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In the Philippines, variety television shows have become mainstays of the noontime slot for network programming since 1958. The first Philippines noontime variety television shows were influenced by the popularity of bodabil (vaudeville) in the first half of the 20th century.[1][2]

Highlights[edit]

The longest-running noontime variety show in the Philippines is Eat Bulaga!, which celebrated its 41th anniversary on July 30, 2020.[3][4]

GMA, Kapamilya Channel/A2Z, Net 25 and TV5 each air up to two noontime shows a week. A weeklong noontime show usually runs from Monday to Saturday, and a separate noontime show is reserved for Sundays.

  • GMA Network: Eat Bulaga! and All-Out Sundays
  • ABS-CBN/Kapamilya Channel/A2Z: It's Showtime and ASAP Natin' To
  • NET25: Happy Time
  • TV5: Lunch Out Loud and Sunday Noontime Live!

History[edit]

Student Canteen (1958–1965)[edit]

Student Canteen was the first noontime variety show on Philippine television.[5] It was originally a radio show on DZXL that was brought to television on CBN in July 1958 upon the sign-on of its television station, DZXL-TV. It was hosted by Eddie Ilarde, Pepe Pimentel and Leila Benitez. Alternating as pinch-hitters were Bobby Ledesma and Bobby de Veyra. It ended in 1965 when Ilarde went to politics and was succeeded by several noontime shows before returning in 1975.

Student Canteen's successors (1965–1975)[edit]

Magandang Tanghali, a musical variety show hosted by Pancho Magalona, and Stop Look and Listen, a former noontime variety show hosted by Eddie Mesa, took over Student Canteen's timeslot in 1965. When Mesa left for the United States, Twelve O'Clock High, a show hosted by Ariel Ureta and Tina Revilla-Valencia, premiered and aired until 1972 when martial law was declared and many television stations were shut down by the Marcos regime. The show moved to RBS (now GMA Network) as Ariel con Tina, a blocktimer by a company headed by Romy Jalosjos from 1972 to 1974. Lunch Break also became popular on the same channel before Student Canteen was eventually revived.

Student Canteen's revival and the birth of Eat Bulaga! (1975–present)[edit]

Student Canteen was revived in 1975 by Ilarde, who produced the program under his production company Program Philippines, Inc. after accepting an offer from GMA Network executives. He was joined by Ledesma and Pepe Pimentel with new co-hosts Helen Vela and Coney Reyes.

Student Canteen became the most-watched noontime program in the 1970s and Program Philippines branched out to produce other TV shows on GMA-7. The comic trio of Tito Sotto, Vic Sotto, and Joey de Leon (collectively known as TVJ) became guest hosts on Student Canteen when some of the main hosts went on leave. Student Canteen was the only noontime variety show on Philippine television from 1975 to 1979. Production Specialists, Inc. offered TVJ to host a new noontime show for RPN in 1979. After some misunderstandings with the Student Canteen's main hosts, they decided to accept the offer and Eat Bulaga! aired its first episode on July 30, 1979. The Sottos and de Leon were accompanied by Richie D' Horsie and Chiqui Hollmann.

Competition[edit]

Two-way competitions between noontime shows started in 1979 when Eat Bulaga! (first aired in RPN 9) fought against Student Canteen (aired on GMA 7). Since then, Eat Bulaga! has faced several rivalries with other noontime shows through the years.

Student Canteen (1979–1986)[edit]

Eat Bulaga! (EB) struggled with its ratings due to a lack of advertisers in its first year of airing due to Student Canteen's stronghold on television. EB was in danger of cancellation until 'Mr. Macho' was launched in 1980, which allowed EB to surpass Student Canteen's ratings. EB aired nationwide in 1982 with the launch of RPN's domestic satellite, which also coincided with Coney Reyes' transfer to EB and Chiqui Hollman to Student Canteen. Other people were introduced in Student Canteen but the show was eventually canceled by the GMA management in March 1986, after the People Power Revolution (also known as the EDSA Revolution) that toppled the Marcos regime one month earlier in February 1986. Student Canteen was revived in 1989 on RPN-9 but was canceled in 1990 after a misunderstanding occurred between the show's producers and the RPN management.

