It was announced in December 2013, but apparently everyone missed the news until yesterday, when it was announced in a kids industry newsletter that Steve Rotfeld Productions will provide four E/I shows a week under a Litton-like syndication package. Unless those two hours somehow involve Fox News Sunday, it's definitely the end of America's most-ignored infomercial block, Fox's Weekend Marketplace, the biggest waste of time (and money) Fox affiliates have to throw on their air every week.
The new E/I programming sounds actually interesting (any description that dares to use the word 'STEM fields' is definitely how Peggy Charren intended the E/I concept to be) and certainly more educational than Litton's cute animal and 'health is awesome' fluff. It may not get that many more eyeballs, but at this point anything that kills one of the most boneheaded moves a broadcaster ever made, to carry infomercials, is just fine by me. And if anything since all the Fox O&O's and Tribune Fox stations signed up, it's the end of an era where the New World 15 that switched to Fox were able to easily push off Fox Kids/FoxBox/4Kids/WM to other stations to maintain their Big Three-era Saturday morning local brokered home show schedules and control of what they chose for E/I. They finally got what they wanted; 2/3 of the E/I burden is now on Fox rather than on their backs.
It also ends the SD era; with Let's Make a Deal going HD in the fall, Weekend Marketplace's infomercials would be the last broadcast network 'content' in the format. Thankfully, that won't be true for much longer.
The new E/I programming sounds actually interesting (any description that dares to use the word 'STEM fields' is definitely how Peggy Charren intended the E/I concept to be) and certainly more educational than Litton's cute animal and 'health is awesome' fluff. It may not get that many more eyeballs, but at this point anything that kills one of the most boneheaded moves a broadcaster ever made, to carry infomercials, is just fine by me. And if anything since all the Fox O&O's and Tribune Fox stations signed up, it's the end of an era where the New World 15 that switched to Fox were able to easily push off Fox Kids/FoxBox/4Kids/WM to other stations to maintain their Big Three-era Saturday morning local brokered home show schedules and control of what they chose for E/I. They finally got what they wanted; 2/3 of the E/I burden is now on Fox rather than on their backs.
It also ends the SD era; with Let's Make a Deal going HD in the fall, Weekend Marketplace's infomercials would be the last broadcast network 'content' in the format. Thankfully, that won't be true for much longer.
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