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ABC Kids (TV programming block)

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ABC Kids (originally titled Disney's One Saturday Morning until 2002) was an American Saturday morning children's programming block that aired on ABC from September 13, 1997 to August 27, 2011. It featured a mixture of animated and live-action series from Walt Disney Television Animation and Disney Channel , aimed at children between the ages of 6 and 14. This was the only time Disney Channel content aired on over-the-air television in the United States.

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93-435: The block regularly aired on Saturday mornings, though certain programs within the lineup aired on Sundays in some parts of the country due to station preferences for non- educational programming or scheduling issues with regional or network sports broadcasts . After five years of mainly repeats of programs introduced onto the block prior to the 2007–08 season, ABC decided it would cease to provide children's programming during

186-405: A Saturday morning block that was different from those carried by its competitors at the time. In February 1997, Peter Hastings left Warner Bros. Animation and joined Disney, where he was tasked with overhauling ABC's Saturday morning lineup in order to compete against Fox Kids and Kids' WB . He pitched an idea around the concept that Saturday is different from every other day of the week, and

279-579: A clear separation between the program and advertising content so that younger viewers were able to distinguish between them. The CTA was passed despite objections by the Bush administration , who believed that requiring the broadcast of educational programming by all television stations was a violation of their rights to free speech . The restriction on "program-length commercials" was also considered to be too narrow; critics (such as Charren) had demanded that it apply to any program targeted towards children that

372-453: A bright spot for the block; the new series dethroned Pokémon to become broadcast television's most-watched Saturday morning cartoon, though all of the broadcast networks had fallen behind Nickelodeon. The block received a new brand identity in the fall of 2000; this was followed by the shorts and hosted segments being discontinued on December 16 in a reformatting of the ABC block. By this time,

465-466: A broad range of children's audiences ranging from preschoolers to preteens; as a non-commercial educational network, it does not rely on advertising revenue in the traditional sense, and its underwriting spots are not directly tied to ratings. PBS requires its member stations to take at least seven hours of PBS Kids programming on weekdays, while its national schedule previously fed 13 hours of PBS Kids programming per-day. In February 2023, PBS reduced

558-493: A condition of being picked up), and Wheel 2000 —a children's version of the game show Wheel of Fortune . For the 1998–99 season, CBS relaunched the block once more as the CBS Kidshow , featuring a slate of animated series from Nelvana such as book adaptations Franklin and Dumb Bunnies , Birdz , and Flying Rhino Junior High . NBC had already abandoned cartoons as Saturday morning programming in 1992 with

651-433: A general audience or children. The rules were officially approved on July 10, and went into effect on September 16. Following the initial implementation of the regulations, many television stations began to cut locally produced children's programs due to budgetary concerns, and largely replaced them with educational programs acquired from the syndication market. Distributors such as Litton Entertainment benefited from

744-469: A given season) featuring moral lessons and/or educational anecdotes. The episodes were selected by both the Standards and Practices Division of the network and any educational consultants who were attached to the shows. The Replacements and Hannah Montana were the last two Disney Channel series to be added to the block in the fall of 2006. Beginning with the 2007–08 season, ABC Kids programming (with

837-546: A joint filing to the FCC in September 2005 to urge against the "far-reaching, burdensome and expensive" advertising rules, with Disney also suing over the regulations as being a violation of freedom of speech. On December 16, 2005, the FCC chose to delay the new regulation to March 6, 2006, in order to allow time for further discussion. They were implemented in September 2006. FCC commissioner Michael O'Rielly has considered

930-408: A letter of opposition to the FCC. They disagreed with O'Rielly's assessment that non-broadcast platforms "provide significant educational programming for children", and argued that broadcast television was still widely viewed by children, and that not all families have access to non-broadcast media. On June 19, 2019, the FCC issued its proposed rule changes: while the basic minimum will remain intact,

1023-673: A longtime essential of ABC's Saturday morning block since 1973, also aired as an interstitial segment during The Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show , likewise a carryover from the pre-Disney era (it would continue until ABC's contract with then- AOL Time Warner expired in 2000). Disney’s One Saturday Morning was initially a massive success, beating Fox Kids during its first season to be the most-watched Saturday morning block on broadcast television. It remained competitive in its second season, beating all of Fox Kids' shows except Power Rangers . The third season remained competitive with its broadcast peers on Fox and Kids WB , with The Weekenders being

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1116-636: A major impact on U.S. television; the syndication market was bolstered by demand for compliant educational programming, while the Saturday morning cartoon blocks traditionally aired by major networks began to increase their focus on educational programming. This factor, however, alongside the growth of platforms not subject to the rules, such as cable channels (including Cartoon Network , Disney Channel and Nickelodeon ) and, later, streaming services , contributed to an overall decline in broadcast television airings of non-educational children's programming. In