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Lunch Date (1986–1993)[edit]

Lunch Date became Student Canteen's successor in 1986 and was GMA Network's first station-produced noontime variety show. Its original hosts were Orly Mercado, Rico J. Puno, Toni Rose Gayda and Hollmann. When the show was reformatted after a year, it only retained Gayda and Hollman and brought in some new and old people to host the show, including Randy Santiago, Keno, Lito Pimentel, Tina Revilla, Pilita Corrales, Louie Heredia, Sheryl Cruz, Jon Santos, Dennis Padilla, Fe Delos Reyes, Manilyn Reynes, Willie Revillame and Ai Ai de las Alas. The show introduced new segments that challenged EB's reign in the noontime slot.

In 1987, EB's ratings improved when Aiza Seguerra, a Little Miss Philippines winner, joined the show and became highly approved to viewers. In 1989, changes were made to both noontime shows: former RPN-9 executive Wilma Galvante and former EB writer Vincent Dy Buncio joined Lunch Date as the executive producer and director of the show respectively. Meanwhile, EB moved to ABS-CBN due to RPN's sequestration under the Cory Aquino administration. EB (together with its sister shows produced by TAPE, Inc.) helped ABS-CBN increased its ranking to No. 1 TV network from No. 4. It also started the rivalry of GMA Network and ABS-CBN in the noontime slot that still exists until today. In 1993, GMA Network's management decided to reformat their own noontime show and replaced it by SST: Salo-Salo Together. According to de Leon, Lunch Date was their toughest opponent ever because it was pitted against EB for more than 6 years, the longest compared to other noontime shows.

SST: Salo-Salo Together (1993–1995)[edit]

SST first aired on March 20, 1993, as a replacement for Lunch Date, hosted by Randy Santiago, Dennis Padilla, and Smokey Manaloto with Liezl Martinez, Anjanette Abayari, Joy Ortega and Giselle Sanchez as co-hosts. In less than six months after it aired, SST started to overtake EB in ratings by providing fresh interactive segments. Comedians Ai-Ai delas Alas and Bayani Agbayani were also hired to be co-hosts on SST.

It started as a blind item as 1994 was about to end until news had leaked out that SST was going to go off the air to give way to EB the 12 pm slot, after EB itself had decided to move to GMA Network following their contract with ABS-CBN was bogged down. During SST's New Year episode on December 31, 1994, the announcement of the new variety show's move to GMA was officially made by main hosts Randy Santiago and Dennis Padilla. The management decided to keep SST after they decided to move it to an earlier time slot, as a pre-programming to EB. SST aired its last noontime episode on January 27, 1995. In June 1995, SST was permanently canceled.

'Sang Linggo nAPO Sila (1995–1998)[edit]

After Eat Bulaga!'s moved to GMA Network, ABS-CBN decided to make Sa Linggo nAPO Sila into a weeklong noontime show as Sang Linggo nAPO Sila (SLNS). It aired its pilot episode on February 4, 1995, led by the APO Hiking Society. During its first year, 'Sang Linggo led the ratings in the provinces and cities where ABS-CBN had a stronger signal. The real challenge to the show was deviating its content from the usual noontime variety show that Eat Bulaga! presented to the viewers for almost two decades. Meanwhile, Bulaga had presented new faces like Allan K., Jose Manalo, and Donna Cruz, and new segments such as Super SiReyna and Philippine Bulaga Association. Calendar Girl was introduced by SLNS in 1998 with John Estrada, Randy Santiago, and Willie Revillame handling the segment by delivering naughtier jokes on TV.

The rating for SLNS had improved but the main hosts did not agree with the changes on their show. Eventually, ABS-CBN ended their noontime show due to criticisms that the show was too intelligent for an average Filipino on November 28, 1998, with Magandang Tanghali Bayan taking place with its main hosts: Santiago, Estrada, and Revillame.

Magandang Tanghali Bayan (1998–2003)[edit]
Time

After the APO failed to beat the EB's high ratings, Randy, John, and Willie was pitted to the established trio of Tito, Vic, and Joey as ABS-CBN launched its new noontime show on November 30, 1998, with the title Magandang Tanghali Bayan. Its highlight segment, Pera O Bayong, made Magandang Tanghali Bayan overtook EB's ratings for years. Due to the growing popularity of the show, EB gave its first millions on television through its new segments Meron O Wala and the all-time popular segment Laban O Bawi which featured the phenomenal all-female dance group Sexbomb Girls. Magandang Tanghali Bayan faced numerous controversies and suspensions including the one-week suspension of the show in August 1999 due to the notorious green jokes of the main hosts. During that week, a placeholder show entitled Esep-Esep filled in the timeslot. In 2001, Revillame was dismissed from the show which resulted in major changes, such as new hosts and segments.

