Early history (2000–02) Soapnet launched on January 20, 2000; at the time of its launch, the channel aired only current
ABC soap operas in the evening and early morning, as encore presentations. Programming was inclusive, as the channel was owned by ABC. Soapnet eventually gained high cable carriage due to
Disney's aggressive policy of pulling ABC-
owned broadcast stations and the
ESPN channels from cable providers if they did not agree to carry Soapnet as well. This was the main reason for ABC
owned-and-operated station WABC-TV being removed from
Time Warner Cable's
New York City system for two days in May 2000. When Soapnet was announced,
Sony Pictures Entertainment planned to launch a competing cable channel and website called
SoapCity, which would air all
CBS soap operas and the
Sony-owned/produced NBC soap
Days of Our Lives. The plans for the SoapCity cable channel were abandoned early in 2000 after Sony failed to secure cable carriage, though the website component remained. Soapnet's inaugural lineup aired current soaps such as
All My Children,
One Life to Live,
General Hospital and
Port Charles, along with canceled daytime and nighttime soaps such as
Falcon Crest,
Knots Landing,
The Colbys,
Hotel,
Sisters, and ''
Ryan's Hope. Over the years, Soapnet introduced original programming such as Soap Center
and Soap Talk, the latter of which was nominated for several Daytime Emmy Awards. Soap Center'', which debuted on Soapnet's launch day schedule, was initially hosted by former soap stars
Brooke Alexander and
David Forsyth. They were replaced the following year by Peggy Bunker: based on the East Coast and covering New York-based soaps; and
Tanika Ray discussing West Coast-based soaps. Peggy Bunker also hosted all events from Super Soap Weekend from Walt Disney World in Florida, including an exclusive interview with Susan Lucci. By 2003, the show stopped filming original material. Other original series included
1 Day With, a half-hour program featuring interviews with soap actors, which was hosted by
General Hospital actor
Wally Kurth;
I Wanna Be a Soap Star, a recurring reality series in which twelve young actors compete for a contract role on a daytime soap; and
Soapography, a 30-minute show profiling the lives and current shows of two different soap opera actors.
Programming expansion (2002–10) In 2002, Soapnet began airing reruns of
Dynasty, and by 2003, the channel added highly requested programming such as reruns of
Another World and
Dallas; replacing
Falcon Crest,
The Colbys,
Hotel, and
Sisters. In 2004, Soapnet acquired the rights to broadcast
Days of Our Lives episodes on a same-day basis. The channel also aired the 1975 to 1981 episodes of ''
Ryan's Hope'', which had not been seen on television since its 1989 cancellation by ABC. At that time, many viewers who did not have Soapnet at its inception petitioned to have the channel broadcast the show from the very beginning. In 2003, the channel aired the first episodes starting on
St. Patrick's Day. In 2004, Soapnet acquired reruns of the short-lived 1980s soap
Paper Dolls. In January 2005, the channel began airing reruns of the
Fox dramas
Beverly Hills, 90210 and
Melrose Place; this was followed that spring with the addition of repeats of short-lived nighttime soaps
The Monroes and
Skin. In July 2005, the network acquired the Fox primetime soap
Pasadena, including nine episodes that were not aired during the show's initial run. On March 16, 2006, Soapnet announced that it had acquired the rights to broadcast same-day episodes of
The Young and the Restless, which began airing on Soapnet on April 24, 2006, making it the first CBS network soap to air on the channel. Since the channel was a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company, it also broadcast events from the annual ABC
Super Soap Weekend, which was held every November at
Walt Disney World, and each summer at
Disney's California Adventure until the last event in 2010.