1209-447: A new Saturday morning block beginning in the 2006–07 season. Initially branded as KOL Secret Slumber Party under a sponsorship with America Online 's KOL portal , it consisted of E/I programming targeting a female youth audience, including original programming and DIC library programs. The block was re-branded as KEWLopolis the following season as part of a new sponsorship with American Greetings , and Cookie Jar TV in 2009 following

1302-586: A number of policies regarding children's programming. Research demonstrated that young children had difficulty distinguishing between the program they were watching, and commercials broadcast during them. Most children had little or no understanding of the persuasive intent of commercials, and as such, were highly vulnerable to claims and appeals by advertisers. Advertisers, especially those related to junk food , were interested in youth as consumers because of their spending power through their parents, their influence, and their brand awareness as adult consumers in

1395-403: A point of contact for viewer inquiries about the educational programs aired by a station. As they are not under the jurisdiction of the FCC, this regulation does not apply to cable channels. While non-commercial educational stations are also required to comply with the regulations, they are not subject to its monitoring and reporting rules. In September 2004, the FCC announced revisions to

1488-703: A recommended schedule for the late-afternoon section of the PBS Kids block for member stations who wished to continue carrying the full block. In 2007, Univision agreed to a record $ 24 million fine from the FCC for violations of the educational programming regulations across 24 of its stations. The fine acted upon complaints by the United Church of Christ and the National Hispanic Media Coalition , alleging that youth telenovelas claimed by Univision as E/I programming did not meet

1581-477: A regularly-scheduled program, of at least 30 minutes in length, that is "specifically designed" to meet the educational and informative needs of children 16 years old and younger. The FCC ordered that by September 1997, all commercial television stations must broadcast at least three hours of core educational programming per-week, regularly scheduled between the hours of 7:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m. Beginning January 2, 1997, television stations were required to use

1674-562: A subtle nod to the Fox Kids brand acquired by Disney through its purchase of Fox Family Worldwide, to ABC Kids (as a result of the sale, Fox Kids ceased to exist; Fox's children's program lineups would be handled from that point onward by 4Kids Entertainment until 2008). The rechristened block originally contained a mix of first-run programs exclusive to the block, as well as reruns of several original series from both Disney Channel and Toon Disney . NBA Inside Stuff also began airing on

1767-561: A sufficient commitment to the 1990 regulations. His proposal included that stations be required to air a minimum of three hours of children's educational programming per-week. Jeff Bingaman issued a letter of support for the proposal, signed by 24 Democratic senators and one Republican. Fox Kids president Margaret Loesch denied Hundt's assessment that broadcasters were not following the rules, stating that most Fox affiliates already aired an average of four hours of children's educational programming per-week. Edward O. Fritts, president of

1860-458: A violation of broadcasters' rights to free speech. The FCC's initial regulations faced criticism for being too broad in its definition of children's educational programming, with stations attempting to classify various non-educational programs as containing educational elements. The amount of network television programming considered "highly educational" decreased after the implementation of the CTA, with

1953-425: Is The Magic School Bus , as it combined effective writing and educational content for children. Networks picked up series more often when they were related to a well-known pop culture icon, or could be marketable as toys. Owing to the success of PBS ' Barney & Friends from both a critical and commercial standpoint, Disney and Nickelodeon had a greater interest in producing preschool programming that

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2046-585: Is related to the program currently airing, including identifiable elements and talent ("host-selling"). The FCC adopted a stronger regulation known as the Children's Programming Report and Order in 1996, which took effect in 1997: it requires all television stations to broadcast at least three hours of programming per-week that is specifically designed to educate and inform viewers aged 16 and younger, requires on-air identification of these programs, and has more stringent reporting requirements. The E/I regulations had

2139-621: The National Association of Broadcasters , accused Hundt of being "obsessed" with the proposed quota. In regards to reports that Hundt was struggling to receive FCC majority support for the proposal and was repeatedly "stalling" a final vote, Fritts stated that Hundt was that "acting like a regulatory referee wanting to push the game into overtime even though the final score is lopsided.", and that he "made up his mind long ago that broadcasters were to be castigated on children’s TV, without reservation, and despite overwhelming evidence to

2232-549: The educational and informative (E/I) needs of children aged 16 and younger. There are also regulations on advertising in broadcast and cable television programming targeting children 12 and younger. Early regulations on educational programming were implemented by the FCC in 1991, as ordered by the Children's Television Act —an Act of Congress passed in 1990. They included a requirement for television stations to publish reports on their efforts to carry programming that "furthers

