Uncovering the factors leading to the sudden cancellation of Live PD.
- Live PD faced backlash amid nationwide protests for police reform.
- Footage of a custody death intensified scrutiny over the show’s practices.
- On Patrol: Live revives the format despite past controversies and stigma.
Picture this: Friday nights buzzing with car chases, drug busts, and tense standoffs beamed straight from police cruisers. Live PD hooked 2.3 million viewers at its peak, dominating cable like few shows ever do. Then poof, gone in June 2020.
A&E’s decision blindsided everyone from host Dan Abrams to die-hard fans. Digging into the mess reveals a perfect storm of timing, scandal, and shifting cultural winds.
Protests Force Networks into Panic Mode
George Floyd’s murder by police in Minneapolis sparked nationwide fury, with riots and calls for reform hitting every corner of America. Live PD caught in the crossfire: A&E paused new episodes on June 6, just as older staple Cops got yanked by Paramount.
The show, which aired live footage from 20-plus departments with studio breakdowns, faced heat for supposedly glorifying cops while downplaying brutality.
Ratings had soared pre-pause; A&E renewed it for 160 episodes mere weeks earlier. But backlash proved too fierce. Critics pointed to past incidents, such as a 2017 South Carolina deputy shooting aired live, fueling claims of insensitivity.
Network viewership plunged 49% post-hiatus, underscoring Live PD’s massive pull. Abrams later vented frustration, arguing the show spotlighted good policing amid bad apples.
Custody Death Footage Becomes the Nail
The real killer blow came from a local newspaper probe. In March 2019, Williamson County deputies stopped Javier Ambler for a minor headlights violation. The 40-year-old Black motorist, clutching chest pain meds, got tased repeatedly despite pleas. He collapsed and died; an autopsy ruled heart issues tied to tasers.

The Live PD crew filmed it all but held the tape under A&E’s no-death rule. Footage vanished after the sheriff’s quick closure of the case; alleged tampering led to indictments for Sheriff Chody and deputies.
A&E stressed non-interference, but the Austin American-Statesman exposé, dropping amid Floyd chaos, sealed the fate. Prosecutors slammed the filming as “particularly disturbing,” amplifying outrage.
Revival Proves Demand Never Died
Don’t mourn too hard. Live PD lives on as On Patrol: Live since July 2022 on Reelz. Abrams and Larkin host the identical format: three hours of patrols, ride-alongs, and replays from places like Florida and Ohio. A&E sued over trademarks, but fans flooded back, praising the “same old thrill.”
The shift dodged old baggage while tapping an endless appetite for real cop action. Recent episodes feature wild pursuits, keeping pulse rates high. Abrams called it vindication, proving transparency wins over censorship.
In a post-2020 TV world wary of police shows, On Patrol thrives, a nod to the fact that scandals fade but chases don’t.
Networks learned hard lessons: hit pause during tempests, but goldfish attention spans let revivals sneak in. Fans binge old Live PD clips on YouTube, debating if A&E botched a cash cow. The beat goes on, sirens wailing in the night.
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