Disney Channel is a cable television network run by The Walt Disney Company. Disney Channel features family-oriented programming, much of it aimed at children of all ages. There is a morning programming block for younger viewers called Playhouse Disney.
Launched as a commercial-free premium channel (with the exception of advertisements for Disney entertainment products, see Mike's Super Short Show), the Disney Channel began with basic family programming of shows and movies. (It was then co-owned by The Walt Disney Company and Westinghouse through Group W.) The channel received a special citation from U.S. President Ronald Reagan in 1984.
From 2001 through 2002, ratings grew higher with such shows as Even Stevens, Kim Possible and others. Lizzie McGuire became the network's banner show, and was the highest-rating program on the network. Reruns of Lizzie continue to outrate competing shows, including those from Disney Channel itself. This led to the termination of Vault Disney and all other classic Disney programming in September 2002. Disney Channel also changed its look again by introducing its current logo that month.
Most of Disney Channel's programming today, surprisingly, does not heavily feature the "classic" Disney characters such as Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Pluto, and Goofy. The characters appear on occasion, especially during the holidays on movies such as Mickey's Once Upon a Christmas, and were also featured on the show House of Mouse, which used to air every weekday afternoon on the channel. This was after Disney Channel realized that reruns of Lizzie McGuire were beating classic Disney shows, and the September 2002 termination of classic programming grew out of that fact. The network is based in Burbank, Calif., a short distance from Disneyland headquarters.
Series produced by Walt Disney Television or production companies unrelated to the Walt Disney Company used to make up most of the schedule, but with the explosion of Disney Channel Original Series, less of these series air on the channel. The only non-original productions airing on Disney (not including the Playhouse Disney lineup) as of February 2006 are Sister, Sister and Boy Meets World.
Preschool programming is still a part of the Disney Channel's morning schedule, thanks to the block called Playhouse Disney.
Disney Channel is known and occasionally criticized for its sometimes poor and/or obvious censoring and editing of some live action series and movies not produced by the channel.
Disney also has compeletely refused to air certain episodes of some non-Original Series especially Boy Meets World for adult content. Boy Meets World has had at least five episodes omitted from Disney Channel broadcasts. "If You Can't Be With the One You Love..." from the fifth season is one of the best examples of this. The involvement of alcohol abuse is the likely reason.
Disney will syndicate its second and third series in the fall with Even Stevens and Lizzie McGuire in September 2006. Both series will be distributed by Buena Vista Television which distributes all series produced by Walt Disney or Touchstone Television.
With all the success that the Disney Channel has experienced in the last ten years, it has come with its share of costs. Many of its most-watched shows are forced into cancellation once they reach the maximum of 65 episodes (e.g. Lizzie McGuire stopped production at 65 episodes even though it remained its highest rated show at the time). There has been a movement, mostly through online message boards and forums, to save cancelled shows that were stopped in their prime. The most recent example is the "Save Phil" or "Save POTF" campaigns that are helping to bring back Phil of the Future, one of Disney Channel's highest-rated shows that was canceled after 43 episodes were produced (the show is currently on hiatus). The campaign is based from www.savepotf.com. Organized days are set in weeks in advance and on these designated days, fans call/phone/fax Disney to get their message across. The last "Save Phil" day was on May 22, 2006. These days have proven extremely successful in saving the formerly cancelled Kim Possible.
During the 1980s and '90s, movies made up most Disney's evening and overnight schedule. Disney now only airs usually around 12 hours of movies per week, occasionally 14 or 15 hours. A Disney Channel Original Movie will usually air twice in the same night on the Friday it premieres. Most movies airing on Disney Channel usually run around 1 hour, 35 minutes to 1 hour, 45 minutes.
Because of this, Disney airs filler programming following the movie:
The official website of Disney Channel includes:
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