After reading more about it at
TV Week, it sounds like a decent plan. Educational programming, cartoons, game-shows, and kid-friendly titles from Discovery will make up the network's lineup. It almost sounds like, bare with me now, Nickelodeon before they got all mainstreamy with theme park attractions and the need to make movies and be more like Disney.
And hey, Romper Room's coming back for a new generation of "do bees," so it can't be a bad thing.
That said, I really, really don't want them to get rid of Dea Connick-Perez, who currently manages the network. She's a Cartoon Network vet, and I think she's done a great job at the network.
First, Animal Planet became co-owned by the BBC (it's funny how the Discovery Channel/BBC connection got overshadowed in their first theatrical film that was recently released by Disney), then Oprah bought Discovery Health transforming that into OWN in 2010, now this. Discovery's into the whole sharing process these days.