Origins 20th Century Fox (now 20th Century Studios) had been involved in
television production as early as 1948. Its television arm was called TCF Television Productions up until 1958, which produced several
syndicated programs. 20th would also produce original content for the NTA network. The film network effort would fail after a few years, but 20th continued to dabble in television through its production arm, such as
Perry Mason,
Batman and
M*A*S*H for the
Big Three television networks
ABC,
NBC, and
CBS.
1980s: Establishment of the network Foundations While running
Paramount Pictures,
Barry Diller attempted to create a fourth television network. The
Paramount Television Service of 1977 was canceled before its first broadcast. Paramount produced many programs for the Big Three but catering to their demands "just wore us down", he said in 1983: "I want to make our own things and put them on the air". Diller hoped to create a "mini-network" of
independent television stations airing Paramount programs. Unable to achieve his goal at Paramount, Diller joined film studio 20th Century Fox. In March 1985,
News Corporation, a media company owned by Australian publishing magnate
Rupert Murdoch that had mainly served as a newspaper publisher, paid $255 million for a 50% interest in TCF Holdings, the
parent company of the 20th Century Fox film studio. In May 1985, News agreed to pay $2.55 billion to acquire independent stations in six major U.S. cities from the
John Kluge-run broadcasting company
Metromedia: WNEW-TV in New York City,
WTTG in Washington, D.C.,
KTTV in Los Angeles,
KRIV-TV in Houston,
WFLD-TV in Chicago, and KRLD-TV in Dallas. A seventh station, ABC affiliate
WCVB-TV in Boston, was part of the original transaction but was spun off to the
Hearst Broadcasting subsidiary of the
Hearst Communications in a separate, concurrent deal as part of a
right of first refusal related to that station's 1982 sale to Metromedia. (Two years later, News Corporation acquired WXNE-TV in that market from the
Christian Broadcasting Network and changed its call letters to
WFXT.) Radio personality
Clarke Ingram suggested that the Fox network is a revival or at least a linear descendant of DuMont, since Metromedia was founded when DuMont spun off its two remaining owned-and-operated stations, WNEW-TV (formerly WABD) and WTTG, as DuMont Broadcasting (it later changed its name to Metropolitan Broadcasting before becoming Metromedia). Additionally, the former base of DuMont's operations, the DuMont Tele-Centre in
Manhattan, eventually became the present-day Fox Television Center.
Beginning of the network In 1985, 20th Century Fox announced its intentions to form a fourth television network that would compete with ABC, CBS, and NBC. The plans were to use the combination of the Fox studios and the former Metromedia stations to both produce and distribute programming. Organizational plans for the network were held off until the Metromedia acquisitions cleared regulatory hurdles. Then, in December 1985, Rupert Murdoch agreed to pay $325 million to acquire the remaining equity in TCF Holdings from his original partner,
Marvin Davis. The purchase of the Metromedia stations was approved by the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in March 1986; the call letters of the New York City and Dallas outlets were subsequently changed respectively to
WNYW and
KDAF. These first six stations, then broadcasting to a combined reach of 22% of the nation's households, became known as the
Fox Television Stations group. With the sole exception of KDAF (which was sold to
Renaissance Broadcasting in 1995, at which time it became an affiliate of
The WB), all of the original
owned-and-operated stations ("O&Os") are still part of the Fox network today. Like the core O&O group, Fox's affiliate body initially consisted of independent stations (a few of which had maintained affiliations with ABC, NBC, CBS, or DuMont earlier in their existences). The local charter affiliate was, in most cases, that market's top-rated independent; however, Fox opted to affiliate with a second-tier independent station in markets where a more established independent declined the affiliation (such as
Denver,
Phoenix and
St. Louis). Largely because of both these factors, Fox in a situation very similar to what DuMont had experienced four decades before had little choice but to affiliate with
UHF stations in all except a few (mainly larger) markets where the network gained clearance. Then-Fox Inc. head Barry Diller was acknowledged to have been the one who created the network, with the
New York Times noting in October 1986 that Diller's "current obsession is creating a television network to compete each evening with NBC, CBS and ABC." After a strong start,
The Late Show quickly eroded in the ratings; it was never able to overtake NBC stalwart
The Tonight Show. By early 1987, Rivers (and her then-husband
Edgar Rosenberg, the show's original executive producer) quit
The Late Show after disagreements with the network over the show's creative direction, the program then began to be hosted by a succession of guest hosts. After that point, some stations that affiliated with FBC in the weeks before the April 1987 launch of its prime time lineup (such as
WCGV-TV in
Milwaukee and
WDRB-TV in
Louisville) signed affiliation agreements with the network on the condition that they would not have to carry
The Late Show due to the program's weak ratings. Shortly before the official launch of FBC on April 5, 1987, under original Fox Entertainment President Garth Ancier, the network underwent a re-branding to the much shorter "Fox". According to an interview Ancier gave at that time, it was ad man
Jay Chiat who suggested to network executives that, rather than create a brand from scratch, the network ought to use the "Fox" heritage of the previous 80 years and the "searchlight" iconography to link Fox Broadcasting to 20th Century Fox. Until late in the game during the 1980s, several station groups like Media Central and
Pappas Telecasting had avoided Fox when the network launched, but joined the network later on. The network had its "
grand opening" when it expanded its programming into prime time on April 5, 1987, inaugurating its Sunday night lineup with the premieres of the sitcom
Married... with Children and the
sketch comedy series
The Tracey Ullman Show. The premieres of both series were rebroadcast twice following their initial airings (at 7:00 p.m. and 7:30 pm. Eastern/Pacific, respectively) that night, which
Jamie Kellner, who served as the network's president and chief operating officer until his resignation in January 1993, stated would allow viewers to "sample FBC programming without missing
60 Minutes,
Murder, She Wrote, or the 8 o'clock movies". Fox added one new show per week over the next several weeks, with the drama
21 Jump Street and comedies
Mr. President and
Duet completing its Sunday schedule. On July 11, 1987, the network rolled out its Saturday night schedule with the premiere of the
supernatural drama series
Werewolf, which began with a two-hour pilot movie event. Three other series were added to the Saturday lineup over the next three weeks: comedies
The New Adventures of Beans Baxter, ''
Karen's Song, and Down and Out in Beverly Hills (the latter being an adaptation of the film of the same name). Both Karen's Song
and Down and Out in Beverly Hills'' were canceled by the start of the
1987–88 television season, the network's first fall launch, and were replaced by the sitcoms
Second Chance and
Women in Prison, both of which would be cancelled by mid 1988. In regard to its late night lineup, Fox had already decided to cancel
The Late Show, and had a replacement series in development,
The Wilton North Report, when the former series began a ratings resurgence under its final guest host, comedian
Arsenio Hall.
Wilton North lasted just a few weeks, however, and the network was unable to reach a deal with Hall to return as host when it hurriedly revived
The Late Show in early 1988.
The Late Show went back to featuring guest hosts, eventually selecting
Ross Shafer as its permanent host, only for it to be canceled for good by October 1988, while Hall signed a deal with
Paramount Television to develop his own syndicated late night talk show,
The Arsenio Hall Show. Fox aired the
39th Primetime Emmy Awards and would air the next five editions. Although the network had modest successes in
Married... with Children and
The Tracy Ullman Show, several affiliates were disappointed with Fox's largely underperforming programming lineup during the network's first three years,
KMSP-TV in
Minneapolis and
KPTV in
Portland, Oregon, both owned at the time by
Chris-Craft Television, disaffiliated from Fox in 1988 (with KITN (now
WFTC) and
KPDX respectively replacing those stations as Fox affiliates), citing that the network's weaker program offerings were hampering viewership of their stronger syndicated slate. At the start of the
1989–90 television season, Fox added a third night of programming, on Mondays. The season heralded the start of a turnaround for Fox. It saw the debut of a
midseason replacement series,
The Simpsons, an animated series that originated as a series of
shorts on
The Tracey Ullman Show. Ranked at a three-way tie for 29th place in the Nielsen ratings, it became a breakout hit and was the first Fox series to break the Top 30.
The Simpsons, at 36 years as of 2025, is the longest-running American sitcom, the longest-running American animated program, and the longest-running American scripted primetime television series. In 1989, Fox also first introduced the documentary series
Cops and crime-focused magazine program ''
America's Most Wanted'' (the latter of which debuted as a half-hour series as part of the network's mainly comedy-based Sunday lineup for its first season, before expanding to an hour and moving to Fridays for the 1990–91 season). These two series, which would become staples on the network for just over two decades, would eventually be paired to form the nucleus of Fox's Saturday night schedule beginning in the
1994–95 season. Meanwhile,
Married... with Children, which differentiated itself from other family sitcoms of the period as it centered on a dysfunctional lower-middle-class family, saw viewer interest substantially increase beginning in its third season after
Michigan homemaker
Terry Rakolta began a boycott to force Fox to cancel the series after objecting to risqué humor and sexual content featured in a
1989 episode.
Married...s newfound success led it to become the network's longest-running live-action sitcom, airing for 11 seasons.
1990s: Rise into mainstream success and beginnings of rivalry with the Big Three Fox survived where DuMont and other attempts to start a fourth network had failed because it programmed just under the number of hours defined by the FCC to legally be considered a network. This allowed Fox to make revenue in ways forbidden to the established networks (for instance, it did not have to adhere to the
Financial Interest and Syndication Rules that were in effect at the time), since during its first years it was considered to be merely a large group of stations. By comparison, DuMont had been saddled by numerous regulatory barriers that hampered its potential to grow, most notably a ban on acquiring additional stations, during an era when the FCC had much tighter ownership limits for television stations (limiting broadcasters to a maximum of five stations nationwide) than it did when Fox launched. In addition, Murdoch was more than willing to open his wallet to get and keep programming and talent. DuMont, in contrast, operated on a shoestring budget and was unable to keep the programs and stars it had. Most of the other startup networks that launched in later years (such as
UPN and
The WB) followed Fox's model as well. Furthermore, DuMont operated during a time when the FCC did not require television manufacturers to include UHF capability. To see DuMont's UHF stations, most people had to buy an expensive
converter. Even then, the signal quality was marginal at best compared to the signals of
VHF stations . By the time Fox launched, cable allowed UHF stations to generally be on an equal footing with VHF stations. The cable-only network launched on June 6, 1991, bringing Fox programming to smaller markets that did not carry a default Fox affiliate at the time; it would manage to reach a total of 1.3 million subscribers by 1992. As Fox gradually headed towards carrying a full week's worth of programming in prime time through the addition of programming on Thursday and Friday nights at the start of the
1990–91 season, the network's added offerings included the scheduling of
The Simpsons opposite veteran NBC sitcom
The Cosby Show as part of Fox's initial Thursday night lineup that fall (along with future hit
Beverly Hills, 90210, which would become the network's longest-running drama, airing for ten seasons) after only a half-season of success on Sunday nights. The show performed well in its new Thursday slot, spending four seasons there and helping to launch
Martin, another Fox comedy that became a hit when it debuted in August 1992.
The Simpsons returned to Sunday nights in the fall of 1994, and has remained there ever since. The sketch comedy series
In Living Color, which debuted in April 1990, created many memorable characters and launched the careers of future movie stars
Jim Carrey,
Jamie Foxx,
Damon Wayans,
Marlon Wayans,
Keenen Ivory Wayans, guest stars
Chris Rock and
Tim Meadows, and
Rosie Perez and
Jennifer Lopez, both members of the show's dance troupe, the "Fly Girls". The series also gained international prominence after Fox aired a special live episode in January 1992 as an
alternative to the halftime show during
Super Bowl XXVI, which was broadcast on CBS, marking the start of Fox's rivalry with the "Big Three" networks while popularizing the
counterprogramming strategy against the
Super Bowl telecast. The early and mid-1990s saw the debuts of several soap opera-style prime time dramas aimed at younger audiences that became quick hits, which, in addition to
Beverly Hills, 90210, included its adult-focused spin-off
Melrose Place (which initially had a mediocre ratings performance, before viewership rose significantly midway through its first season following
Heather Locklear's addition to the cast), its own short lived spin-off
Models Inc., and family drama
Party of Five. The early and mid-1990s also saw the network launch several series aimed at a
black audience, which, in addition to
Martin, included the sitcom
Living Single and
police procedural New York Undercover.
Luring the NFL and affiliation switches Despite having a few successful shows like the science fiction drama
The X-Files, Fox still lacked credibility among viewers. Even those working in television thought of Fox as "the one that has that cartoon show" (
The Simpsons). More than 85% of affiliates in 1993 were UHF stations. Fox became a viable competitor to the older networks when it won broadcast television rights to the
National Football League (NFL) away from
CBS. In December 1993, Fox signed a contract with the NFL to televise games from the
National Football Conference (NFC)—which had been airing its games on CBS since
1956—starting with the
1994 season. The initial four-year contract, which Fox bid $1.58 billion to obtain—while CBS offered $295 million per year to retain the rights—also included the exclusive U.S. television rights to
Super Bowl XXXI in
1997. The network also lured
Pat Summerall,
John Madden,
Dick Stockton,
Matt Millen,
James Brown,
Terry Bradshaw, and behind-the-scenes production personnel, from
CBS Sports to staff its NFL coverage. Shortly afterward, News Corporation began striking affiliation deals with, and later purchasing, more television station groups. On May 23, 1994, Fox agreed to purchase a 20% stake in
New World Communications, a television and film
production company controlled by investor
Ronald Perelman that had just recently entered into broadcasting through its 1993 purchase of seven stations owned by
SCI Television. As a result of Fox acquiring a 20% minority interest in the company, New World signed an agreement to switch the affiliations of twelve stations (eight CBS affiliates, three ABC affiliates [
two of which were subsequently placed in a
blind trust and then sold directly to Fox due to conflicts with FCC ownership rules ], and
one NBC affiliate) that it had either already owned outright or was in the process of acquiring from
Citicasters and
Argyle Communications at the time to Fox starting in September 1994 and continuing as existing affiliation contracts with their existing major network partners expired. That summer,
SF Broadcasting, a joint venture between Fox and
Savoy Pictures that was founded in March 1994, purchased four stations from Burnham Broadcasting (
three NBC affiliates and
one ABC affiliate); through a separate agreement, those stations would also switch to Fox between September 1995 and January 1996 as existing affiliation agreements lapsed. These two deals were not the first instances in which a longtime "Big Three" station affiliated with Fox: in Miami, the affiliation moved from
WCIX (channel 6) to NBC affiliate
WSVN in January 1989 as the result of
a complicated six-station affiliation swap in two South Florida markets spurred by NBC's purchase of CBS affiliate
WTVJ (channel 4) and CBS's purchase of WCIX. WSVN immediately attracted industry notice for featuring a news-intensive tabloid format uncharacteristic of any Fox affiliate or independent station heretofore, with then-Fox network president
Lucie Salhany calling WSVN "the future of television" in May 1994. WSVN remains the largest Fox affiliate in terms of market size to have entirely eschewed any prominent on-air branding with the network name. The NFC contract, in fact, was the impetus for the affiliation deal with New World the deal was completed on January 22, 1997. Later, in August 2000, Fox bought several stations owned by Chris-Craft Industries and its subsidiaries
BHC Communications and United Television for $5.5 billion (most of these stations were UPN affiliates, although its Minneapolis station KMSP-TV would rejoin Fox in September 2002 as an owned-and-operated station). These purchases, for a time, made Fox Television Stations the largest owner of television stations in the U.S. (a title that has since been assumed by the
Sinclair Broadcast Group, one of the network's largest affiliate groups).
Evolving programming Fox completed its prime time expansion to all seven nights on January 19,
1993, with the launch of two additional nights of programming on Tuesdays and Wednesdays (The method of gradually adding nights to the programming schedule that began with the network's April 1987 prime time launch was replicated by The WB and UPN when those networks debuted in January 1995), making it the fifth broadcast network (behind the Dumont network) to air programming on a nightly basis. September 1993 saw the heavy promotion and debut of a short-lived
western series that incorporated science-fiction elements,
The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr. However, it was the supernatural investigative drama that debuted immediately following it on Friday nights,
The X-Files, that would find long-lasting success, and would become Fox's first series to crack Nielsen's year-end Top 20 most-watched network programs. After several other failed attempts at late night programming following the cancellation of
The Late Show (most notably, the quick failure of
The Chevy Chase Show in 1993), Fox finally found success in that time period with the debut of
MADtv on October 14, 1995; the sketch comedy series became a solid competitor to NBC's
Saturday Night Live for over a decade and was Fox's most successful late night program as well as one of its most successful Saturday night shows, running for 14 seasons until 2009. An attempt to make a larger effort to program Saturday nights by moving
Married... with Children from its longtime Sunday slot and adding a new but short-lived sitcom (
Love and Marriage) to the night at the beginning of the
1996–97 season backfired with the public, as it resulted in a brief cancellation of ''America's Most Wanted
that was criticized by law enforcement and public officials, and was roundly rejected by viewers, which brought swift cancellation to the newer series. Married...
quickly returned to Sundays (before moving again to Mondays two months later); both it and Martin
would end their runs at the end of that season. The Saturday schedule was revised in November 1996, to feature one new and one encore episode of Cops
, and the revived America's Most Wanted: America Fights Back
. Cops
and AMW'' remained the anchors of Fox's Saturday lineup, making it the most stable night in American broadcast television for over 14 years; both shows eventually were among the few first-run programs remaining on Saturday evenings across the four major networks after decreasing prime time viewership – as more people opted to engage in leisure activities away from home rather than watch television on that night of the week led ABC, NBC and CBS to largely abandon first-run series on Saturdays (outside
newsmagazines, sports and
burned off prime time shows that failed on other nights) in favor of reruns and movies by the mid-2000s. ''America's Most Wanted
ended its 22-year run on Fox in June 2011, and was subsequently picked up by Lifetime (before being cancelled for good in 2013); Cops'', in turn, would move its first-run episodes to
Spike in 2013 after 23 seasons (ending its original run on Fox as the network's longest-running prime time program), leaving sports and repeats of reality and drama series as the only programs airing on Fox on Saturday evenings. During the
1997–98 season, Fox had three shows in the Nielsen Top 20 (in terms of total viewers);
The X-Files (which ranked 11th),
King of the Hill (which ranked 15th) and
The Simpsons (which ranked 18th), all of which aired on Sunday nights. Building around its flagship animated comedy
The Simpsons, Fox would experience relative success with animated sitcoms in prime time, beginning with the debut of the
Mike Judge-produced
King of the Hill in 1997.
Family Guy (the first of three
adult-oriented animated series from
Seth MacFarlane to air on the network) and
Futurama (from
Simpsons creator
Matt Groening) would make their debuts in 1999; however, they were canceled in 2002 and 2003 respectively. Due to strong DVD sales and highly rated cable reruns on
Cartoon Network's
Adult Swim, Fox later decided to order new episodes of
Family Guy, which began airing in 2005.
Futurama would be revived with four direct-to-DVD films between 2007 and 2009 and would return as a first-run series on
Comedy Central, where it ran from 2010 to 2013. Less successful efforts included
The Critic, starring
Saturday Night Live alumnus
Jon Lovitz (which Fox picked up in 1994 after it was cancelled by ABC, only for the series to be cancelled again after its second season), and
The PJs (which moved to The WB in 2000, after Fox cancelled that series after its second season). Other notable shows that debuted in the late 1990s included the quirky
David E. Kelley-produced live-action
dramedy Ally McBeal, the short-lived game show
Greed, and the period comedy ''
That '70s Show'', the latter of which became Fox's second-longest-running live-action sitcom, airing for eight seasons. Throughout the 1990s and into the next decade, Fox launched a slate of cable channels beginning with the 1994 debuts of general entertainment network
FX and movie channel FXM: Movies from Fox (now
FX Movie Channel), followed by the debut of
Fox News Channel in August 1996. Its sports operations expanded with the acquisition of controlling interests in several
regional sports networks (including the
Prime Network and
SportsChannel) between 1996 and 2000 to form
Fox Sports Net (which launched in November 1996), its 2000 purchase of Speedvision (later Speed Channel, which was replaced in the United States by
Fox Sports 1 in August 2013; however, it continues to exist in other North American and
Caribbean countries as
Fox Sports Racing), and the launches of Fox Sports World (later
Fox Soccer, which was replaced by
FXX in September 2013) and Fox Sports en Español (now
Fox Deportes) in the early 2000s.
2000s: Rise to ratings leadership, the American Idol effect, and fierce rivalry with CBS By 2000, many staple Fox shows of the 1990s had ended their runs. During the late 1990s and carrying over into the early 2000s, Fox put much of its efforts into producing reality shows many of which were considered to be sensationalistic and controversial in nature – such as
Who Wants to Marry a Multi-Millionaire?,
Temptation Island,
Married by America, and
Joe Millionaire (which became the first Fox program to crack the Nielsen Top 10), as well as video clip shows such as ''
World's Wildest Police Videos and When Animals Attack!. After shedding most of these programs, Fox gradually filled its lineup with acclaimed dramas such as 24, The O.C., House, Prison Break and Bones, and comedies such as The Bernie Mac Show, Malcolm in the Middle, and Arrested Development''. As the decade wore on, Fox began surpassing ABC and NBC in the ratings, first in age demographics, then in overall viewership, and placed second behind a resurgent CBS in total viewership, beginning in
2002. Fox hit a major milestone in
2005 when it emerged as the most-watched U.S. broadcast network in the lucrative 18–49 demographic for the first time, largely boosted by the strength of the reality singing competition series
American Idol. Regarded as the single most dominant program on 21st-century U.S. television, as well as the first Fox show to lead the Nielsen seasonal ratings,
American Idol had peak audiences of up to 38 million viewers during the
2003 season finale and double-season average audiences of around 31 million viewers in
2006 and
2007. Subsequently, it leapfrogged over Fox's Big Three competition to become the highest-rated U.S. television program overall starting with the
2003–04 season, becoming the first reality singing competition series in the country to reach first place in the seasonal ratings.
American Idol remains the most recent American television program to date to lead the national prime time ratings and attract at least 30 million viewers for multiple and consecutive television seasons. It is the most-watched program on American television by seasonal average viewership in the 2000s decade, as well as the most recent program scheduled to have successfully established a
graveyard slot on American television since the end of NBC's
Friends in 2004 and the subsequent decline of NBC's previously dominant "
Must See TV" Thursday timeblock. By 2005, reality television succeeded sitcoms as the most popular form of entertainment in the United States as a result of Fox's rise with
American Idol and NBC's network declines.
House, which aired as
American Idols lead-out program on Tuesday nights, earned international prominence in the 21st century and became Fox's first prime time drama series (and the network's third program overall) to reach the Nielsen Top 10 beginning
2006. Beginning
2004, CBS and Fox, which ranked as the two most-watched broadcast networks in the U.S. during the 2000s, have tended to equal one another in
demographic ratings among general viewership, with both networks winning certain demographics by narrow margins; however, while Fox has the youngest-skewing viewer base, CBS is consistently regarded to have the oldest audience demographics among the major broadcast networks. Fox hit a milestone in February 2005 by scoring its first
sweeps victory in total viewership and demographic ratings, boosted largely by its broadcast of
Super Bowl XXXIX and the strengths of
American Idol,
24,
House, and
The O.C. In September 2006, as a result of the increasing number of over-the-air Fox affiliates and the increased availability of digital subchannels carrying Fox in certain markets, Foxnet was discontinued. Then, a sweeping milestone came by the conclusion of the
2007–08 season on May 21, 2008, shortly after the widely acclaimed
seventh-season finale of
American Idol, when Fox outranked longtime leader CBS as the most-watched television network overall in the United States, attributed to the strengths of
Super Bowl XLII and its NFL game coverages,
Idol and
House during that season. To date, Fox is the only non-Big Three network to top the overall Nielsen ratings since its inception in the
1950–51 season.
American Idol lost its first place standing among all network prime time programs during the
2011–12 finale (falling to second that season behind
NBC Sunday Night Football), ending the
longest streak at#1 for a prime-time broadcast network series in American television history, through its eight-year ratings domination in both the Adults 18–49 demographic and total viewership.
Idol also remained in the Nielsen Top 10 for eleven years from
2003 to
2013, and became the highest-rated non-
sports prime time television program as well as the highest-rated reality series in the United States from 2003 to 2012. these records marked the longest Nielsen ratings streaks of any Fox program in these categories. The 2012 season finale of
American Idol marked the end of the season-long 25th anniversary of the establishment of Fox network, helping it win in the 18–49 demographic for the eighth consecutive season, the longest such streak according to Nielsen measurement records (and still standing as of ). However, Fox suffered a collapse in viewership during the
2012–13 season;
American Idol and
Glee suffered steep ratings declines, while the network as a whole fell to third place (suffering an overall decrease by 22%) in total viewership and to second place in the 18–49 demographic (where it remained ) by the end of the season. The decline in ratings continued into the
2013–14 season, with Fox placing fourth among the major networks in total viewership for the first time since
2001. Subsequently, on January 13, 2014, Fox announced that it would abandon its use of the standard concept of greenlighting shows through the initial order of pilot episodes during the designated "pilot season" (running from January through April), instead opting to pick up shows directly to series. Fox scored renewed ratings successes with its February 2014 live telecast of
Super Bowl XLVIII, which became the
second most-watched television broadcast (by average) in U.S. history, and the lead-out programs that followed this event –
New Girl and
Brooklyn Nine-Nine. Later, in May 2014,
Kevin Reilly announced that he would resign as chairman of Fox Entertainment. On July 15, 2014, then-corporate parent
21st Century Fox announced that it would merge the operations of the network and 20th Century Fox Television into the newly created Fox Television Group, with 20th Century Fox Television co-chairpersons
Dana Walden and Gary Newman appointed to head the division. The
2014–15 season saw the series finale of
Glee and debut of hits in the freshmen dramas
Gotham (based on the
Batman mythos) and the
Lee Daniels-produced
Empire. Ratings for
Empire, in particular, increased week-to-week throughout its first season, becoming the network's first successful
American Idol lead-out since
House, as well as the first American television program to consistently increase its episode-to-episode viewership during its first five weeks since the
1992 feat set by ABC's
Roseanne.
Empire ended its inaugural season as the first American television show ever to increase its episodic viewership on a consistent basis throughout the course of a single season, as well as Fox's fourth program overall (and the first since the
2013 finale of
American Idol) to enter the Nielsen Top 10 by the end of the 2014–15 season. The
2015–16 season marked a notable turnaround for Fox, as it jumped ahead of ABC to third place in nationwide ratings (both in overall viewership and in the 18–49 demo) and posted several firsts for the network and on American television. Its improvement was boosted by the transfer of the
Miss Universe and
Miss USA pageants from NBC, as well as shows such as
Grease: Live,
Empire and the return of
The X-Files after its most recent season ending in 2002.
Grease: Live became the first live American television musical special of the 21st century to be broadcast in front of a live studio audience (as well as the first ever live musical special aired by a non-Big Three network on primetime). By 2016,
Empire and
The X-Files ranked in the Nielsen Top 10 for the season, the first season with 2 Fox programs entering the top rankings since the
American Idol-
House tandem of the 2007–2008 season (and the first ever season that Fox achieved such rankings without
American Idol or any other reality television show from Fox in the Top 10). The same year also marked the
finale of
American Idol in its original run on Fox after airing for fifteen seasons, ending an era of one of the most successful shows in American television history. In February 2017, Fox broadcast
Super Bowl LI, which attracted an average 111.3 million viewers—ranking among the top five most-watched Super Bowl games, and the second-highest audience in network history behind Super Bowl XLVIII. In March 2017, Rob Wade was named Fox's new president of alternative entertainment and specials Rob Wade; he had previously worked as a showrunner for
Dancing with the Stars, as head of entertainment for
BBC Worldwide, and as executive producer of ''
America's Got Talent and The X Factor''.