2325-577: The safe harbor provision in order to regulate content for younger audiences. Due to the weak definition used in the regulation, many stations attempted to declare programs not specifically designed to be educational—such as The Flintstones , G.I. Joe , Hard Copy , The Jetsons , and Leave It to Beaver —as educational programming, based on their discussion of social and moral issues. In 1995, then-FCC commissioner Reed Hundt began campaigning for stricter children's educational programming regulations, arguing that broadcasters were not displaying

2418-599: The "end" of Saturday morning cartoons), NBC ( The More You Know in 2016; Spanish-language dubs began airing on Telemundo in 2018 under the MiTelemundo branding) all leased their weekend morning blocks to Litton Entertainment to air such E/I programming. Fox entered into a similar arrangement with Steve Rotfeld Productions to produce the STEM -based block Xploration Station for its affiliates, which premiered in September 2014. NBC argued that its The More You Know block

2511-563: The 1997–98 season. It featured a mix of Disney animated series, educational interstitial segments (including a history-oriented segment starring comedian Robin Williams , reprising his role as the Genie from Aladdin ), the educational series Science Court , and a flagship wraparound program ( Disney's One Saturday Morning ). ABC stated that four of the block's five hours would be billed as E/I programming. One Saturday Morning quickly became

2604-510: The 2000–01 season. The block primarily focused on preschool programming from the Nick Jr. brand, but from 2002 to 2004 the block targeted a broader youth audience as simply "Nick on CBS" (after 2004, the block returned to a preschool audience). NBC partnered with cable network Discovery Kids to replace TNBC with Discovery Kids on NBC for the 2002–03 season, which featured factual entertainment programming and educational cartoons (including

2697-464: The 2010s, the major commercial networks began to use factual and reality -style programming (such as Weekend Adventure )—declared as targeting teenagers—to meet their E/I obligations, as they are not subject to the same restrictions on advertising as programs targeting children 12 and under. The educational programming regulations have faced a mixed reception from the industry. There have historically been concerns over whether these mandates constitute

2790-601: The 2010s, the major networks began to schedule factual , documentary - and reality -style series aimed at a teen (13–16 years old) audience to fulfill their E/I obligations, rather than programming targeting preschool or preteen audiences. As they are targeting viewers older than 12 years old, these programs are not subject to the restrictions on advertising in the Children's Television Act . ABC ( Litton's Weekend Adventure in 2011), CBS ( CBS Dream Team in 2013), The CW ( One Magnificent Morning in 2014; The Washington Post wrote that its replacement of Vortexx signaled

2883-615: The 2011–12 season. The block aired for the final time on August 27, 2011 without any announcement of its closure, and was quietly replaced by Litton's Weekend Adventure the following week on September 3. † - Program transitioned to ABC Kids ‡ - Program transitioned from final schedule of Fox Kids/4Kids The following programs were planned to air on Disney's One Saturday Morning/ABC Kids, but they were pulled. † - Program transitioned from Disney's One Saturday Morning ‡ - Program transitioned from final schedule of Fox Kids Regulations on children%27s television programming in

ABC Kids (TV programming block) - Misplaced Pages Continue

2976-528: The ABC Saturday Morning lineup. It was originally scheduled to debut the Saturday prior on September 6, but coverage by all U.S. networks of the funeral of Princess Diana pushed back the premiere by one week to September 13. Disney's One Saturday Morning featured two parts: three hours of regularly scheduled cartoons and a two-hour flagship show that included feature segments, comedy skits, and

3069-407: The FCC issued proposals regarding changes to the rules, including removing the requirement that a program must be regularly scheduled and at least 30 minutes in length, providing the option for all of a station's E/I programming to air on a subchannel rather than the main signal, allowing stations to organize or sponsor "non-broadcast" initiatives in lieu of airing educational programming, and replacing

3162-411: The FCC to implement regulations surrounding programming that serves the "educational and informational" (E/I) needs of children, as well as the amount of advertising broadcast during television programs aimed towards children. This included that a station's commitment to airing and supporting educational children's programming had to become a factor in license renewals, and that limits had to be imposed on

3255-537: The Qubo consortium and introduced the new NBC Kids and MiTelemundo blocks in July 2012, which were programmed by new sister network Sprout . Ion continued to operate the Qubo channel until February 2021, when it was shut down as part of the merger of Ion's operations with new owner E. W. Scripps Company . In 2012, Saban Capital Group acquired some of 4Kids' assets as part of its chapter 11 bankruptcy , which included