Another triumvirate was introduced on Magandang Tanghali Bayan when matinee idols Rico Yan, Dominic Ochoa, and Marvin Agustin joined the show after Willie's exit. Their addition resulted in the show bringing in a younger demographic and a more wholesome approach to noontime viewing. However, on March 29, 2002, Yan died during his Lenten vacation in Palawan and Magandang Tanghali Bayan later on reformatted on November 23, 2002 with new segments and additional hosts, after it had lost its victory in terms of ratings to EB. The reformat, however, failed to stop the management in deciding to bring back Revillame effective February 22, 2003, which led to its second incarnation, Masayang Tanghali Bayan.

Masayang Tanghali Bayan (2003–2004)[edit]

Magandang Tanghali Bayan aired its last episode on February 21, 2003, and was replaced by Masayang Tanghali Bayan as ABS-CBN's response to the noontime competition against EB. The new MTB premiered on February 22, 2003 and was simulcasted on ABS-CBN's VHF (led by flagship station Channel 2) and UHF channels (Studio 23) nationwide, with Revillame reunited with Santiago and Estrada, along with co-hosts Padilla, delas Alas, Bayani Agbayani, Mickey Ferriols, Aubrey Miles, Tado, and Bentong. The show gave out more cash prizes than its predecessor through the segments Super Jack En Poy and Urong Sulong, that gave away 2 million pesos as a jackpot prize.

Before the end of 2003, Revillame resigned from the show in regards to his derogatory joke against their co-host Mahal. The show continued to air until February 2004 with comedian Vhong Navarro and actor-host Edu Manzano taking over Willie's place. However, Masayang Tanghali Bayan failed to sustain viewership and was cancelled on February 20, 2004, two days before their first anniversary on television.

MTB: Ang Saya Saya (2004–2005)[edit]

The third incarnation of MTB, entitled MTB: Ang Saya Saya premiered on February 21, 2004 with delas Alas, Manzano, and Arnell Ignacio as its main hosts. The show introduced a new set of co-hosts and segments, with a focus on reality talent-based search on the latter. However, these efforts were overshadowed by the Silver Anniversary Special of EB which received the highest rating of a noontime show exceeding 30%. On November 15, 2004, MTB: Ang Saya Saya lost its 12 pm slot to Kris Aquino's Pilipinas, Game KNB? and started airing as an afternoon variety show on a 1:00 pm time slot as the network's strategic move against the anniversary special, which failed. After months of low ratings, the management decided to cancel MTB: Ang Saya Saya on February 4, 2005, and launched a new noontime show hosted by Revillame.

Wowowee (2005–2010)[edit]

Wowowee was ABS-CBN's longest-running noontime show. Former MTB main host Revillame returned on the noontime slot with the new show Wowowee on February 5, 2005. ABS-CBN's influence worldwide (via TFC) helped Wowowee lead the noontime race for years.

Wowowee faced controversies during its five-year run on television. The ULTRA Stampede, which happened during the first anniversary of the show, led to the death of 71 people. The Guinness World Records cited the incident as 'the greatest death toll in a game show.' Another controversy was the Hello Papi scandal, wherein Revillame allegedly cheated a contestant during the jackpot round on one of the Wowowee's game segments. The scandal also led to an on-air argument between Revillame and de Leon.

Competition became harder for EB so they decided to take a different approach. To celebrate their 30th anniversary in 2009, they honored people from different fields, gave scholarships to honor students, and built classrooms for public schools in different provinces. EB also renovated their studio to accommodate more studio audience, install LED screens, and to commemorate the first death anniversary of Francis Magalona on March 6, 2010. EB also launched its widely popular segment Juan for All, All for Juan: Bayanihan of D' Pipol (a regular segment which broadcasts from different barangays).

