MovieChat Forums > TV General > Was E/I meant to kill network cartoons?

Was E/I meant to kill network cartoons?


Maybe that's a bit of an extreme accusation to make but either way, lets first take things back to see how we ultimately got here. Back in 1969 we got Hot Wheels on ABC, which was the first 30 minute animated TV series based on a toy-line. To make a long story short, this inevitably didn't go over so well with both parents and the FCC, who naturally viewed the show as little more than a half-hour toy commercial.

Regulations were soon put into place to ensure that nothing like this would ever happen again. And by 1974, rules were made so that no television show could be based strictly on merchandise (especially toys aimed at children). This however didn't stop popular shows from spawning toys afterwards.

By the early '80s under the Ronald Reagan administration, the government passed legislation relaxing this regulation and every cartoon (He-Man, G.I. Joe, and Transformers were pretty much the big three) was suddenly just as they feared in 1969: A half-hour commercial for toys. To put things into proper perspective, even the Rubik Cube by 1983, had its own weekly animated series.

Some of them tried to appease wary parents and such by adding 30 second "morals" to the ends of episodes (e.g. G.I. Joe's "Knowing is half the battle!" segments), but by 1990, the FCC realized what a horrible mistake that whole experiment had been and started trying to get back to how things had been prior. It should be noted that major related factor involved regulations on advertising in and of itself, and the programs were seen as a loophole to get around those rules as well as make money off elementary kids.

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What is E/I?

I think after the explosion of high speed mobile internet service the entire concept of regulating network television is about as passe as trying to regulate telemarketers who harass old people on their LAN lines. Besides, everything in today's economy is based on some form of cross-marketing and exploitation. It's amazing how 30 years ago if you were a comic book "nerd" you were isolated and considered undesirable to women, especially if you were over the age of 12. Today the majority of comic book geeks are old enough to be parents and grandparents and are considered cool and hip. Chewbacca Mom exemplifies this change.

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What is E/I?


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E/I

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according to the wiki article it states that cable and internet (streaming) channels are exempt from FCC regulation, so it pretty much shows that brands can exploit children's programming for nominal commercial gain.

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I think internet and/or DVDs killed it. Why would you either pay for commercials (cable) or wait just for Sat (network) when you can get everything online and or watch entire seasons whenever you want?

I do feel for today's kids. My brother and I used to 'plan' our schedules---like we would years later in college. Now it's you can watch anything whenever.

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I agree. I didn't grow up wealthy so just having a basic color television with reception was "good enough" to find entertainment when you had time. Seems in today's world the disconnect, ironically via social media, and the simultaneous availability of mass media at the touch of a button really takes today's youth out of perspective on how different things were. My generation (X) had a little more conveniences than the previous two generations but it's nothing like comparing it in today's world.

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Hey who didn't like Aquaman showing you how to work out a leg cramp while swimming every week when watching the Superfriends?

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I was crushed when child version me found out hall of justice was not real building....yes my parents told me.

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Before Hot Wheels, Post cereals released cartoons of Lnus the Lionhearted (I have dyslexia, so bear with me). From cereals. 1960-69. Very good shows..

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