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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 4:14 pm 
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The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete

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The era of the Saturday morning cartoon is officially over. This morning, The CW’s Vortexx programming block is airing episodes of Cubix, Sonic X, Dragon Ball Z and Kai, Digimon Fusion, Yu-Gi-Oh! and more for the very last time. Next week, The CW is parting with its animated block, signing on for One Magnificent Morning, a live-action block filled with educational shows for kids. This made today the last day to catch cartoons on a network station with your kids.

Over the years, The CW has changed up its Saturday morning programming block more than once. Two years ago, Toonzai became Vortexx. On October 4, Vortexx will become One Magnificent Morning. A changing of the guard signifies different programming, but this time around, there will be no cartoons. One Magnificent Morning and Vortexx are, in fact, quite dissimilar. While Vortexx was mainly for kids, One Magnificent Morning is being billed as family-friendly programming. The new block will feature five hours of live action, educational programming like Dr. Pol, a new show that will follow a farm veterinarian taking care of animals, and The Brady Barr Show, which will follow Barr as he gets up close to wild and dangerous creatures. The move toward educational (and assumedly cheaper) programming has been coming for a long time. The programming is put together by Litton, an entertainment group that also runs Saturday mornings on several of the other big networks.

In 2008, Fox cut cartoons from Saturday mornings. In 2011, ABC signed over its former “One Saturday Morning” block to Litton. Then in 2013, Vortexx became the only non-educational, non-live action programming block geared towards kids on Saturday mornings after This TV shut down its early morning cartoons. Now, Vortexx is gone, too.

For years, from the 1960s into the 90s, Saturday mornings were made for cartoons. Several generations of kids wearing footie pajamas and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle print pjs would clamor in front of the television on early Saturday mornings, savoring hours of programming geared just toward them. Unfortunately, like the prize at the bottom of the cereal box, network cartoon blocks have disappeared.

That doesn’t mean cartoons are disappearing everywhere. The cable networks are doing fine with animated fodder geared toward kids, with Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network leading the charge. Disney XD, too, has done well with cartoon programs, including the popular Phineus and Ferb, Avengers Assemble and the upcoming Star Wars Rebels already receiving plenty of buzz. Streaming services are also offering plenty of alternatives to the traditional Saturday morning fodder, and as a bonus, you can watch whenever you want.

With cable stations and more picking up the slack where the networks left off, it’s not surprising that the major stations would replace early morning weekend programming with new entries. It’s sad, though, that an entire generation of kids is missing out on lazy Saturdays filled with excellent cartoons like The Smurfs, Muppet Babies, Recess, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Scooby Doo, Where Are You?, Pepper Ann, and much, much more. Replacing them with cheaper, educational content was bound to happen, but a little magic has been lost in the process.


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 5:10 pm 
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Wow, another piece of Americana is lost. Damn. Other that buying new comics, this was probably my favorite thing from childhood.

:cry:


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 5:15 pm 
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Bannings: Bannings? We don't need no stinkin' bannings!
I guess I can't complain, since I haven't watched Saturday morning cartoons in decades.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 6:00 pm 
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Ancient Alien Theorist

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The children should be watching that, not us. Instead, what? Sports? Social interaction?

BULLSHIT


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 6:11 pm 
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A sad state of affairs.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 6:13 pm 
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Sounds like six hours of In The News.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 6:27 pm 
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Joined: 12 Aug 2007
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The victory of the do-gooders is complete. Unless they move on to cable, now.

They started with the beloved, local live-action kids shows, running them out of business for advertising to...kids (with a later side-trip to get Ronald McDonald off the TV for the same reasons).

Then, they moved on to the animated shows, condemning them for being the equivalent of "empty calories" or for being violent. "My son was playing with his baby sister and I was shocked when he told her, 'I'll DESTROY you!'..." This was around the time of the H-B FF show and I always figured that kid was watching. It took a while, (and later bright spots like BTAS became the wonderful, rare exceptions) but it all started going to shit after that. The networks are public so it's easier for them to avoid the expense and any and all controversy by just not dealing with it at all. It wasn't "bound" to happen; it was made to happen.

So I hope they're happy now. It pisses me right off.


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 6:40 pm 
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I'm grateful that my kids grew up during the resurgence of kids animated programming in the 90's and early 2000's. FOX even brought back the concept of the local cartoon host with their Kids Club initiative. It was great working at a FOX and WB affiliate, with cartoons playing in the afternoons and weekends, and Cub Scout and Brownie troops coming in to appear on the Kids Club shows.


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 6:42 pm 
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Bannings: Bannings? We don't need no stinkin' bannings!
H-B FF? BTAS? Are we speaking in cide so the children won't understand?

