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''Disney's One Too'' is an American children's programming block that aired on UPN from September 6, 1999 to August 31, 2003. A spinoff of the ''Disney's One Saturday Morning'' block on ABC (owned by The Walt Disney Company), it featured animated series from Walt Disney Television Animation aimed at children between the ages of 7 and 14. The block aired on Sunday mornings and weekdays (either in the mornings or afternoons). In Canada, the ''Disney's One Too'' block aired on Family Channel, a specialty channel that has long been associated with The Walt Disney Company due to its carriage of Disney-produced feature films and television series (and currently serves as the Canadian broadcaster of Disney Channel's original programming). ==History== In January 1998, UPN began discussions with The Walt Disney Company (owner of rival network ABC) to have the company program a daily two-hour children's block for the network. However, attempts to reach a time-lease agreement deal with Disney were called off one week after negotiations started due to a dispute between Disney and UPN over how the block would be branded and the amount of E/I programming that Disney would provide for the block; UPN then entered into discussions with then-corporate sister Nickelodeon (both networks were owned by Viacom) to produce the new block. That February, UPN entered into an agreement with Saban Entertainment (which at the time was part-owner of Fox Family Worldwide, the parent subsidiary of Fox corporate parent News Corporation that produced competing block Fox Kids) – which distributed two series already seen on the UPN Kids block around that time, ''Sweet Valley High'' and ''Breaker High'' – to program the Sunday through Friday morning block.〔 In March 1998, UPN resumed discussions with Disney and the following month, The Walt Disney Company and UPN came to an agreement to provide Disney-produced programs on the network every Sunday morning (from 8:00 to 10:00 a.m.) and on Monday through Fridays (from 3:00 to 5:00 p.m.) The block was originally announced under the working title "''Whomptastic''", though the name was changed prior to the debut of the block for greater brand identity (incidentally, "whomp" was used as a pejorative term in the Disney-produced animated series ''Recess'', one of the series that would end up part of the new block, as a substitute for "sucks").〔Issue 3.2. 〕 The new lineup was later renamed ''Disney's One Too'' in July 1999, formatted to serve as a companion block to ABC's existing children's block ''Disney's One Saturday Morning''. The block debuted on September 5, 1999, replacing UPN Kids, which ended its run the day before (on September 4) after four years.〔 Compared to the format of ''One Saturday Morning'', ''One Too'' differed in that, instead of incorporating hosted segments, short gag segments from the shows featured in the block Fox, The WB, UPN, and independent stations (such as ''Sabrina: The Animated Series'', ''Doug'' and ''Recess'', all of which – along with a few other series – were originally aired on ''One Saturday Morning'') were usually shown, often preceding the start of each program, and after commercial breaks. The block also featured a different opening sequence, using more futuristic buildings and a theme similar to that used on ''One Saturday Morning''. Many shows formerly featured on ''Disney's One Too'' continued in reruns on Toon Disney and Disney Channel. In September 2002, the ''One Too'' branding was dropped as a result of the rebranding of the ABC block from ''One Saturday Morning'' to ''ABC Kids''; although the UPN block was unbranded, the Disney.com website referred to it under the brand ''Disney's Animation Weekdays''. The block ended on August 29, 2003, with the time periods being turned over to UPN's affiliates; this left UPN as the only "big six" broadcast television network without children's programming, and one of only two major commercial broadcast networks that did not air a children's programming block (the other being Pax TV, which discontinued its ''Pax Kids'' lineup in 2000, before reviving children's programming as Ion Television through the 2007 launch of Qubo). UPN was not the first "big six" network to drop children's programming: NBC became the first to drop kids shows entirely in August 1992, when the network launched a live-action block for teenagers called TNBC (however, children's programming returned to NBC in 2002, through a time-lease agreement with Discovery Kids). To date, ABC (which dropped the ABC Kids block in 2011, and replaced it with the syndicated live-action family-oriented E/I block ''Litton's Weekend Adventure''), CBS (which replaced the Cookie Jar TV block with a similar live-action E/I block, ''CBS Dream Team'', in 2013), Fox (which dropped its 4Kids TV block on December 27, 2008), The CW (which replaced the Vortexx block with another similar E/I block, ''One Magnificent Morning''), and MyNetworkTV (which has never run children's programming since it launched in 2006) are the only television networks that do not air children's programming or whose E/I program content is not strictly aimed at that demographic. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Disney's One Too」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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