Judith Sheindlin's syndicated court show, Judge Judy, was first aired on television on September 16, 1996, and ran for almost 25 seasons until July 23, 2021. Thus, she set a record as the longest-serving television court show arbitrator. Sheindlin accepted an offer made to her in 1995 to preside in a new reality courtroom series featuring 'real cases with real rulings.' Sheindlin was the show's lead, and she was frequently joined on-screen by Bailiff Byrd, sometimes known as 'Byrd' or 'Officer Byrd,' her courtroom security guard. Byrd backed Sheindlin for the entire 25 years that the show was on, making her the longest-serving arbitrator in the history of courtroom TV.
Judge Judy achieved her first Daytime Emmy nomination in 2013 and went on to win the award. Sheindlin received recognition from Guinness World Records on September 14, 2015, for having the longest-running program of the continuous series of court shows and functioning as a judge or arbitrator in courtroom-themed programming history. The program earned a Daytime Emmy Award once more in 2017.
The show lasted for more than two decades after CBS TV and Sheindlin signed several contract extensions. Yet the series finally ended on the 25th season anniversary. She revealed in a March 2020 appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show that the show's series finale will be aired on July 23, 2021, and the final taped episode will take place on June 8, 2021. Sheindlin stopped the series on purpose because '25 is a good round number' to end on a high note, even though Rebel Entertainment was suing him and Viacom-CBS wasn't happy with him.