposes is currently not advised." Despite such travel technically being permitted under health restrictions, such activity makes it "more likely that people will end up together in vehicles or indoors in less-controlled settings," according to the letter.

Continued filming operations made headlines recently thanks to a Sherman Oaks restaurant owner's viral video rant, blasting health officials for shutting down her outdoor dining patio while allowing a film crew to set up an outdoor catering tent across the street to serve food to crew members.