3348-477: The Saturday morning timeslot, and entered into an agreement with Litton Entertainment to program that period; the block that resulted from this deal – Litton's Weekend Adventure , which is structured as a syndication package distributed with virtual exclusivity to ABC's owned-and-operated stations and affiliates – replaced ABC Kids on September 3, 2011. Immediately after The Walt Disney Company purchased ABC corporate parent Capital Cities/ABC Inc. in 1996,

3441-891: The United States The broadcast of educational children's programming by terrestrial television stations in the United States is mandated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), under regulations colloquially referred to as the Children's Television Act ( CTA ), the E/I rules, or the Kid Vid rules. Since 1997, all full-power and Class A low-power broadcast television stations have been required to broadcast at least three hours (or more if they operate digital subchannels ) per-week of programs that are specifically designed to meet

3534-502: The acquisition of DIC by Cookie Jar Group . Also in the 2006–07 season, NBC and its Spanish sister network Telemundo launched a new block known as Qubo , as a joint venture between NBC Universal, Ion Media Networks , Nelvana owner Corus Entertainment , Scholastic , and Classic Media . Qubo blocks aired on NBC, Telemundo, and Ion Television , while Ion also offered a 24-hour Qubo channel on digital terrestrial television . When The WB merged with UPN in 2006 to form The CW ,

3627-434: The allowance for programming dealing with social issues (as opposed to programming dealing in traditional academic subjects) having been cited as a factor. The regulations were described by then-FCC commissioner Michael O'Rielly as "onerous" and outdated due to the cable and new media platforms that have emerged since their introduction, which led to changes in 2019 to provide more flexibility in compliance. Concern over

3720-476: The amount of PBS Kids programming on the national schedule to eight hours per-day in the morning and early-afternoon hours; it cited viewing habits favouring its streaming platforms and PBS Kids digital channel , and successful moves by member stations such as KPBS San Diego and WOSU-TV Columbus to cut back on the block in favor of more general interest programming (such as lifestyle shows, British dramas, and distance education programming). PBS would still provide

3813-492: The amount of advertising that can be aired during television programs targeting children. The CTA also called for the Secretary of Education to establish a National Endowment to help support the production of educational children's programming. The FCC implemented the CTA via new regulations that came into effect on October 1, 1991. Television stations and cable providers would be required to maintain and publish summaries of

ABC Kids (TV programming block) - Misplaced Pages Continue

3906-524: The block as a result of ABC's acquisition of the broadcast television rights to the NBA from NBC (where the series originally premiered in 1990), beginning with the 2002–03 season 's Christmas Day game ; Inside Stuff continued to air on ABC Kids until 2004. The series premiere of Disney Channel's Lilo & Stitch: The Series was also held on ABC Kids on September 20, 2003, with a delayed premiere on Disney Channel on October 12, 2003. The new block abandoned

3999-521: The block's first season in 1997, and later by MeMe ( Valarie Rae Miller ) beginning in September 1998; the segments also featured an elephant named Jelly Roll (voiced by stand up comedian and actor Brad Garrett ), who served as a sidekick to the human host, while the eccentric Manny the Uncanny ( Paul Rugg ), host of his own standalone segment where he visited and observed various jobs, made occasional appearances outside that segment. Schoolhouse Rock! ,

4092-415: The branding "E/I" to promote these programs on-air and in programming information supplied to TV listings providers. Commercial stations are also required to compile, publish, and publicize a quarterly Children's Television Programming Report in their public file , detailing the children's educational programming aired during the past quarter, what programs it plans to air during the next, and providing

4185-479: The broadcasting of educational programming was part of broadcasters' obligations to serve the public interest . In the early 1970s, ACT successfully pressured the major networks to remove "violent" superhero cartoons from their children's programming, and in 1971, first proposed restrictions on airing any advertising during children's programs. In the early-1980s, ACT criticized the major networks for their decreasing commitments to educational programming, citing

4278-855: The cancellations of ABC 's Animals, Animals, Animals and CBS 's children's newsmagazine 30 Minutes as examples . It also criticized the networks for airing cartoons that they considered to be promotional tie-ins for associated toylines rather than legitimate entertainment, such as He-Man and the Masters of the Universe , The Transformers and My Little Pony . In 1982, Reagan administration FCC chairman Mark S. Fowler lamented upon CBS's decision to move its long-running children's series Captain Kangaroo from its historic weekday morning timeslot, to weekends, in order to accommodate an expanded morning newscast . CBS had already shortened

