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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ion_television.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''Positively Entertaining'']]
In 1998, Lowell "Bud" Paxson (most famous for unleashing the ''Creator/HomeShoppingNetwork'' on America's credit cards) established PAX as the seventh commercial broadcast television network in the United States. Paxson, himself a [[MoralGuardians born-again Christian]] felt that the major networks were too raunchy and violent, and wanted PAX to be TheMoralSubstitute. Despite airing a few notable original dramas (such as ''Doc'', which starred Billy Ray Cyrus, and ''Series/SueThomasFBEye''), it didn't take off.

A problem that dogged PAX from day one was that its initial station roster was descended from PAX's spiritual predecessor, a network named "inTV", also owned by Paxson, whose entire schedule consisted of {{infomercial}}s [[note]](mostly the infamous Alumaloy infomercial, produced for approximately $6.47 and a couple bus tokens)[[/note]]. In addition, PAX was made up mostly of second-string independent stations purchased by Paxson which either carried religious programming or didn't step up their game with the rise of Creator/{{Fox}}, Creator/{{UPN}}, and Creator/TheWB in the last 15 years and lagged behind everybody else. Most of these stations were high on the UHF dial and weren't licensed to the largest city in their market [[note]](for example, the UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC market needed two PAX stations to make it in: one in West Virginia, the other in Virginia)[[/note]]. And like its predecessor, Pat Robertson's The Family Channel, PAX promoted itself as a family network but its programming skewed much older than the coveted 18-34 demographic most networks crave. In addition to the infomercials and rare original series, most of the schedule consisted of (often {{Bowdlerise}}d) reruns of older programs like ''Series/RemingtonSteele'', ''Series/ScarecrowAndMrsKing'', and ''Series/{{Bonanza}}''; public-domain movies; and several GameShows (including the third incarnations of ''Series/SupermarketSweep'' and ''Series/ShopTilYouDrop''). Most of these programs were also carried on The Family Channel prior to its acquisition by Fox and its subsequent revamp as Fox Family (it is now Disney-owned Creator/{{Freeform}}).

They at one point formed an alliance of sorts with Creator/{{NBC}} (they had acquired a 32% stake in Paxson Communications in 1999)- NBC and Pax would share some programming, and certain affiliates would provide engineering and back-office services for local Pax stations; in addition, most NBC affiliates would also rebroadcast their newscasts on the area Pax station (and in some cases, produce exclusive newscasts- WKYC-3, the NBC station for UsefulNotes/{{Cleveland}}, would produce a newscast for the Pax station's area of license, Akron, branded as "Channel 23 News"[[note]]This was because said Akron station used to be that city's Creator/{{ABC}} affiliate but eventually had to give it up because of Cleveland's ABC station, WEWS finally succeeding at a decades-long campaign to strip that station of their ABC affiliation and become the exclusive ABC affiliate for the region. The newscast was retained mainly to keep some form of Akron news on the air.[[/note]])

However, the NBC/Pax partnership was problematic, to say the least. Paxson was hoping to merge with NBC, but NBC was looking to buy Creator/{{Telemundo}} instead; in late 2001, Paxson sued NBC to prevent that from happening. The courts sided with NBC and the Telemundo acquisition went without a hitch. Around this time, Paxson began to bleed money and cut back on original programs while increasing infomercials; by 2003, Pax was operating 5-6½ hours a day when they ''weren't'' airing infomercials, infuriating NBC and local cable providers. In November 2005, NBC divested its minority stake in Paxson.