In 2010, Revillame threatened ABS-CBN management to remove radio/TV host Jobert Sucaldito, or he would resign from the noontime show due to Sucaldito's criticisms against Revillame and Wowowee. On May 5, Revillame left permanently. After negotiations between Revillame and the network, the network decided that Wowowee would air its final episode on July 30, 2010 (coinciding with Eat Bulaga!'s 31st anniversary). The show was replaced by Pilipinas Win Na Win. Revillame is currently on GMA Network hosting Wowowin, a primetime variety game show with the same format with Wowowee.

Pilipinas Win Na Win (2010)[edit]

Pilipinas Win Na Win was ABS-CBN's shortest-lived noontime show. After Wowowee's cancellation, Pilipinas Win Na Win premiered on July 31, 2010 with Kris Aquino and Robin Padilla as its main hosts, while some co-hosts from Wowowee joined. Some of the show's staff left the show to join Revillame's comeback on TV5 In 2010. After receiving consistently low ratings since launch, ABS-CBN asked Aquino mid-September to leave the show; she quietly left in September 2010. Two days later on October 2, ABS-CBN officially announced four new hosts and two new co-hosts. The four hosts tagged as the 'hitmakers' include Rico J. Puno, Rey Valera, Marco Sison, and Nonoy Zuñiga.

Pilipinas Win Na Win ended on December 31, 2010 during the New Year celebration after constant low ratings and changing time slots. The cancellation was announced by Puno several times during the December 20 episode. Rumors were posted on entertainment websites from interviews of a fellow co-host, Valerie Concepcion before the network announced its cancellation. Its time slot was temporarily occupied by Showtime. On February 12, 2011, a new noontime show was aired entitled Happy Yipee Yehey!.

Happy Yipee Yehey! (2011–2012)[edit]

The unsuccessful stint of PWNW was immediately replaced by Happy Yipee Yehey! which premiered on February 12, 2011. Before its premiere, Willie Revillame (then-host of Willing Willie on TV5) challenged its upcoming host John Estrada that HYY would not reach its success in terms of ratings and Revillame will promote Eat Bulaga! constantly on his show. HYY was hosted by former MTB hosts John Estrada and Randy Santiago, Toni Gonzaga, Rico J. Puno, Pokwang, and others. The new noontime show introduced segments similar to its predecessors like Pera O Bayong, My Girl and Miss Kasamabahay.

Revillame's prediction was correct. HYY received consistently low ratings due to Eat Bulaga!'s strong noontime viewership. In January 2012, Showtime was canceled from its late-morning slot, and it was later revealed that Showtime would be formatted into a new noontime variety show to replace HYY. Happy Yipee Yehey! aired its final episode on February 4, 2012 to give way to ABS-CBN's new noontime show, It's Showtime.

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It's Showtime (2009–present)[edit]

Showtime was a morning talent show that started airing on October 24, 2009, as a lead-in program to Wowowee, overtook the ratings of both Wowowee and EB. The show was inserted in Pilipinas Win na Win's timeslot in January 2011 as a temporary replacement before returning to the morning slot in February 2011.

Showtime became the top morning variety show and prompted ABS-CBN management to transfer it to the noontime slot as It's Showtime on February 6, 2012. The new noontime show introduced segments from the Showtime series and new segments like Sine Mo 'To, AdVice Ganda, That's My Tomboy, I Am PoGay, and Magpasikat. The show is currently hosted by Vice Ganda, Anne Curtis, Vhong Navarro, Jhong Hilario, Karylle, Ryan Bang, Mariel Rodriguez, Amy Perez, Jugs and Teddy. Currently, they feature the segments Tawag ng Tanghalan and Ms. Q&A. All of these segments have high ratings to rival EB since 2016, with EB leading in NUTAM and It's Showtime leading in KANTAR.

Lunch Out Loud (2020–present)[edit]

Lunch Out Loud is one of the numerous programs produced by Brightlight Productions, a production outfit of former Rep. Albee Benitez, that serves as the blocktimer of TV5 and is directed by veteran television director and former Star Magic head Johnny Manahan.

Sunday noontime shows[edit]

Currently, ABS-CBN's ASAP holds the record of being the longest-running Sunday noontime variety show which began airing in 1995 when Eat Bulaga! moved to GMA Network and the Sunday noontime show Sa Linggo nAPO Sila became a weeklong noontime show. During its 22nd anniversary, ASAP surpassed GMA Supershow as the longest-running Sunday noontime variety show.