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 7:12 pm 
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RobertSwanderson wrote:
I'm grateful that my kids grew up during the resurgence of kids animated programming in the 90's and early 2000's. FOX even brought back the concept of the local cartoon host with their Kids Club initiative. It was great working at a FOX and WB affiliate, with cartoons playing in the afternoons and weekends, and Cub Scout and Brownie troops coming in to appear on the Kids Club shows.

That sounds wonderful. Mine liked the "Disney's One Saturday Morning" cartoons with the teenaged Doug, and the Power Rangers and a bunch of Nick series. I don't remember us having any local children's TV hosts in the 1990s, though.

A well-chosen selection of YouTube and home videos can easily fill all of a child's viewing needs nowadays. The do-gooders, as Rick called them, have really only hastened the speed at which families turn away from over-the-air and cable programming for their children.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 8:24 pm 
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Shakespeare, you say? And I have to type how long?

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Sad day. Saturday morning cartoons are a real touchstone of my youth.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 8:37 pm 
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The morning test pattern was lost long ago, too, but I used to watch that. Well, for a little while. I don't recall what else I watched on Saturdays after cartoons, but when allowed, I'd watch stuff until the Star Spangled Banner closed down the channel. Good times. :ohyes:


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 8:53 pm 
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They would show cheesy (and classic) old sci fi movies on Saturday afternoon after the cartoons were done.
I must have seen The Incredible Shrinking Man at least a dozen times. Love that movie.
Lots of Godzilla movies, too.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 9:42 pm 
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It scorched

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Kids watch more cartoons than they ever did. They just watch them around the clock on all the specialized cable channels or streaming services.

I think it would have been wise for the networks to maintain that sense of "prime time" that Saturday morning and, and roll out the new episodes of the best stuff there.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 9:44 pm 
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Saturday Morning Cartoons Disappear, A Nation's Children Wonder Why Their Parents Think This Is A Big Deal

By Joey, Age 8.

Look, mom, the cartoons are on like all the time on Cartoon Network. You can watch cartoons anytime you like, even the really old stuff like Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:09 pm 
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Kind Of Close For One Of These Jewels.

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:lol: The really old stuff.


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:13 pm 
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We had two televisions in my childhood household.
A color console, and a 12 inch black and white.
The only time I got to decide what to watch on the color set was after school, for an hour, and Saturday mornings.
Getting to decide what to watch on the color set was as important as the cartoon themselves.
I remember that the FF cartoon of the 70's debuted at a later morning time, but the ratings stunk and they moved it to 7am central time. My mom got up early on Saturdays to prepare for work, and I would have her get me up so that I could watch it.
I didn't have a clock radio until I was 16.


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:19 pm 
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It scorched

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I watched Saturday morning cartoons until an embarrassingly late age. There, I've said it.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:21 pm 
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45 is not that embarrassing.

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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:21 pm 
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Li'l Jay wrote:
I watched Saturday morning cartoons until an embarrassingly late age. There, I've said it.

Well, after this week it won't be a problem. :thumbsup:


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:21 pm 
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Ancient Alien Theorist

Joined: 24 Jun 2007
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Linda wrote:
RobertSwanderson wrote:
I'm grateful that my kids grew up during the resurgence of kids animated programming in the 90's and early 2000's. FOX even brought back the concept of the local cartoon host with their Kids Club initiative. It was great working at a FOX and WB affiliate, with cartoons playing in the afternoons and weekends, and Cub Scout and Brownie troops coming in to appear on the Kids Club shows.

That sounds wonderful. Mine liked the "Disney's One Saturday Morning" cartoons with the teenaged Doug, and the Power Rangers and a bunch of Nick series. I don't remember us having any local children's TV hosts in the 1990s, though.

A well-chosen selection of YouTube and home videos can easily fill all of a child's viewing needs nowadays. The do-gooders, as Rick called them, have really only hastened the speed at which families turn away from over-the-air and cable programming for their children.

I have Masters of the Universe, Super Powers Team, Ninja Turtles, Batman: The Animated Series, Filmation's Superman, Justice League, Superman: TAS, and several more all ready to go.


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 Post subject: The Death Of The Saturday Morning Cartoon Is Complete
PostPosted: Sat Sep 27, 2014 10:24 pm 
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It scorched

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Bannings: One too few . . .
Linda wrote:
45 is not that embarrassing.


You're supposed to return to it out of nostalgia, or maybe watch them ironically as a college student, hung over with a bowl of cereal.

But for me they were appointment TV all the way through high school, without any sense of irony or detachment.

I've mentioned before, I went in the service and got married at age 22, and my wife found her new husband parked in front of the new X-Men cartoon every saturday. Complete with play-by-play about how good it was and how close to the comics.

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