The network [[NetworkDeath changed its name]] to "i" (for "independent", as it intended to give small producers a platform to air their programming) in 2005 (ending their programming deal and newscast deals with NBC at the same time). The "i" era schedule still consisted mainly of {{infomercial}}s; an industry RunningGag was that the "i" name stood for "infomercial", and the only show to result out of the "independent programming" initiative was ''Palmetto Pointe'', a naked ''Series/DawsonsCreek'' ripoff that only had a few episodes (because it had low ratings and bled money) whose only difference was that it was set in Charleston, South Carolina and shamelessly promoted South Carolina tourism and Cheerwine. The rest of the schedule is made up of movies, overnight and Sunday morning religious programming, and reruns of various shows, mostly in the CriminalProcedural genre. In the same year, the content editing stopped (except for certain movies which have to meet [[MediaWatchdog FCC]] regulations; usually the default 'TV cut' is now taken) when Paxson left the network; it might shock viewers who remember the old PAX to see ''Film/{{Scarface 1983}}'' on a network that was formerly home to ''Promised Land'' and ''Hope Island''.

Ion Television would adapt its current name in 2007. While the network's programming remained largely unchanged at the time, the infomercial block, which formerly made up 2/3 of i's broadcast day, is down now to 6-8 hours per day, par for the course with many cable networks. Today, Ion's programming is predominately made up of all-day marathons of one-or-two crime dramas. In 2013, for instance, they seemed to fixate on ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'' (gaining the rights to [[Series/LawAndOrder the mothership]] and ''[[Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit Special Victims Unit]]'' by 2016), ''Series/{{Psych}}'' and ''Series/CriminalMinds''. Clearly, this strategy has worked; as of 2019, Ion regularly outrates Creator/TheCW and Creator/MyNetworkTV in total viewership, something Pax could never do to to either UPN or The WB.

Outside of reruns, they had aired new episodes of ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'' as part of a unique deal with Creator/{{CBS}} to air the series outside the summer months. In March 2012, they signed a deal to air Arena Football League games, and later that October, premiered The C-Level Wrestling/{{WWE}} ''[[Wrestling/WWEMainEvent Main Event]]'' (The show would move to the WWE Network in 2014). In 2017, Ion would pick up exclusive broadcast rights to the [[Creator/GlobalTelevisionNetwork Global TV]] detective series ''Private Eyes''.

Prior to Ion Media's acquisition by the E. W. Scripps Company, The network operated three digital subchannels until February 28, 2021. The first two being Ion Plus, which carries more of the same (prior to July 2019, it was called Ion Life and showed health programs), and Creator/{{Qubo}}, with children's entertainment on its stations. Both subchannels have more feature programming than the main feed, with the latter also having aired on some Creator/{{NBC}} and Telemundo stations (it was created in conjunction with [=NBCUniversal=], which owns the aforementioned networks, though since the Comcast deal where PBS Kids Sprout joined the NBC family, their programming became the new NBC EdutainmentShow block in July 2012). A remnant subchannel of the Paxson era, The Worship Network [[note]](which carried a FunForSome format of nature scenery and light music combined with Bible verses projected on the screen)[[/note]], left the Ion airwaves in January 2010 but remained on some satellite systems until 2013. [=DirecTV=] and some Comcast systems [[note]]In markets where ION doesn't have a over-the-air station[[/note]] air an infomercial-free version of the main Ion feed, a reaction to threats of the network being dropped by the both of them.

In 2012, a network called Shop TV began to air on the network's fourth subchannel, which soon devolved into 24/7 infomercials and was ignored by everyone but the [[MoneyDearBoy Ion accounting department]]. In August 2013, Ion and QVC came to an agreement to carry that shopping network on their fifth digital subchannel, finishing a year where that formerly cable-only network now is carried on broadcast television in some form. Finally it all came back to Bud Paxson's first creation when a couple months later, HSN was added to Ion's sixth subchannel.

As of 2016, Ion began to open up to affiliating with traditional commercial stations via digital subchannel in order to get their signal on the air in markets where getting a new station on the air was impossible. This didn't come with the subchannels, but it helps Ion and those stations thanks to the network establishing a quality schedule that was far from the lows it had in 2005.