4371-451: The children's educational programming that they broadcast, defined as "programming that furthers the positive development of children 16 years of age and under in any respect, including the child's intellectual/cognitive or social/emotional needs". Commercial time during children's programming was limited to 12 minutes per hour on weekdays and 10.5 on weekends. The airing of advertising during children's programs for products associated with

4464-912: The company's contract to program The CW's Saturday morning lineup. Toonzai was subsequently re-launched by Saban as Vortexx in August 2012, with a mix of animated and live-action series (the latter including the Power Rangers franchise, and the WWE wrestling show Saturday Morning Slam ) . The CW remained the last major U.S. network to still program non-educational children's programming on weekend mornings. The growing regulatory scrutiny, increasing competition from cable channels such as Cartoon Network , Disney Channel, and Nickelodeon, as well as video on-demand and streaming services , brought changes to viewing habits that made non-educational Saturday morning programming less viable for networks. Throughout

4557-479: The contrary." Following a push for support from Congress and the Clinton administration , the FCC adopted the Children's Programming Report and Order in August 1996. The new regulations were intended to provide clearer regulatory obligations for television stations, and promote public awareness of educational programming offered by television stations. The order and regulations defined core educational programming :

4650-484: The discretion of affiliates, and entered into an agreement with 4Kids Entertainment to program a new Saturday morning block beginning in the 2002–03 season. That season, ABC's One Saturday Morning was rebranded as ABC Kids, which drew from the programming of Disney's cable networks Disney Channel , Toon Disney , and the newly rebranded ABC Family. In January 2006, after CBS and Viacom split into separate companies, CBS partnered with DIC Entertainment to program

4743-474: The earliest time allowed for E/I programming was moved up to 6:00 a.m. local time. Furthermore, a limited amount of public service announcements and short-form programming will be allowed to count as E/I, and stations will be allowed to schedule up to a third of the required programming on its digital subchannels. As a consequence of the latter aspect of the rule changes, the requirement to place E/I programming on every subchannel would be removed. Enforcement of

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4836-553: The educational programming regulations to be outdated. Citing the wider variety of platforms available (including cable networks and digital platforms), he stated that "with today's dynamic media marketplace there are very little, if any, additional benefits provided by the Kid Vid rules". O'Rielly also argued that the "onerous" nature of the regulations were also making stations reluctant to air other, more viable programs on Saturday mornings, such as newscasts and sports. In July 2018,

4929-510: The exception of Power Rangers ) became fully automated, putting the same handful of episodes of each show ( The Emperor's New School , The Replacements , That's So Raven , Hannah Montana and The Suite Life of Zack & Cody ) on a permanent rotation for the block's remaining four years. In March 2010, ABC made the decision to cease providing a three-hour block of E/I-compliant , repurposed Disney Channel programming sent to its own stations and ABC affiliates. The network chose to lease out

5022-613: The first animated programs aired by NBC's Saturday morning lineup since the TNBC era). In 2001, Fox and its partner Saban Entertainment sold Fox Kids' assets —which included the Fox Family cable channel—to Disney. As a result, Fox discontinued the Fox Kids block in 2002, and returned its weekday daytime timeslots back to affiliates in 2002. The network would continue to provide airings of The Magic School Bus for E/I compliance at

5115-527: The franchise back and Nickelodeon acquired broadcast rights to the series. In the 2004–05 season, ABC Kids dropped its two remaining original series, Fillmore! and Recess (the latter of which was airing in reruns on the block since it ended in 2001). With the transfer of Walt Disney Television Animation to Disney Channels Worldwide , ABC fulfilled the FCC's three-hour quota by carrying select episodes of Disney Channel live-action comedies and animated series (anywhere between nine and thirteen episodes from

5208-771: The future. Newton Minow was one of the first federal officials to speak of the need for regulation of children's programming, openly denouncing cartoons as being unfit for the airwaves in his 1961 landmark speech " Television and the Public Interest ." He did not take any direct action because he believed that improvements could be made without force and could be resolved by increasing competition through UHF television and expanding non-commercial educational options. In 1968, activist Peggy Charren established Action for Children's Television (ACT)—a lobbying group that campaigned for high-quality children's programming to be broadcast by television stations. ACT believed that

5301-604: The imagery of the One Saturday Morning era in favor of a sports stadium motif, which, in 2006, was changed to a rock concert design that remained throughout the last five years of ABC Kids. Through Disney's acquisition of Saban Entertainment, the Power Rangers series moved from Fox Kids to the ABC Kids block. All first-run episodes from the franchise premiered on ABC Kids beginning with the second half of

