irenecooke2004
New member
Let's look at the past few megaton franchises that changed the face of kids' TV for their generations.
1983: He-Man and the Masters of the Universe
Span until next big show: 6 years
1989: Ninja Turtles (yes, the show technically debuted in 1987, but only as a 5-episode miniseries; kids did not get into this until it was a full-fledged 65-episode series)
Span until next big show: 4 years
1993: Power Rangers
Span until next big show: 5 years
1998: Pokemon
Span until next big show: 9 years and counting
What happened here? Where is the next big kiddie show? In my opinion, this is the main problem that's overlooked:
The toy industry never had anything like He-Man until He-Man happened. Why is that? Because He-Man was there every day. The show was one of the first original animated properties to be created for syndication. It was on 5 days a week, with 65 episodes to begin with, and kids easily developed a habit of watching it instead of the billionth moldy Flintstones rerun or whatever else the local affiliate filled afternoon time with. Then they got absorbed into the world and had to have the toys.
Now let's examine the Turtles. One of its main factors in its success was how different it was from every He-Man clone at the time; instead of dead-serious robots and muscle men, these guys just wanted to have fun. Like we did. BUT also notice what I pointed out earlier: it didn't catch on in a big way until children could watch it all the time. Five days a week.
Then, after so many Turtles ripoffs, children were introduced to Sentai with Power Rangers. Big fat Godzilla-type battles just didn't happen on TV previously, no matter how paper-mache it all was. It was also introduced as a weekday series, but that wasn't abnormal at the time anymore.
One of syndication's last shows--and the last one to hit a sonic boom--was Pokemon in 1998. At this time syndication, as well as the concept of a show being on reliably and having a full stock of episodes from the beginning, was dying. And that was the big mistake.
In order for a TV-launched franchise to truly take off, they have to start spending serious money into creating a wealth of episodes from the onset, so kids don't get bored with it too soon. In addition, it has to be in a reliable time slot every weekday, preforably when children come home from school.
Also note: Spongebob, DBZ, and Rugrats existed for years before truly catching on, and the point they became hits was the point when they'd amassed enough episodes to be on without repetition and be given a reliable slot. The same might go for grown-ups: Family Guy wasn't "discovered" until it was on several times a week.
Until the networks figure this out, we're in for a long wait until the next superfranchise. The closest they've come to the fully-stocked-episode days of old is CN making four Ben 10 seasons in two years, but, well, Ben 10 is lame.
1983: He-Man and the Masters of the Universe
Span until next big show: 6 years
1989: Ninja Turtles (yes, the show technically debuted in 1987, but only as a 5-episode miniseries; kids did not get into this until it was a full-fledged 65-episode series)
Span until next big show: 4 years
1993: Power Rangers
Span until next big show: 5 years
1998: Pokemon
Span until next big show: 9 years and counting
What happened here? Where is the next big kiddie show? In my opinion, this is the main problem that's overlooked:
The toy industry never had anything like He-Man until He-Man happened. Why is that? Because He-Man was there every day. The show was one of the first original animated properties to be created for syndication. It was on 5 days a week, with 65 episodes to begin with, and kids easily developed a habit of watching it instead of the billionth moldy Flintstones rerun or whatever else the local affiliate filled afternoon time with. Then they got absorbed into the world and had to have the toys.
Now let's examine the Turtles. One of its main factors in its success was how different it was from every He-Man clone at the time; instead of dead-serious robots and muscle men, these guys just wanted to have fun. Like we did. BUT also notice what I pointed out earlier: it didn't catch on in a big way until children could watch it all the time. Five days a week.
Then, after so many Turtles ripoffs, children were introduced to Sentai with Power Rangers. Big fat Godzilla-type battles just didn't happen on TV previously, no matter how paper-mache it all was. It was also introduced as a weekday series, but that wasn't abnormal at the time anymore.
One of syndication's last shows--and the last one to hit a sonic boom--was Pokemon in 1998. At this time syndication, as well as the concept of a show being on reliably and having a full stock of episodes from the beginning, was dying. And that was the big mistake.
In order for a TV-launched franchise to truly take off, they have to start spending serious money into creating a wealth of episodes from the onset, so kids don't get bored with it too soon. In addition, it has to be in a reliable time slot every weekday, preforably when children come home from school.
Also note: Spongebob, DBZ, and Rugrats existed for years before truly catching on, and the point they became hits was the point when they'd amassed enough episodes to be on without repetition and be given a reliable slot. The same might go for grown-ups: Family Guy wasn't "discovered" until it was on several times a week.
Until the networks figure this out, we're in for a long wait until the next superfranchise. The closest they've come to the fully-stocked-episode days of old is CN making four Ben 10 seasons in two years, but, well, Ben 10 is lame.