Yes. Most of Seinfeld was filmed in front of a live studio audience. This was mainly in locations like Jerry's apartment or the various offices where George or Elaine worked. However, when they needed to film in locations where a live audience would be impossible they included canned laughter in post-production.
The TV show friends was filmed at the Warner Brothers Studio; early episodes were shot at Stage 5 without an audience. Starting with the second season and later, the show was shot at Stage 24 with an audience.
no it is not.
No there are not.
Some shows do! Shows such as Saturday Night Live, The Big Bang Theory, and Hot in Cleveland still get taped in front of a live audience. Most dramas are not filmed in front of an audience, and many comedies no longer are. Whether they are or not, they will still often use a laugh track.
Well, honey, Seinfeld was indeed filmed in front of a live studio audience. Those laughs weren't just canned, they were the real deal. So, yes, Jerry, Elaine, George, and Kramer had a bunch of folks watching their shenanigans unfold firsthand.
Yes it was, except for scenes where they're outside or something like that.
no it is not.
No it wasn't.
Well, honey, Seinfeld was indeed filmed in front of a live studio audience. Those laughs weren't just canned, they were the real deal. So, yes, Jerry, Elaine, George, and Kramer had a bunch of folks watching their shenanigans unfold firsthand.
No there are not.
Most, if not all, of it is, yes.
Some shows do! Shows such as Saturday Night Live, The Big Bang Theory, and Hot in Cleveland still get taped in front of a live audience. Most dramas are not filmed in front of an audience, and many comedies no longer are. Whether they are or not, they will still often use a laugh track.
John...is filmed in front of a live studio audience.
If they are filmed in front of a live TV audience, yes
Yes it was, except for scenes where they're outside or something like that.
It's filmed in front of a live audience at Warner Brothers in Burbank, CA.
To perform onstage means to perform live in front of the audience as opposed to being recorded or filmed.
There is not a real boat and if you are talking about seeing it when they are filming, the show is not filmed in front of a live studio audience.