5394-560: The impact of television on academic performance continues to be debated in scholarly research. The first attempt to address these concerns were during Congressional hearings in 1952 that addressed violence. Besides Congress, there were government commissions that also pursued this agenda. Included in these discussions were the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the Federal Trade Commission , and advocacy groups formed by concerned citizens. The FCC intended to change

5487-409: The impact that television had on children began when television was still a new entertainment medium. During the 1950s, many individuals, particularly parents, asked their legislators to do something about the potential effects of television viewing on young people. Academic research was initiated since this time to monitor, analyze and explain the relationships between television and children, although

5580-679: The interstitials within the block were relegated to bumpers and program promotions . The change proved to be disastrous; by February 2001, ratings had fallen to less than half of its competitors' on Fox, The WB and Nickelodeon. In the fall of 2001, live-action series were added to the One Saturday Morning lineup with the addition of the "Zoog Hour," an hour-long sub-block featuring the Disney Channel original series Lizzie McGuire and Even Stevens (the sub-block, advertised in promos for Disney’s One Saturday Morning promoting

5673-520: The introduction of TNBC , a block that featured live-action teen sitcoms . By 2001, TNBC's viewership had seen major declines in its core demographic, while the median age of its viewers was around 41. In the 2000s, multiple networks began to outsource their Saturday morning blocks to sister cable networks and third-parties. After Viacom acquired CBS for the first time in 2000, it was announced that sister network Nickelodeon would program CBS's Saturday-morning lineup as Nick Jr. on CBS beginning in

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5766-763: The low ratings of the Jungle Fury season, as well as the merger between Jetix and Toon Disney to form Disney XD in 2009, the RPM season aired exclusively on ABC Kids. After production on RPM had concluded, instead of producing a new season, Disney produced a re-version of the first 32 episodes of Mighty Morphin Power Rangers , which included a new logo, an updated title sequence, comic book-referenced graphics, and extra alternative visual effects. The re-version aired from January 2 to August 28, 2010 (the 17th anniversary of Power Rangers ), after which Haim Saban bought

5859-478: The merged network initially maintained Kids' WB; by then the five-hour block only carried one hour of E/I programming at 7:00 a.m. ET/PT, which was branded as the "Pillow Head Hour". In October 2007, The CW reached a five-year agreement with 4Kids for it to program its Saturday morning block, resulting in the replacement of Kids' WB with The CW4Kids (later branded as Toonzai) in the 2008–09 season. The block initially co-existed with 4Kids' block for Fox, which

5952-515: The network's children's program block ABC Saturday Morning, aired such Disney-produced series as The Mighty Ducks , Jungle Cubs and Gargoyles ; it was one of two networks at the time that prominently carried Disney programming on Saturday mornings, as CBS also carried Disney cartoons (CBS' were mostly television spin-offs of Disney Renaissance films, whereas ABC's were mostly other Disney properties). After Disney formally took over ABC's operations, Disney head Michael Eisner sought to create

6045-437: The networks and their profit motives." Citing the recent New York v. Ferber decision, he told The New York Times that "despite the guarantee of free speech, our children are so precious that the free speech of the [child] pornographer had to give way to allow us to protect children from exploitation." In October 1990, President George H. W. Bush signed the Children's Television Act (CTA), an Act of Congress ordering

6138-430: The positive development of children 16 years of age and under in any respect, including the child's intellectual/cognitive or social/emotional needs", and for the FCC to use these reports as a factor in license renewals. The Act also imposed limits on advertising during television programming targeting viewers 12 and younger, including limits on how many minutes of advertising may be aired, and prohibiting advertising that

6231-452: The production of educational children's programming by public broadcasters . The idea was criticized by NBC's vice president as being a "tax" on commercial broadcasting, while ABC argued that commercial television (including networks and their affiliates) was doing a better job at serving children than public broadcasters. Captain Kangaroo creator and host Bob Keeshan disagreed, arguing that children were "just too important to be left to

6324-487: The program currently airing ("program-length commercials"), or otherwise containing talent or identifiable characteristics from the program ("host-selling"), was prohibited. The prohibition of "host-selling" was intended to prevent children's programs that were tie-ins with toy franchises (such as, for example, G.I. Joe ) from airing ads for the toys themselves during their associated programs. When airing children's programming, broadcasters were also encouraged to establish

6417-583: The program from a full hour to 30 minutes in 1981 for the same reason. At the time, the big three networks scheduled the majority of their children's programming—including cartoons—during their Saturday morning lineups . They also aired occasional " after school specials "— anthologies of television films focusing on issues affecting youth—in late-afternoon timeslots. Captain Kangaroo had to compete not only with news-based morning shows such as ABC's Good Morning America and NBC's Today , but local and syndicated offerings also targeting children. Fowler

