In 1995, Disney had purchased their
own television network: ABC.
They were looking to revitalize a lot of the network's programming with original
productions, particularly on Saturday mornings. Fortunately for them, Peter Hastings had recently left
Warner
Bros. Animation after being frustrated by the new
management’s meddling in the programs he worked on.
Disney hired Hastings to revamp
their Saturday line-up, and he came up with the concept of Disney’s One Saturday Morning. He visualized the days of the week
as buildings, with Saturdays being represented by a steampunk building and
large cartoon number one. He pushed for live-action hosting segments throughout
the block and the use of virtual sets--a technology that was in its infancy at
the time and which he knew little about. For that reason, he took on Prudence Fenton as a consulting
manager and together they settled on the technology of Accom
ELSET to bring the sets designed by Fenton to life.
Most of the block's line-up. |
One
Saturday Morning was broken up into two parts. One part was the actual
programs airing during the block. The initial line-up featured 101 Dalmations: The Series, Recess, Pepper
Ann, the newly-acquired Doug, The
Bugs Bunny and Tweety Show (the only non-Disney series to be carried over
from the old ABC line-up) and Schoolhouse
Rock! The second part was a series of interstitial segments that was shown
between the shows and the commercial breaks. The whole thing would be hosted in
wraparound segments by at first a woman named Charlie (Jessica Prunell),
and later MeMe (Valarie
Rae Miller), with the help of an elephant named Jelly Roll (Brad
Garrett). To further emphasize the block’s educational
content in compliance with FCC
mandates, a CGI lightbulb would appear with an announcer saying “Illuminating
television” before being clicked on and leaving the screen in a variety of
manners (such as blasting off like a rocket ship or exploding into fireworks).
The block’s segments included: Manny the Uncanny, which
had Manny (Paul
Rugg)
visit and learn about an unusual job; Great Minds Think For
Themselves, where Aladdin’s Genie
(Robin Williams)
would talk about famous figures that went against conventional wisdom; How Things Werk, which
explained American engineering in a 1950s comic book style; Mrs. Munger’s Class, which
was performed with a syncro-voxed page from an actual elementary school
yearbook and had the people pictured interacting with each other within their
photo borders (sometimes leaving them and disappearing off the page); Find Out Why!, which
had the Lion King’s Timon (Quinton Flynn)
and Pumbaa (Ernie
Sabella) answering scientific questions; The Monkey Boys,
where Buddy & Hodge-Podge silently acted out a different job; and Tube Dwellers, which
featured workers that lived inside viewers’ televisions and were responsible
for keeping the show running. Because permission wasn’t granted for the
likenesses used in the Mrs. Munger
segment, some of the people featured filed
suit against Disney. It was settled out of court and the segment was
replaced by the similar segment Centerville, which was
set outside a school setting.
The block made its debut on
September 13, 1997. Originally, it was intended to begin on September 6 but was
delayed when the networks simulcasted the funeral of Princess Diana of
Wales, who was killed
in a car crash the week prior. Despite the heavy infusion of educational
content, the block and its various programs were a success due to their strong
writing. In 1999, a spin-off block, Disney’s One Too, began
airing on UPN as part of a
time-lease agreement with Disney. It showed reruns of the One Saturday shows either on Sunday mornings on during the week.
By 2000, however, the ratings began
to decline. The shorts and live-action segments were dropped in favor of simple
commercial bumpers and program promotions. In 2001, a sub-block called “Zoog
Hour” (taken from Disney
Channel’s weekend programming block’s name, “Zoog
Disney”) was added to show live-action Disney Channel original sitcoms Lizzie
McGuire and
Even Stevens. Following Disney
purchasing assets from Fox
Family Worldwide, they decided to rebrand their Saturday
morning block in 2002. It was called ABC Kids after their acquired Fox Kids
brand.
Despite the block’s overall short
run, it had a lasting impression on the fans of its programs. As 2017 marks the
20th anniversary of the debut of the block, we’re going to take a
look at some of the shows that made it what it was.
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