Saturday Mornings are dead to me, as far as I'm concrened. or at least a vegetable that's about to have the plug pulled. And the people holding the various murder weopon?
The FCC. In an attempt to fool the public to let single conglomerates buy up as many media outlets as possible the FCC passed 2 idiotic regulations on Kid's programming. Limiting the amount of junk food advertising on kid's programming, which left the market virtually unprofitable. And then the 3 1/2 hours of TV E/I programming, which doomed the only people still playing the game to run educational programming. Which worked at first, letting in a bunch of newly produced shows on the syndicated market... but in the long run, stations just provide lip service with slapdash programming, like old cheaply produced nature shows from the mid 90's.
The Cable Conglomerates/ Corporate partners. Due to the fact they now possessed all these networks (see above), they feel they needn't compete with themselves. So, to satiate the FCC's requirement (a formality, since the FCC has been a corporate slave for years) they felt they could just toss on some old reruns of their educational programs. All the while, not trying to compete with their up to three children's networks on cable.
To extrapolate, when CBS and WB wanted to merge their 2 pathetic networks together, huge terrible changes to children's programming occurred. It started with the CW dropping their afternoon kid's line up (why compete with Cartoon Network- they're owned by Warners) for adult programming like ER and 8 Simple Rules (a terrible, terrible show). now it's the CW's toxic waste dump of cancelled, unfunny, unwatchable WB and UPN sitcoms (Mostly Reba, which has to be on ABC Family half the day too). Which of course led to their dropping the kid's WB line up in order to get as many profits with as little effort as possible.
So basically, it's all this huge corporate deal. Kiddy shows that don't feature talentless live action tweenage twits yowling mindless pop music just aren't worth anything anymore. having a toyetic or toy based show is the only way to get your foot in the door, since profits are increasingly harder to come by with things like creativity and variety.
Sorry if this sounds bitter, but this is a touchy subject. No animated shows means no work for animators. And as I'm still struggling to find a way to get my foot in the door, the number of doors is dwindling.