6510-429: The program must also be "sufficiently separated" from commercial areas of the site. The rule would be enforcable by the FCC for broadcast TV, and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for cable. The implementation of the advertising rules were deferred from February 2005 to January 2006, following concerns by broadcasters over the amount of time given to become compliant. Disney , NBC Universal , and Viacom issued

6603-494: The programs shown on One Saturday Morning (including Recess , Pepper Ann and Sabrina: The Animated Series ). On July 23, 2001, the Walt Disney Company purchased Fox Family Worldwide , primarily for its Fox Family Channel , which was included in the sale as well as Saban Entertainment , a company in which Fox purchased a 50% interest in 1994. On September 14, 2002, ABC rebranded its Saturday morning block, as

6696-483: The quarterly report with an annual report. O'Rielly felt that the 30-minute minimum length "killed off shorter, high-quality programs that were once popular and educational", and does not reflect current viewing habits. A group in favor of maintaining the existing policies, which included the Benton Foundation , Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood , and Common Sense Kids Action , among others, issued

6789-434: The regulations to account for the then-upcoming digital television transition . An additional half-hour of E/I programming must be broadcast for every increment of 28 hours of additional free video programming the station offers via digital subchannels . The regulations also stipulate that an "E/I" logo must be displayed on-screen throughout such a program, that a regularly-scheduled E/I program may only be rescheduled 10% of

6882-575: The representation of weekdays as buildings. Hastings also proposed the use of virtual set technology; although he knew a bit about it at the time and the technology used was just starting to be developed, Disney and ABC liked the idea. He hired Prudence Fenton as consultant manager and co-executive producer. Together, they sampled virtual set technology at the 1997 NAB Show and chose technology developed by Accom and ELSET. Rutherford Bench Productions, which had previously worked with Disney on other projects, hired Pacific Ocean Post (now POP Sound) to produce

6975-470: The requirements for core educational programming, citing their lack of actual educational content, and themes inappropriate for a youth audience. The following year, Univision would introduce the new E/I block Planeta U ; at launch, the block would consist primarily of Spanish-language dubs of existing children's educational programming. Valarie Rae Miller Valarie Rae Miller is an American actress . Miller became interested in acting when she

7068-492: The resulting demand. The Annenberg Foundation found that the number of network television shows deemed to be "highly educational" from 1990 to 1998 fell from 43% to 29%. A research report from Georgetown University said that one issue contributing to this was that what constituted "educational television" programming was defined too broadly, as programming that was only academic or that covered pro-social issues, for example, counted towards station requirements. Another issue

7161-697: The show's Wild Force season (starting with the episode "Unfinished Business"), with the entirety of the Wild Force and Ninja Storm seasons subsequently airing in reruns on ABC Family (the former season aired in part both before the introduction of and during the ABC Family Action Block ). However, when Toon Disney and ABC Family jointly launched the action-oriented Jetix block in 2004, Jetix handled all first-run episode debuts of subsequent seasons from Dino Thunder to Jungle Fury , while ABC Kids aired these seasons in reruns. Due to

7254-454: The subchannel compliance with the E/I rules had resulted in incongruency of the required programming with the formats of many subchannels, particularly with the rise of niche multicast networks that rely on a specific genre of programming (e.g., classic television, movies, etc.) or focus on news, weather or sports (whether nationally distributed or locally originated) as few subchannel services target

7347-541: The three-hour time slot and seek other programmers for an agreement to produce a syndicated block, not for the network, but for each ABC station as the network was turning the E/I responsibility back to local ABC stations. A month later, ABC's affiliate board announced that it had reached a deal with Litton Entertainment , a production company which produced syndicated programming (including educational programs aimed at children and teenagers), to produce six, all-new, original half-hour E/I series exclusively for ABC stations for

7440-440: The time, and that if rescheduled or moved to a different multicast channel, the station must announce the new scheduling on-air. The FCC also instituted new rules for promoting websites during programs targeting children 12 and younger: they must offer "a substantial amount of bona fide program-related or other noncommercial content", and not contain any commercial or e-commerce content. Pages containing imagery of characters from

7533-417: The top Saturday morning block in terms of viewership, until competition from Fox Kids and Kids' WB began to erode its audience. CBS relaunched its Saturday morning block for the 1997–98 season as Think CBS Kids, with a focus on live-action educational series such as The New Ghostwriter Mysteries , The Weird Al Show (which only unwillingly, and with great difficulty, complied with the E/I mandate as