Its current rival program is All-Out Sundays aired on GMA Network. AOS aired its pilot episode in January 2020 as a replacement to Sunday PinaSaya.

Other popular defunct Sunday noontime variety shows include:

GMA NetworkABS-CBN
GMA Supershow (May 7, 1978 - January 26, 1997)

SOP (February 2, 1997 - February 28, 2010)

Party Pilipinas (March 28, 2010 - May 19, 2013)

Sunday All Stars (June 16, 2013 - August 2, 2015)

Sunday PinaSaya (August 9, 2015 – December 29, 2019)

All-Out Sundays (January 5, 2020 – present)

Sa Linggo nAPO Sila (January 28, 1990 - January 29, 1995)

ASAP (February 5, 1995 – present)

TV5
P.O.5 (April 11, 2010 - February 20, 2011)

Fan*tastik (February 27 - May 22, 2011)

Sunday Funday (April 8 - June 10, 2012)

Game 'N Go (June 17, 2012 - February 3, 2013)

Happy Truck ng Bayan (June 14, 2015 - February 7, 2016)

Happy Truck HAPPinas (March 6 - May 1, 2016)

Sunday Noontime Live! (October 18, 2020 - present)

List of weeklong noontime variety shows aired from 1958-present[edit]

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Series shaded in light blue are currently in production.

Length of current noontime shows are as of February 6, 2018. Noontime shows without specific dates of first and/or last broadcast were given approximate length of broadcast.

SeriesNetworkLengthFirst broadcastLast broadcast
Student CanteenABS-CBN19 years (approximate)July 19581965
GMA NetworkJanuary 1975June 7, 1986
RPNFebruary 20, 19891990
Magandang TanghaliABS-CBN3 years (approximate)19651968
Stop, Look, and ListenABS-CBN4 years (approximate)19681972
12 O' Clock HighABS-CBN<1 year (approximate)19721972
Ariel Con TinaGMA Network2 years (approximate)19721974
Lunch BreakGMA Network1 year (approximate)19741975
Eat Bulaga!RPN*41 yearsJuly 30, 1979February 17, 1989
ABS-CBN*February 18, 1989January 27, 1995
'GMA Network'*

(Worldwide: GMA Pinoy TV)

January 28, 1995present
Kalatog PingganBBC/ABS-CBN3 years19851988
Lunch DateGMA Network6 years, 9 daysJune 9, 1986March 19, 1993
Afternoon DelightABS-CBNapproximately one year1988February 17, 1989
SST: Salo-Salo TogetherGMA Network1 year, 10 months, 7 daysMarch 20, 1993January 27, 1995
Chibugan NaRPNapproximately one year19941995
'Sang Linggo nAPO SilaABS-CBN3 years, 9 months, 24 daysFebruary 4, 1995November 28, 1998
Magandang Tanghali BayanABS-CBN4 years, 2 months, 22 daysNovember 30, 1998February 21, 2003
Alas Dose sa TreseIBC1 year, 3 months, 10 daysJuly 24, 1999November 3, 2000
Esep EsepABS-CBNapproximately one weekAugust 1999August 1999
Lunch BreakIBCapproximately two yearsNovember 4, 20002002
Lunch Break MunaIBCapproximately one year2002December 12, 2003
Masayang Tanghali BayanABS-CBN11 months, 29 daysFebruary 22, 2003February 20, 2004
MTB: Ang Saya SayaABS-CBN11 months, 14 daysFebruary 21, 2004February 4, 2005
It's Chowtime/ Chowtime Na!IBCapproximately one yearMay 17, 20042005
Chowtime Na! Laban Na!IBCless than one year20052006
Chowtime: ConquestIBCapproximately one year2006October 6, 2006
WowoweeABS-CBN5 years, 5 months, 25 daysFebruary 5, 2005July 30, 2010
Pilipinas Win Na WinABS-CBN5 monthsJuly 31, 2010Dec. 31, 2010
Happy Yipee Yehey!ABS-CBN11 months, 23 daysFebruary 12, 2011February 4, 2012
It's ShowtimeABS-CBN

(Worldwide: The Filipino Channel)

11 yearsOctober 24, 2009present
WowowillieTV58 months, 16 daysJanuary 26, 2013October 12, 2013
Happy TimeNet 2520 daysSeptember 14, 2020present
Lunch Out LoudTV54 weeksOctober 19, 2020present