Soap Talk hosts
Lisa Rinna and
Ty Treadway served as hosts for question and answer sessions at the events, allowing fans to ask questions to their favorite soap stars. Some viewers complained about what they viewed as an overabundance of prime-time programming on the channel, some of which (
90210 and
Melrose Place) had ended their original broadcast runs only a few years prior and had been repeated in syndication on other networks. These fans also objected to the large number of new episodes of the ABC lineup and
Days of Our Lives, and repeatedly requested rebroadcasts of former daytime soaps such as
Loving,
The Edge of Night,
Santa Barbara, and
Search for Tomorrow. On February 7, 2007, Soapnet acquired the rights to air reruns of
The O.C. and
One Tree Hill. The syndication deal also gave Soapnet an option to order a new season of
One Tree Hill to air on the channel in an event that
The CW were to cancel the show, although this option never exercised as first-run episodes of
One Tree Hill remained on The CW for the remainder of the series' run until 2012. In November 2007,
Deborah Blackwell resigned as general manager of the channel and was replaced by then-
ABC Daytime president
Brian Frons. In August 2008, it was announced that Soapnet's broadcast rights for both
Dallas and
Melrose Place had expired; both shows were removed the schedule that September. In 2009, the channel started to further expand its acquired programming; and began airing ''
Greg Behrendt's Wake Up Call, a program that was originally set to air on ABC during the 2006–07 season. After airing the CBC Television series MVP (which was canceled by the CBC due to low ratings) in 2008, Soapnet also acquired the rights for the American broadcast of the Canadian dramedy Being Erica'' (which began in January 2009 on the CBC) beginning in February 2009. According to
Nielsen Media Research, Soapnet was available to 75,259,000 cable and satellite subscribers in December 2010, an increase of 4 million subscribers from May 2009.
Decline, transition to Disney Junior and channel closure (2010–13) Due to declining viewership in the genre, the Big Three networks had begun to cancel selected soaps and replace them with less-expensive
talk show and
game show programming, including ABC's
All My Children and
One Life to Live (an attempt to license the two soaps to
Prospect Park to continue them as
internet television series in 2013 was cancelled after a few months due to production and licensing conflicts), which were replaced with the cooking show
The Chew (which aired until June 2018) and the lifestyle talk show
The Revolution (which was canceled in April 2012 due to low ratings; its timeslot was assumed by
General Hospital and the remaining hour given back to ABC's affiliates).
The Chew did air on Soapnet for a short time on weekends with its five episodes for that week aired consecutively, but it was quickly removed due to negative viewer feedback. The decreasing number of active soaps, as well as the growing adoption of
digital video recorders (which made it more convenient to record multiple soaps), along with cable and internet
video on demand options to watch episodes online within a matter of hours, negated the further need for a linear channel devoted to the genre. On May 26, 2010,
Disney Junior was officially announced as Disney Channels Worldwide's new preschool television brand, replacing
Playhouse Disney. Disney Junior would launch as a block on Disney Channel on February 14, 2011, and was to launch a 24-hour cable channel in January 2012, replacing Soapnet. On July 28, 2011, due to issues in reaching carriage deals for the new network, the launch of the Disney Junior channel was delayed to an unspecified date in early 2012. The
Los Angeles Times reported that some television providers had been hesitant to immediately replace Soapnet with Disney Junior, as they "didn't want to risk legions of vocal soap opera fans getting into a lather, or worse, moving to a rival service." Soapnet continued to be carried on providers who had not yet made carriage agreements for Disney Junior (such as
Dish Network), as well as for certain providers that retained Soapnet as part of their channel lineups, while also adding Disney Junior as an additional channel (such as
Cablevision,
DirecTV,
Verizon FiOS,
RCN. and
Time Warner Cable). Same day rebroadcasts of
General Hospital,
Days of Our Lives and
The Young and the Restless were retained, with repeats of ABC Family programming and reruns of
Veronica Mars being added to the schedule. On January 15, 2013,
AT&T U-verse reached a new wide-ranging multi-year carriage agreement with Disney for its various broadcast and cable channels, which included the addition of Disney Junior. In April 2013, the broadcast rights to same-day broadcasts of
The Young and the Restless previously held by Soapnet were replaced by
TVGN (which
CBS Corporation, owner of the show's originating broadcaster
CBS, had acquired a 50% ownership stake in the previous month), the show moved to TVGN on July 1. TVGN (now
Pop) also acquired same-day reruns of
The Bold and the Beautiful after Soapnet closed, the soap was never carried by the network, and both were also carried in
high definition on TVGN's HD simulcast network, along with eventually,
Days of Our Lives. Same-day airings of soaps eventually left cable television altogether with ABC's
General Hospital premiering the same day on Hulu, with
Days of Our Lives moving exclusively to
Peacock in the fall of 2022, and CBS's soaps carried as a part of
Paramount+. In November 2013, Disney announced that Soapnet would close on December 31, 2013. Soapnet quietly went dark shortly before midnight
ET on January 1, 2014, after an airing of
General Hospital. ==Programming==