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danfling

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I was thinking about how in the 90s Loving, All My Children, and GH all had cosmetics storylines (reflecting the era when every small town in the US had rival makeup companies and spokesmodel competitions).  But, I've been racking my brain and I can't recall if OLTL ever had a similar plotline.  Am I forgetting one?

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[This doesn't exactly fit here but maybe it's close enough. The URL for this went from valid to an eror code as I was trying to post it.]

SOAPnet Turns 25: Remembering the Channel That Brought Daytime Dramas to Primetime


Dan Clarendon, TV Insider Jan 20, 2025 Updated Jan 20, 2025 


For countless soap opera fans, the dawn of the new millennium 25 years ago brought a new way to watch their favorite shows. On January 20, 2000, Disney launched SOAPnet, a basic cable channel devoted to daytime dramas.
While the decline of soap operas had already begun — the number of daytime dramas on American broadcast TV was down to nine in 2000, half as many as were on in 1970, per Ad Age — SOAPnet still served a useful role for fans. The idea was that those who worked during the day could watch soap repeats during primetime and over the weekend.
“When SOAPnet launched, it was back in the videocassette-recorder days and you really could only record one episode at a time and you had to deal with all those cassette tapes,” soap opera expert Ed Martin explained to the Los Angeles Times in 2013. “SOAPnet made it easy to follow multiple soap operas at the same time.”
Initially, SOAPnet stuck to soaps from corporate sibling ABC, including All My Children and One Life to Live, but in time, it added sudsy programming from other networks, including NBC’s Days of Our Lives and CBS’ The Young and the Restless. Then it added primetime soaps, too, including hits from the 1980s (Dynasty, Dallas), 1990s (Melrose Place, Beverly Hills, 90210), and 2000s (The O.C., One Tree Hill).
And SOAPnet even offered original programming, including the talk shows Soap Center and SoapTalk and the reality competition I Wanna Be a Soap Star. One of the most high-profile originals came in 2007 with the premiere of the short-lived spinoff General Hospital: Night Shift.
SOAPnet became a “big moneymaker” for Disney, according to the Los Angeles Times, since it attracted new fans, brought in more advertising revenue, and reaped programming fees from cable and satellite TV operators. The channel eventually reached 75 million homes and peaked in ratings in the 2008–2009 season with a primetime average of 353,000 viewers, according to Ad Age.
After nearly half of U.S. households with pay television started using digital video recorders, however, SOAPnet fell out of favor with its corporate parent. In 2010, Disney announced plans to replace SOAPnet with Disney Junior.
“The launch of Disney Junior in the U.S. is the next step in our global preschool strategy, which began 10 years ago with the premiere of our first dedicated preschool channel in the UK. The decision to ultimately transition SOAPnet to accomplish this was not arrived at lightly,” Anne Sweeney, then the co-chair of Disney Media Networks and president of Disney–ABC Television Group, said in a statement at the time, per Soap Opera Network. “SOAPnet was created in 2000 to give daytime viewers the ability to watch time-shifted soaps, before multiplatform viewing and DVRs were part of our vocabulary. But today, as technology and our businesses evolve, it makes more sense to align this distribution with a preschool channel that builds on the core strengths of our company.”
As it turned out, the transition from SOAPnet to Disney Junior took years, as cable and satellite TV operators were “loath to drop SOAPnet, realizing that it was a favorite among the most dedicated fans,” the Los Angeles Times reported.
“SOAPnet had a great run,” Ben Pyne, then president of global distribution for Disney Media Networks, told the newspaper in 2013. “It served an audience of super-soap fans. And when given the opportunity, all of our affiliates kept the channel up and running.”
But SOAPnet finally went dark at midnight on January 1, 2014, after one last rerun of General Hospital, per Soap Opera Network. A message on SOAPnet’s Facebook page — which remains online, more than a decade later — thanks fans “for over 13 years of soapy drama.”
In a 2024 Reddit thread about SOAPnet’s demise, one viewer observed that the channel was just a victim of changing times, coinciding with the decline of soaps, the uptake of multiplatform viewing, and the advent of on-demand streaming. “I liked SOAPnet, too, but I also enjoyed renting movies from a [brick-and-mortar Blockbuster] store,” that viewer wrote. “Not all business concepts are made to last forever.”

Edited by Contessa Donatella
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In 1998 Pat Fili Krushel, once VP of daytime and now president of ABC discussed briefly their test marketing of rerunning soaps.

Obviously nothing came of it.

Are additional revenue streams needed to improve the network model?

Yes, and we're looking at a number of things including all of the repurposing opportunities that don't hurt the core business and at the same time expand the current audience. You know about our soap opera market test. Soaps are a very expensive product for one run. I mean, in essence they're like tissues, you run 'em once and you throw 'em away. And the thought is to do a day- and -date repurposing on another distribution platform to expand the amount of viewers. And therefore get more for the money that you paid for this product, in terms of increased revenues, to at least make the business make a little more sense. SSo that is one way that you could increase your revenues.

Where does that soap project stand now?

We did a three -market test. One we ended early, which was in Charlotte, and it was a week -delay test, so today's episode would be on next Friday night. There really wasn't an audience for that. In the other two markets -Chicago and Houston-we did same -day airing at night, and then on the weekend we would play all five episodes. We're currently analyzing what we have -but in both markets the overall audience grew.

In one market it eroded the daytime play a bit; in the other market it did not erode the daytime play at all. What we're trying to analyze is: How much of that additional viewing was driven by the frequency, and how much of it was driven by lapsed viewers coming back, to see what kind of business model we would have. I would say we'll have all the data in by mid- January.

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March 73

ABC has signed Agnes Nixon as daytime consultant. Miss Nixon is creator and head writer of One Life to Live and All My Children, two ABC daytime serials. ABC has bought rights to One Life to Live from her production company. She will continue as head writer of All My Children.

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I have just finished reading the oral histories about Ryan's Hope and Texas.  I also read the oral history on One Life to Life a few years back.  I couldn't put them down!  So interesting to hear from all the actors and behind the scenes folks.  How do we go about getting ones for rest ABC soaps?  All My Children, Dark Shadows, The Edge of Night, Loving/The City, Port Charles would all be interesting reads.   I don't imagine that they would touch General Hospital currently airing.

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