Everything about The Disney Afternoon totally explained
The Disney Afternoon was a created-for-
syndication two-hour television programming block which aired from
September 10,
1990, until Spring
1999. At that time, it was taken out of syndication, and a new Disney weekday afternoon block was started on
UPN.
The Disney Afternoon was produced by
The Walt Disney Company. Now, some of the shows in the block have been scattered on
Toon Disney between 4:30 am to 1:00 pm weekdays.
The two hour block was broken up into four half-hour segments, each of which contained a
cartoon series. As each season ended, the first cartoon shown in the lineup would typically be dropped, and a new one added to the end. In the
1994-
1995 season this practice changed somewhat, as Gargoyles and Shnookums and Meat premiered at 4:00 p.m. Also, the practice changed again as Bonkers was replaced with the 1996-1997 season (see below).
The Disney Afternoon itself featured unique animated segments consisting of its own opening and "wrappers" around the cartoon shows shown.
This block didn't air in every market across the United States, but for those markets that didn't air the block in full, individual shows featured on
The Disney Afternoon could be packaged by themselves. In Europe, there was a similar series called the
Disney Festival.
History of the block and series that aired
Some of the early cartoon series in
The Disney Afternoon came from already in-circulation cartoons, such as
Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears (created years earlier).
DuckTales and
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers had been a one hour long cartoon block in 1989-1990, until both were incorporated into The Disney Afternoon the next year.
TaleSpin was the first series presumably created expressly for The Disney Afternoon.
Some of the later additions were inspired by shorter cartoons in the short lived series
Raw Toonage, which appeared on the
CBS network in
Fall,
1992 -- for example,
Marsupilami; also
He's Bonkers!, which has characters that also appear in
Bonkers.
Another source for Disney Afternoon cartoons were series inspired by
movies created previously; for a time, a 'two year rule' of sorts became almost reliable, whereby about two years after a Disney summer movie came out, a Disney Afternoon series by the same name or feauring characters from that film premiered (example:
Aladdin, and
Timon and Pumbaa, from
The Lion King).
Beginning with the 1994 season, the name of
The Disney Afternoon was shortened to
TDA. That same year,
Marvel Comics began publishing a comic book series based on the programs featured on the block, as part of their line of comics based on modern Disney properties (the classic properties were licensed to
Gladstone Publishing). The series mainly consisted of stories based on
Darkwing Duck, with occasional stories featuring
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers and
TaleSpin. It ended at 10 issues, but stories based on the block's shows continued in Marvel's
Disney Comic Hits! and in the children's magazine
Disney Adventures.
Popularity
The popularity of the Disney Afternoon led to a temporary sub-park at
Disneyland called
Disney Afternoon Avenue. At this time, the block even garnered its own parade and a stage show titled
Plane Crazy (not to be confused with
the Mickey Mouse short of the same name). Walk-around costumes were created for the characters featured on the shows and regularly appeared throughout the theme parks, mostly in
Mickey's Toontown, which featured an attraction based on
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers -
Gadget's Go-Coaster. At Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom in Florida, Mickey's Birthdayland was renamed Mickey's Starland in May of 1990. This new "land" featured a stage show called
Mickey's Magical TV World and starred the new Disney Afternoon characters. As of today, most of the character walk-arounds have been retired, but costumed TDA characters occasionally make an appearance on board the Mark Twain during the final celebration scene finale of Fantasmic at Disneyland.
The Disney Afternoon Ave actually came to Disneyland before Mickey's Toontown (name based on the film
Who Framed Roger Rabbit) ever opened. This temporary "land" actually used cartoon building fronts to occupy the space leading up to the "it's a small world" attraction and the Fantasyland Theatre, known as the Small World Mall. The Entrance to Baloo's dressing room was actually under the train tracks, where the entrance to Mickey's Toontown is now. Some say that Disney actually used Disney Afternoon Ave as a test, to gauge interest in a Mickey's Toontown concept.
