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The Rise and MESSY Ending of Cartoon Network: The Weird Kids Channel That Forgot Who It Was

Dial-Up Days | June 21, 2026



Cartoon Network wasn’t supposed to become one of the most creative kids channels ever made.

When it launched in 1992, it was basically a rerun machine — a place for Ted Turner to air the massive cartoon library he already owned, from Looney Tunes and Tom and Jerry to The Flintstones, Scooby-Doo, and the rest of the Hanna-Barbera vault.

But somehow, that animated storage unit turned into something much stranger.

This is the story of how Cartoon Network went from a rerun dump to a weird cartoon paradise — launching creator-driven shows like Dexter’s Laboratory, Johnny Bravo, The Powerpuff Girls, Courage the Cowardly Dog, Ed, Edd n Eddy, The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy, Codename: Kids Next Door, and Foster’s Home for Imaginary Friends. It became a channel with its own world, its own rhythm, and its own strange personality.

Then came Toonami, Adult Swim, the Powerhouse era, Cartoon Cartoon Fridays, and the feeling that Cartoon Network wasn’t just a channel — it was a place. Look back at the rise of Toonami below..

https://youtu.be/aahu9sOIN2I

But eventually, that identity started to crack. From the end of Cartoon Cartoon Fridays and Toonami’s cancellation to the strange live-action experiment of CN Real, Cartoon Network began to look less like the weird channel that made it special and more like a network that had forgotten its own name.

So what happened? Did Cartoon Network really lose its mind? Or did cable TV, streaming, corporate mergers, and changing viewing habits make that old version of the channel impossible to preserve?

Let’s look back at the rise, weird golden age, identity crisis, and slow disappearance of the Cartoon Network we remember.

What was your Cartoon Network era — Cartoon Cartoon Fridays, Toonami, Adult Swim, or all of the above? Let me know in the comments.

Written by Dial-Up Days

Comments

This post currently has 22 comments.

  1. @Popinki-x2r

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    I was a sophomore in high school when it premiered. I blew off work at Kmart just to watch it, and I kept right on watching it right through sometime in the 2010s (The stupid CN Real block, then the neverending repeats of shows I didn't like.)

    They really took the Droopy Poodle quote, "In a cartoon, you can do anything," to heart in its heyday, especially with the What a Cartoon experiments and then adding in the Toonami blocks.

    I always had an appreciation for animation as a medium and Cartoon Network showed to more and more people that a cartoon really could be anything.

    Whether it was nostalgic, silly, violent, subversive, experimental, vulgar, bewildering, scary, whether you liked it or not, it gave animation its chance to shine.

  2. @gamerdude612

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    Cartoon Network late 90's and early 00's was my favorite era Ed Edd N Eddy was my favorite and thank you Toonmai for introducing me to Dragon Ball Z and CN even being Pokémon's home for many years just great times.

  3. @Ninja0492

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    Cartoon Network was awesome & amazingly way better when it 1st launched around 1992………..
    Ah, what I wouldn’t give anything to go return at a simpler time but alas & sadly 😢, things change & life goes by fast 💨.

  4. @darthgoku90

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    RIP Ted Turner and thanks forever for contributing greatly to us 90s kids' entertainment growing up. Yeah, the CN City era was cool, but the Powerhouse era was the real golden age when Toonami and CCF were in their prime and CN was also still airing the classic Looney Tunes and Hanna-Barbera shows as well. By the time CN City came around, too much was changing at once. Looney Tunes was gone, Toonami was bumped to Saturdays, and Dexter's Lab, PPG, and the other early CN original shows had all ended their runs.

    At least the CN City bumpers were awesome. Almost like watching Disney's House of Mouse. Wish CN could do a show like that where all the CN characters from various eras interact on a regular basis. Kinda like Jellystone, except all CN characters. Probably be expensive though between all the different shows' creators/producers and getting all the OG voice actors involved too, minus Dexter and Professor Utonium (RIP Christine Cavanaugh and Tom Kane). Jellystone had the Crisis on Infinite Mirths special last year of course, but I'd sure like to see more stuff like that in the future somehow.

  5. @PancakePrince1

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    I grew up watching on Cartoon Network. I do remember watching Dexter's Lab, Johnny Bravo, Ed, Edd n Eddy, Powerpuff Girls and Kids Next Door.

    For me, Kids Next Door was my favorite to watch. I like the concept of kids battling against adults and their gear is mostly made of common household stuff.

  6. @JonesNate

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    "Cartoon Network! All cartoons! All the time!"

    I could swear I remember hearing this sometime on the network in the early '90s. When I learned that they started creating live action TV programming, I figured that would be the end of the channel. It was certainly the end of me watching it or being interested in it at all.

    One thing I actually miss is the really early days of the night time Cartoon Network. Prior to the premiere of toonami, and prior to the premiere of Space Ghost Coast to Coast, there was a late-night block of other classic TV shows. One that I remember, but for a long time I couldn't remember the name of, was (I think) the Gary Coleman Show, where after a child dies, he goes to heaven, and then chooses to become a sort of Angel/secret agent to continue being with his friends. Not only do I miss that show, but I also miss that entire block of programming. My memory cannot remember what all the different shows were, and I've not seen any videos online that actually described that lineup in its entirety.

  7. @Memoirsofapsycho

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    I miss coming home from school and catching DBZ at 4 or 5. Of course if this was in the early days it was likely a rerun of the Frieza saga for the umpteenth time, if that was the case I went outside and played with the neighborhood kids until around 6:30-7 when they start showing Dexter's lab/ppg/ ed eddband Eddy. I'll never forget how boring Sundays schedule was compared to the rest of the week, but there was always classics on later at night like Hong Kong phooey. I'm glad there's some people who recorded 3 to 4 hour programming blocks around this time, it's just a shame that there aren't more out so that we may be able to put together a semblance of a week's worth of programming from these times. Anything from 1996 to 2002 holds a special place in my heart. I'll never forget watching until 11:00 and then having space Ghost Coast to Coast in cartoon planet come on around midnight, sitting up watching it with my older sister and playing Monopoly. It almost felt like being part of a secret club being up that late with those shows

  8. @fedupN

    June 21, 2026 at 8:26 pm

    20:2321:08 – That is a great point. The shows quality, obviously, did the trick, but so too did the bumpers.
    From Toonami, Adult Swim, and the CN City, the bumpers set the tone and drew the viewer in. When we think of CN in its infancy or its prime, those often crop up as much as the shows themselves.
    Short but vital, they showed effort and supported the whole experience.

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