7626-444: The two programs as "powered by Zoog," was named after Disney Channel's weekend programming block at the time, Zoog Disney). A spin-off of Disney's One Saturday Morning, Disney's One Too , debuted on UPN on September 6, 1999; produced through a time-lease agreement between Disney and UPN, the block aired each weekday (either in the morning or afternoon, depending on the station's preference) and on Sunday mornings, and featured many of

7719-400: The virtual set. The building was initially a drawing of Grand Central Terminal with a roller coaster added but evolved into a towering mechanical structure. Even the interior has similarities such as a central high raised room, with two wings on the left and right sides and another on the south side. On September 13, 1997, Disney's One Saturday Morning premiered as a two-hour sub-block within

7812-511: The virtual world which Hastings had proposed, along with newer episodes of three animated series: Doug (which had been acquired from Nickelodeon in 1996), Recess and Pepper Ann . Doug , Recess and Pepper Ann were each nominally given 40-minute time slots. The extended 10 minutes during each show's slot were for One Saturday Morning's interstitial segments and educational features. The live-action wraparound segments were originally hosted by Charlie (portrayed by Jessica Prunell ) for

7905-433: Was a better lead-out for Weekend Today 's audience than the preschool programming it had aired before. Peggy Charren's daughter Claudia Moquin criticized Litton for contravening the spirit of the CTA by including product placement and host-selling from " underwriters " in some of their programs, such as Electronic Arts , Norwegian Cruise Line , and SeaWorld . Litton defended its practices, stating that its programming

7998-568: Was against mandating the broadcast of educational programming by commercial stations, arguing that it was within their First Amendment rights to choose the programming they wish to broadcast, and adding that "it's too bad Captain Kangaroo is gone, but the Government should not be issuing directives about what should be on the air." Fowler suggested that, if the FCC felt there was not enough children's programming on television, it could mandate that commercial stations contribute funding to support

8091-507: Was by then branded as 4Kids TV , and contained only a single half-hour of E/I programming. After a legal dispute with the company over missed payments and insufficient national clearance, Fox reached a settlement to end its agreement with 4Kids at the end of 2008. As a result, 4Kids TV would be replaced by a national block of paid programming beginning in January 2009. Following Comcast 's 2011 purchase of NBC Universal, it pulled out of

8184-500: Was designed to meet "child psychologist-developed standards that did not exist prior to 1990", and considered the brand placements in the programs to be "a far better alternative to the ads that have often previously aired during children's programming, whose sole purpose was to sell less than beneficial products to children". PBS member stations have been an exception to this trend, with the network's PBS Kids block continuing to largely air animated, educational series catered towards

8277-555: Was engaging and had educational value. However, they also leveraged techniques designed to bolster the programs as a brand when merchandised, such as close-up "money shots" of key characters designed to encourage recognition of them by viewers. In the wake of the stricter regulations, the big three television networks retooled their Saturday morning lineups for the 1997–98 television season in order to include more core educational programming. ABC , which had recently been acquired by Disney , introduced One Saturday Morning for

8370-573: Was primarily designed to promote products associated with them, rather than only applying if advertising for said products were broadcast during the program. The 1990 regulations were considered ineffective; many stations failed to keep the required records or had any method for accurate recording. More than 25% of television stations in the U.S. failed to record the time, date, or length of programming considered to be educational in content. The FCC did little to regulate these logs up until 1993, but later on, came up with certain rules and regulations such as

8463-646: Was quite young. She attended a high school for the performing arts and landed a number of high-profile commercials while still in college. On summer vacation in Los Angeles , she took a course in stand-up comedy and went on to perform at such well-known clubs as The Improv and The Comedy Store . Despite offers to go on tour with her stand-up routine, Miller decided to move to Los Angeles and pursue acting. She's best known for her role as Original Cindy in Dark Angel (2000–2002). She hosted two game shows; one

8556-408: Was that traditional ideas of what should be taught to children, such as the alphabet or number systems, were lost. There was also a reported increase in the number of programs focusing on social issues. Writers for these programs wrote stories that often were not academically sound for young viewers, because they were not trained in writing for this audience. One show that was an exception to this rule

8649-808: Was the second season of Gladiators 2000 , replacing Maria Sansone ; the other was (along with Nick Spano ) Peer Pressure . She also hosted One Saturday Morning on ABC . From Fall 2007 to May 2009, Miller appeared in the television drama Reaper on The CW . She also appeared in Crank , in the NCIS episode " Reunion ", and in the Netflix film Reality High . She voiced Tiffany Fox, Lucius Fox 's daughter, in Batman: The Enemy Within . She voices Wish Bear in Care Bears: Unlock

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