Toon Disney and cancellation of the block
By
1997,
The Disney Afternoon was terminated as a formally named series. An eighth season, only 90 minutes long, was no longer named
The Disney Afternoon or
TDA, and was by accounts essentially a simple 90 minute syndicated block of cartoons.
On
December 8,
1997, Disney announced the planned launch of
Toon Disney, a 24-hour cable cartoon network, effective on
April 18,
1998. At the same time local stations found it hard to comply with FCC restrictions on children's advertising in terms of allowed quantity and content and still remain profitable in such blocks. Still
FOX, UPN, and
WB wanted to try to hold on to children's programming during the week. Disney continued the 90-minute syndicated block until the Fall of 1999, at which time Disney and UPN teamed up for a UPN Kids block. Also, a two-hour Sunday Morning kids' block of shows from Disney aired on UPN stations.
By the 1999-2000 television season, some remnants of
The Disney Afternoon package were moved to Saturday mornings, solely on the
ABC network, under the name
Disney's One Saturday Morning. Weekdays, the remnants of this block aired on UPN affiliates. By early 2001,
One Saturday Morning had begun broadcasting a weekday afternoon spinoff called
Disney's One Too, which bore virtually no resemblance to the Disney Afternoon.
Many shows formerly featured on
The Disney Afternoon continued in syndication as individual shows, or continued in reruns on
Toon Disney and
The Disney Channel.
Approximate lineup by seasons
- Disney attempted to diversify The Disney Afternoon in the 1994-1995 season. It was attempting to make 'Monday Mania', and 'Disney Action Friday', as is implied from the Monday/Friday breakup of slot 3. The format idea didn't catch on and was dropped after this season.
- The Schnookums and Meat Funny Cartoon Show was shown on Mondays - and Gargoyles, on Friday, in this slot
- The Lion King's Timon and Pumbaa ran on Fridays in this slot
- The Lion King's Timon and Pumbaa ran on Mondays, and The Mighty Ducks, on Fridays, in this slot
- The Disney Afternoon/TDA was no longer used as a title; format shortened to 90 minutes
- The Mighty Ducks ran Mondays and Tuesdays in this slot
Saturday Mornings
Some of these cartoons, when originally airing on Disney Afternoon also had Saturday morning episodes that were being broadcast for
ABC and
CBS. When the Saturday morning run ended for the first 4 of these shows, the episodes would be part of the Disney Afternoon package. These are:
Darkwing Duck 1991-1993, ABC (seasons 2 and 3)
Goof Troop 1992-1993, ABC (seasons 2)
Aladdin 1994-1996, CBS (seasons 2 and 3)
The Lion King's Timon and Pumbaa 1995-1997, CBS (seasons 2 and 4, as the Disney afternoon showed seasons 1 and 3)
The Mighty Ducks 1996-1997, ABC (Both showed the first episode of the series)
1997-1999, ABC (season 1, as season 2 was shown on the Disney afternoon)
Gargoyles doesn't fall into this category because only the third season episodes subtitled The Goliath Chronicles aired during the 1996-1997 season on ABC, while The Disney afternoon was only showing reruns of the first 2 seasons. Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears continued running on Saturday mornings during the 1990-1991 season on ABC, but ABC was only showing new episodes while the Disney afternoon was also showing only reruns.
Video Games
Many of the Disney Afternoon shows were made into video games.
Gargoyles - GEN, SNES
DuckTales - NES, GB
DuckTales 2 - NES, GB
Tale Spin - NES, GB, GEN, GG, TG16
Goof Troop - SNES
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers - NES
Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers 2 - NES
Darkwing Duck - NES, GB, TG16
Bonkers - GEN, SNES, GG, SMSFurther Information
Get more info on 'The Disney Afternoon'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://the_disney_afternoon.totallyexplained.com">The Disney Afternoon Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |