Purchase by Fox Kids Worldwide In early 1997,
Rupert Murdoch-owned
News Corporation entered into discussions to purchase a stake in The Family Channel with International Family Entertainment as a partner, seeking to bring it under its
Fox Kids joint venture with
Haim Saban. On June 11, 1997, News Corporation purchased International Family Entertainment for $1.9 billion. The latter company's assets were split within News Corporation's portfolio: The Family Channel was merged into Fox Kids Worldwide, a joint venture between majority owners News Corporation and Saban (which each owned a 49.5% share in the company), and media investment firm
Allen & Company (which owned the remaining 1%), which was subsequently renamed Fox Family Worldwide following the completion of the acquisition. The Family Channel was renamed
Fox Family Channel – though on-air promotions typically referred to the network as just
"Fox Family" – on August 15, 1998. With the change in ownership, Fox Family's operations were also migrated from the Christian Broadcasting Network's headquarters in
Virginia Beach,
Virginia, and integrated with the operations of some of News Corporation's other cable channels in
Los Angeles at the Fox Network Center (located on the
20th Century Fox backlot in
Century City). The MTM Enterprises library was assumed by
20th Television.
Early programming logo, used from August 15, 1998, to September 1, 2000; a modified version of the logo used as The (CBN) Family Channel, incorporating the
Fox network's
wordmark, was originally used in some promotional materials. When Fox purchased the channel, programmers sought to reposition it to target a dual audience: children in daytime, families at night. Once the network became Fox Family, the new owners dropped nearly all of the programming that it aired under The Family Channel brand – which at that point included reruns of series such as
Bonanza,
The Rifleman,
Carol Burnett and Friends,
Hawaii Five-O,
The High Chaparral,
Rescue 911 and
Diagnosis: Murder – and replaced them with shows that appealed to a younger demographic.
Rich Cronin, who was appointed as the network's president and
CEO, said regarding the channel's audience refocusing, "our focus is on younger families, more suburban or urban, more plugged into
pop culture". Fox Family was obligated to continue airing
The 700 Club as part of the sale, but the program's airings were scaled back to two times each day (though the sale agreement required the channel to air it three times daily, once each in the morning, late-evening and overnight hours), with the evening broadcast being moved out of
prime time, and pushed one hour later to 11:00 p.m. Eastern Time (from 10:00 p.m.). Programming that appealed to children and teenagers was also greatly expanded on the channel. Fox Family added more animated series to the lineup, many of which came from the
Fox Kids program library.
Major League Baseball In
April 2000, Fox Family began airing
Major League Baseball (MLB) games in prime time on most weeks during the league's regular season, on an alternating basis with sister network
FX. The network – which acquired the rights from
Fox Sports Net (FSN), which aired the weekly telecasts across its
regional sports networks (except in markets where the nationally televised game conflicts with scheduled sporting events involving local teams on the individual FSN outlet) from
1997 to
1999 – usually ran the games on either Thursday or Saturday nights. Starting with the
2001 season, the network also carried games from the first round of the MLB playoffs, the
Division Series, which did not air on Fox. Among the games that aired on Fox Family included one between the
San Francisco Giants and the
Houston Astros on October 4, 2001, in which
Barry Bonds hit his 70th
home run of the season, tying the all-time single season record that
Mark McGwire had set only
three years earlier (Bonds would break the record the following night).
The 700 Club As part of a stipulation negotiated into International Family Entertainment's sale agreement with Fox Entertainment Group by Pat Robertson, Fox Family aired
The 700 Club twice every weekday: a live broadcast at 10:00 a.m. Eastern Time, and a repeat at 11:00 p.m. Eastern.
Fox Family Films Fox created a film division for the channel, Fox Family Films, which produced motion pictures targeted at different age groups, mainly towards children; the titles included
Addams Family Reunion, which aired during Fox's inauguration of the channel under the initial format as Fox Family, and
Digimon: The Movie, which was compiled from several Japanese
Digimon short films. Aimed a more teenage audience, Fox Family Films created
Ice Angel, a made-for-cable movie about a hockey player who is reborn as a female synchronized skater, as well as the thriller ''
Don't Look Behind You. Fox Family also aired a wide array of Saban Entertainment-produced movies as well as many direct-to-video films from 20th Century Fox (including Richie Rich's Christmas Wish, Casper: A Spirited Beginning and Like Father, Like Santa''). In August 1999, the channel experienced its highest total viewership at that point in its history, with the premiere of the made-for-TV romantic/family comedy
Au Pair.
31 Nights of Halloween In October 1998, Fox Family introduced one of its most successful programming concepts, "The 13 Days of Halloween," a two-week-long block beginning each year on October 19, leading into
Halloween on October 31. This block – which was subsequently rebranded as the "13 Nights of Halloween" in 2002, under Disney/ABC ownership – introduced the original comedy series
The New Addams Family, the unscripted series
Scariest Places on Earth (hosted by
Exorcist star
Linda Blair, focusing on places infamous for frightening
urban legends) and some new movies such as
Casper Meets Wendy (the latter of which would become a staple of the block for several years, particularly during the years in which
Hilary Duff, who made her acting debut in the film, starred in the
Disney Channel series
Lizzie McGuire). The block was temporarily suspended in 2003, following an overhaul of the channel's programming management under Disney. But it returned in 2004. A few years later, the 2002 live-action film adaptation of
Scooby-Doo became part of its annual Halloween lineup. This continues to be one of the most successful programming blocks to date for the channel as ABC Family, and will be carried over under the Freeform brand. On May 15, 2018, Freeform renamed the block to 31 Nights of Halloween, meaning that the block now starts on October 1 and lasts throughout the whole month of October. With
Disney's acquisition of Fox the following year, the channel, having already added the show itself, has also included marathons of
The Simpsons' long-running Halloween-centric sub-series
Treehouse of Horror in the block.
25 Days of Christmas Two years before the launch of its Halloween programming lineup, in 1996, what was then The Family Channel launched the "
25 Days of Christmas", a four-week holiday-themed program block running annually during the month of December, formally starting on December 1 and continuing until
Christmas Day on December 25. The block was carried over to Fox Family under News Corporation ownership, with a staple of the lineup being Christmas-themed specials from the
Rankin-Bass library (among them,
The Little Drummer Boy and
Santa Claus Is Coming to Town), although it also features mostly holiday-themed theatrically-released and original made-for-TV movies, and other original programming. The "25 Days of Christmas" continued to air on the rebranded ABC Family following the sale to Disney in 2001, and expanded into include a sub-block that runs during late November, "Countdown to 25 Days of Christmas", beginning in 2007. On May 15, 2018, Freeform renamed the Countdown to 25 Days of Christmas block to Kickoff to Christmas, meaning that the block now starts on November 1 and lasts throughout the whole month of November.
Change in visual style On September 1, 2000, Fox Family adopted a new visual style, as part of an attempt to refocus its programming to attract an older audience. While in essence, it maintained a family-oriented format, the network began to feature some original and acquired programming aimed at adults during the early evening and in prime time. At that time, Fox Family purchased the syndication rights to the
CBS series
Early Edition, and two
ABC series:
My So-Called Life and
Step by Step (the latter of which aired on the channel until March 2010 as ABC Family). The channel also acquired the short-lived comedy-drama series
Freaks and Geeks, including episodes of the show that had not previously aired as a result of its 2000 cancellation by
NBC, and broadcast more "
romantic comedy"-themed original movies. Keeping kids and families in mind, the channel introduced the original series
State of Grace (a half-hour period dramedy set in the 1960s, centering around a pre-teen from a conservative
Jewish-American family and her boisterous best friend, raised by a free-wheeling divorced mother) and a programming block for teens, ''Fox Family's Summer High School Countdown
(which introduced the Swedish pop group Play to American audiences). However, the idea was unsuccessful, as a year later, Fox Family was sold to The Walt Disney Company, and State of Grace'' was only renewed for one more season before it was cancelled.
Declining ratings Under the control of Murdoch and Saban, Fox Family saw its overall viewership slide from 10th to 17th place in the
Nielsen cable ratings as a result of an increasingly competitive race for younger viewers (with the channel facing brisk competition from established children's cable networks
Nickelodeon,
Cartoon Network and eventual corporate sister
Disney Channel), and the bickering over ownership between News Corporation and Saban Entertainment founder and CEO
Haim Saban, who eventually opted to exercise an option given by News Corporation to have the company
buy out his 49.5% interest in Fox Family Worldwide on December 21, 2000. Some observers believe that the network chased away some of its older viewers when, without notice, News Corporation/Saban removed all of the older programming that it aired as The Family Channel – especially western reruns, which made up the bulk of its weekday and weekend schedule, dating back to its existence under the CBN Cable Network identity – in their effort to contemporize the channel, and never really replaced the core audience due to the absence of planning on how to retain that segment of the network's pre-acquisition viewer base, while simultaneously attracting new viewers. As a result, prime time viewership declined by 35% over the course of Fox Family's three-year tenure under Murdoch/Saban ownership. It is also suggested that News Corporation hired more employees than were needed, and when Disney took ownership, as many as 500 people were laid off (this was also at a time when The Walt Disney Company itself was downsizing, as the company had laid off 400 other employees from its failed
Go Network web portal). Fox Family also used many freelancers for certain aspects of the channel's operations and programming, such as its short-lived "block jocks" (which were on-air hosts that the channel hired to present its afternoon children's programs); most of the monikers for the network – including the slogans "You Belong" and "It's Electric" – were created by freelance artists. ==ABC Family (2001–2016)==