Submitted by sgavary t3_1170qv6 in television
Back in the 90's there were plenty of broadcast channels that offered plenty of kids programming: Fox Kids, Kids WB, ABC, UPN, 4Kids, etc, that all offered plenty of kids shows: X-Men, Recess, Animaniacs, Batman the Animated Series, Pokemon, etc. However, when the 2000's began, fewer and fewer high quality cartoons stopped airing on broadcast networks and went to cable, and most of the non cable cartoons were preschool cartoons. What happened to high quality TV-Y7 cartoons that could be watched without cable?
WeDriftEternal t1_j99jwr3 wrote
Because of a law passed by the US putting regulations on children's TV shows during the 90s. The real effect of this wasn't quite a thing until the late 90s and got solidified shortly after in the early 2000s as all the broadcasters were on board and business models had changed.
Basically, children's TV was a free for all of all types, local, national, acquired overseas content, lvie action, cartoons, just bonkers and go crazy with it.
This lead to tons of kids programming on broadcast since it did pretty well, especially in certain hours, like before school and saturday morning. Animation became the go to here, for lots of reasons, but they aren't important.
So while the 80s and 90s were absolutely filled with all types of childrens animated shows, some good, bad, for younger kids, or teens, experimental or classic -- lots of options and the ratings were good so things were good, keep watching! Its doing great, we can take chances, and we can invest in this.
But then in the mid-late 90s a law passed earlier was more cracked down on-- it forces broadcast networks to make a certain amount of 'Educational & Informative' (called E/I) content, airing roughly 1-2 hours per day.
So this content can be anything, but it was mandatory conent, and most cartoons and stuff didn't meet its needs. Instead you'd often just purchase some shit syndicated show (like some guy with animals, or an educational cartoon). And really the only place for this, was the same time as kids TV.
So you basically cut out a big chunk of kids TV every single day.
Lots more happened, but it gets technical and less ELI5... but suffice it to say, a lot of content in kids areas got pushed out or FAR more highly selective for the same time slots, and thus, the boom shifted away from kids animation on broadcast networks more to cable nets that could content with lower ratings and more niche content. Broadcast just didn't need to recompete to regain that audience, it wasn't worth it.