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'8 Kick-Ass Pinoy Noontime Shows of Yesteryears'. 8List.PH. 12 September 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  2. ^'ONCE UPON A NOONTIME SHOW: A HISTORICAL STUDY OF NOONTIME VARIETY SHOWS AS A REPRESENTATION OF FILIPINO CULTURE FROM 1965-1986'. Iskwiki. 4 March 2011. Retrieved 30 April 2017.
  3. ^Godinez, Bong. 'Longest running television shows'. Retrieved 2017-04-30.
  4. ^''Eat, Bulaga!' celebrates 38 years of fun and laughter'. Tempo - The Nation's Fastest Growing Newspaper. 2017-07-16. Retrieved 2017-09-02.
  5. ^'Philippine Daily Inquirer - Google News Archive Search'. news.google.com. Retrieved 2017-05-01.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Philippine_noontime_variety_television_shows&oldid=988919297'
Where in the world do we not know the exact time-slots of our favorite TV shows?
Only in the Philippines. Only here do viewers get told to watch such-and-such a program after such-and-such a program, or during an unseen program (which is really a “block”) called telebabad. I remember when I first heard of that word a few years ago during a Magpakailanman advertisement: “Watch Magpakailanman after Telebabad.” I remember asking myself, “Telebabad? What show is that? How come I never see it?”
Or what about the daytime soap, Leya? I do not get to watch at noontime often, but I decided to take a look one time to see the premiere telecast. What did the advertisement tell me? “Watch for it after DaisySiyete (or whatever show that was).” What? I didn’t even know the time-slot of that one. How was I supposed to know?
Where in the world do supposedly 30 minute shows run for 45 minutes or even more? Where else are news programs capable of extending themselves to 2 hours just to pester the rival network?
Only in the Philippines. Only here has the Goddess of Discipline and Good Sense totally gone and taken all her blessings with her. You cannot tell when exactly a show will start. You cannot tell when it will end. To make sure you catch a specific program, you have to sit through two others before it, it seems. You can’t look at the clock and say, “Oh, Darna na!” I remember ONCE I turned on the TV late since usually, at that time, Extra Challenge was still on. But it turned out that Mulawin aired early that time to give way for a New Year’s Eve special. Just like that. No word, no warning.
And remember when both TV Patrol and 24 Oras went super, mega overtime when they interviewed Mrs. Susan Roces-Poe during FPJ’s wake? That was really the latter show’s fault, if I recall, because they were supposed to “share” the interview with the other networks but since they were first, they decided to make life miserable for the rival news program by making them wait for an hour. I think their interview of Roces ate up ¾ of their airtime that night. Of course, TV Patrol was not to be outdone. I think Mulawin and other shows were delayed by about 2 hours because of that.
And where in the Philippines do the networks jumble their programs faster than a gambler shuffles cards?
One week it is this, next week it is that. For once, ABS-CBN did something I liked: those guys moved their primetime news show to the 6 o’clock slot. I was impressed because their shows always finished in time---for a week. Then next week, it went back to 6:30 and so on. And don’t blink! The show you watch at such and such a time can be gone the next day! No joke!
It’s this kind of undisciplined programming that needs to change. It’s as if the AGB Overnight Ratings were Holy Writ. A lightning that strikes from heaven bringing tele-damnation if you don’t act fast enough. Look at what happened to NAKS and Bubble Gang Jr. If my memory serves me well, the former was only slightly behind Goin’ Bulilit when GMA 7 sacked the show and replaced it with its own hastily and ill- prepared child sitcom. Everyone is in such a hurry to demolish everyone else. The TV Ratings have become to the networks what the stock market is to businessmen.
Of course, the ratings matter. That’s how you tell what the viewers want. But does that give them a license to drive us crazy and ruin our day while still making us pay in the process? They can’t even tell us when exactly a particular show is going to air, and for how long. Who are they making a fool of? I really wish that there’d be more superpower TV networks. Maybe then these two giants would come to their senses.
And by the way, it’s such a stupid move to insert Attic Cat before the telefantasya series. What a joke. And they told us once that they moved the two shows to an earlier time-slot for the sake of young viewers who need to go to school. Yeah right. Then why did they do this in the middle of the school season?