Don't you find it a bit sad that these channels will likely die unceremoniously for how many enjoyed them over the...

Don't you find it a bit sad that these channels will likely die unceremoniously for how many enjoyed them over the decades? Like 5 years from now when they start to shut down they won't have a final day/week of programming that aired over the years, they won't have bumpers mentioning the history or directly mention that it's shutting down, they won't get in a farewell message outside "make sure to catch your favorites on Disney+/HBOMAX/etc." before cutting the feed midway through a random show or bumper

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They might not have a tv network in the future but they'll never truly die they'll just move somewhere else, Disney's especially not going to die.

Nick will just end in the middle of a Spongebob rerun that's already been shown a million times already. Same with Cartoon Network and Teen Titans Go. It'll just be another day for the network until it's shut down unannounced.

What's a ceremonious way for a network to die?

A week dedicated to airing tons of different shows throughout the channel's history and giving historical facts about each show and what it meant to each generation during commercial breaks. Also, reminders of an official shut down date and where people can go to keep watching their favorite show. Then a sign off bumper with the history of the channel in a nutshell saying "goodbye". Basically, a way to celebrate to legacy of the channel before it goes away forever and respecting the audience who grew up with them at any point and make the final minutes of broadcast iconic and unforgettable.

They will not. We will get Villainous which will be a big hit. As an answer, Nick will bring back IZ IMO. Disney is okay now with Owl House and Amphibia.

I mentioned it a bit, but generally it's to thank before moving onto the next chapter of the channel or programming if the channel is fully shut down. Spend even a few hours showing some of the long off the air shows, show some bumpers or personalities over the years, thank the viewers for watching, end with a cheesy thank you message or sometimes something funny marking the death other channel. Hell even just airing bumpers throughout regular programming thanking the viewer and saying the channel is shutting down is sufficient
This is a proper way to sign off a network
youtube.com/watch?v=BVR78SujJyI
This is NOT how you sign off a network
youtube.com/watch?v=p77BiOGx1y4

Everything you mentioned will go to HBO Max, CBS All Access and Disney+ respectively.

Cringe

>A channel honoring its history and it's audience from all different generations is cringe.
You're an idiot.

Yes. So what? They will keep the companies alive.

I hope CN freezes in the middle of a TTG episode when Raven is brapping that would be based

Obvious bait taker

It is sad they'll leave, but it should be clear any love of the game is long gone now. There's no pride amongst the networks anymore - just a fight to stay relevant & rake in as much cash as they can before they have to shift gears again.

In the middle of the episode kek

I'm just gonna miss Adult Swim/Toonami when CN dies desu.

I honestly wish Viacom would just sell off the Nickelodeon library to Netflix. Nobody fucking wants CBS All Access. Nobody.

When did Zig Forums become this gay?

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they're transitioning over to streaming services i.e. jumping ship before they drown

>Not being le jaded is gay
Zig Forums was never like what you heard on Fox News kiddo

Cartoon Network died for me when they let Steven Universe push gender politics on children and have those "non-binary" commercials advertising it with Dove soap. The only thing that could revive it for me is a "Cartoon Cartoon Network" like Nicktoons was in 2004. Nothing but the older stuff with bumpers included, kind of like what Boomerang is doing with 90s shows now but not hard enough.

They're already dead. To me.

Disney definitely not going to die.

Nick, maybe not. It's still got some life left. SpongeBob's sudden relevancy and Loud House

CN might die someday. Either from canceling or death slotting their shows too much or too much TTG.

>Disney definitely not

CN City bumpers but it's 9/11

I only grew up with Nick and CN before they killed off Courage. Disney channel sucked balls.

I only feel bad for the employees who will lose their jobs

>Don't you find it a bit sad that these channels will likely die unceremoniously for how many enjoyed them over the decades?
I find it sad in that I will miss them.
I don't find it sad because they brought it on themselves. They know what people want, and they have consistently short-changed themselves by cutting more and more costs, getting cheaper and cheaper programs, and refusing to invest for the future. Instead just watching the medium die while they offer nothing of value to it.

They did it all to themselves, and were told tiem and time again that this is coming.

This, and that's about it.
Let the corporate part die.

I doubt they will die anytime soon. They are big advertising markets to them kids.

youtube.com/watch?v=xsPQNLJ_j4M

>CN: "Help! Help! Daddy AT&T's cutting us off!"
>Nick: "How did we trick ourselves into airing reruns of COPS?!"
>Disney Channel: "Let's dedicate 24h of programming to things we would never ever show again!" *airs the completely uncut version of Fantasia, Song of the South (the first time and last time), and a four part biographical series about Walt Disney but no punches pulled (even brings up his alleged racism and anti-Semitism)*