2018–present: Sale of studios to Disney, focus on non-scripted and sports programming On July 27, 2018, in a deal first announced December 2017, and completed March 20, 2019, 21st Century Fox shareholders agreed to
sell most of its key assets (including
20th Century Fox and
FX Networks) to
The Walt Disney Company for $71.3 billion, following the spin-off of certain businesses. The sale did not include the Fox Broadcasting Company and television stations or the Fox Sports, Fox News, and Fox Business cable channels, which were to be maintained under a company tentatively referred to as "
New Fox". Because Disney already owns the American Broadcasting Company (ABC), the acquisition of the Fox network by Disney would have been illegal under the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)'s rules prohibiting a merger between any of the four major broadcast networks. As a result of the Disney/Fox deal, and with the
merger of CBS and Viacom on December 4, 2019, Fox has become the only major American broadcast network without attachment to any
film studio. It was acknowledged that Fox had placed a larger emphasis on its sports programming in its first upfronts since the deal was announced, including the acquisitions of the NFL's
Thursday Night Football package and rights to the
FIFA World Cup. It was also noted that Fox had been increasingly pivoting towards programs that could generate large audiences, as opposed to ones that become successful primarily through critical acclaim. On June 27, 2018,
WWE announced that
SmackDown would move to Fox on Friday nights beginning October 4, 2019, following its run on
USA Network, under a five-year contract valued at $205 million per-year. The network also began to increase its non-scripted output, announcing the new celebrity music competition series
The Masked Singer (based on the South Korean format
King of Mask Singer), and the new game shows
Mental Samurai and
Spin the Wheel for the 2018–19 season. Following the completion of the sale, network head Dana Walden became chairwoman of Disney Television Studios and ABC Entertainment.
AMC president Charlie Collier succeeded Gary Newman as chairman and CEO of Fox on November 1, 2018. Newman was expected to temporarily remain with Fox in a transitional role, to oversee the corporate transition. The start of 2019 saw
The Masked Singer premiere to Fox's highest ratings for a non-scripted premiere without an NFL lead-in since 2011, and record the largest-ever Nielsen ratings gain for a non-scripted series after three days of delayed viewership. On January 30, 2019, Fox ordered a second season, while the first-season finale saw an average audience of 11.5 million viewers. With the completion of Disney's purchase the next day, the "New Fox" entity, officially named Fox Corporation, formally began trading on March 19, 2019. Fox also established a new in-house studio, Fox Alternative Entertainment, for investments in non-scripted formats. It is led by Rob Wade, while its first production was the
second season of
The Masked Singer (after season 1 was produced by
Endemol Shine North America).
Thursday Night Football finished as the second highest-rated series of the 2018–19 television season in the
key demographic, behind only
Sunday Night Football, while
The Masked Singer finished tied for third with
The Big Bang Theory and
This Is Us. In the 2019–20,
Thursday Night Football and
The Masked Singer once again finished as the second and third highest-rated programs in the key demographic, and Fox finished the season as the highest-rated network among viewers 18–49 (with CBS leading in overall viewers). Fox repeated this victory in the 2020–21 season, but was narrowly beaten by NBC for 2021–22 by a tenth of a ratings share. In October 2022, Collier stepped down to join
Roku, with Rob Wade promoted to president and CEO of Fox Entertainment. In May 2023, Fox dropped its procedural drama
9-1-1 after six seasons. It had been the network's scripted tentpole since 2018. As a 20th Television production, ABC would subsequently pick up the series for a seventh season. Its spin-off
9-1-1: Lone Star would remain on Fox for the time being, with a renewal for a fifth season. In September 2024, it was announced that
9-1-1: Lone Star would conclude after its fifth season; it was the last 20th Television-produced drama airing on the network. Fox would also lose
SmackDown to
USA Network in September 2024; as a replacement, Fox would begin a strategy of regular sports programming on Friday nights, beginning with a package of primetime college football games. The new package would leverage Fox's contract extension with the
Big Ten Conference, which included options for the network to carry Friday-night games after the addition of west coast teams to the conference. On April 2, 2025, Fox and
20th Television Animation announced a four-season, 15-episode renewal for animated comedies
The Simpsons, ''
Bob's Burgers and Family Guy, alongside American Dad!'', marking its return to the network since its debut in 2005, after an 11-year run on
TBS that lasted between October 2014 and March 2025. ==Programming==