On September 24, 2020, it was announced that Ion and its parent company would be acquired by the E. W. Scripps Company, a TV station owner with a growing national network portfolio, in a deal funded in part by Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway. The deal closed on January 7, 2021, after which the Ion owned-and-operated stations kept by Scripps became sister stations to some established Scripps-owned network affiliates. On February 28, 2021, Ion Plus, Ion Shop, and Qubo went off the air to make way for sister networks owned by now-sister company Katz Broadcasting.

In February 2022, Ion took over Creator/CourtTV Mystery, changing it to Creator/IonMystery. The lineup remained the same, however, and most markets keep it under the same channel number.

Not to be confused with the manga ''Manga/{{ION}}'', the play by Euripides, the Saturn car model, or the chemical entity. A company called "Positive Ions" with nothing to do with television filed suit against the network's name, but was [[FrivolousLawsuit laughed out of court]].

----
!!Main Channel Current Programming:
* ''Series/BlueBloods''
* ''Series/ChicagoFire''
* ''Series/ChicagoPD''
* ''Series/CriminalMinds''
* ''Series/HawaiiFive0''
* ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit''
* ''Series/{{NCIS}}''
* ''Series/NCISLosAngeles''
* ''Series/NCISNewOrleans''

!!Former programming:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Fiction]]
* ''Body and Soul'' (2002-03, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Doc'' (2001-04, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Durham County'' (2007-10)
* ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'' ([[http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110125006261/en/ION-Television-Acquires-Popular-Police-Drama-%E2%80%9CFlashpoint%E2%80%9D second half of Season 4 and entirety of Season 5]]; the first three-and-a-half seasons aired on Creator/{{CBS}})
* ''Hope Island'' (1999-2000)
* ''Series/JustCause'' (2002-03, with repeats into 2004)
* ''Little Men'' (1998-99)
* ''Series/MysteriousWays'' (2000-02)
* ''Palmetto Pointe'' (August-October 2005)
* ''The Ponderosa'' (2001-02, with repeats in 2005-06; prequel of ''Series/{{Bonanza}}'')
* ''Private Eyes'' (2017-present)
* ''Series/SueThomasFBEye'' (2002-05, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Twice In A Lifetime'' (1999-2001)
* ''Series/YoungBlades'' (January-June 2005, with repeats into 2006)
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Game/Reality Shows]]
* ''America's Most Talented Kids'' (2004-05, moved from Creator/{{NBC}}; repeats of both aired into 2006)
* ''Animal Tails'' (2003-04)
* ''Balderdash'' (2004-05)
* ''Series/BeatTheClock'' (2002-03)
* ''Series/CandidCamera'' (2001-04, moved from Creator/{{CBS}})
* ''Dirty Rotten Cheater'' (January-April 2003)
* ''Ed [=McMahon=]'s Next Big Star'' (2001-02, remake of ''Star Search'')
* ''The Emeril Lagasse Show'' (April-July 2010)
* ''Series/FamilyFeud'' (2002-2008; reruns of Anderson, Karn and O'Hurley versions)
* ''Hollywood Showdown'' (January-November 2000, essentially a remake of ''Series/{{Jackpot}}''; moved to being a Creator/{{GSN}} exclusive)
* ''It's A Miracle'' (1998-2004, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Lie Detector'' (March-June 2005)
* ''Miracle Pets'' (2000-05)
* ''On The Cover'' (2004-05)
* ''Series/{{Pyramid}}'' (2004-05; reruns of ''Donnymid'')
* ''The Reel-To-Reel Picture Show'' (August-September 1998, with repeats into October)
* ''Series/ShopTilYouDrop'' (2000-02/2003-05, with repeats in 2002-03 and 2005-06; PAX also aired repeats of Lifetime and [[Creator/{{Freeform}} Family Channel]]-era episodes in 1999-2000)
* ''Series/SupermarketSweep'' (2000-03, with repeats into 2004; PAX also aired repeats of Lifetime episodes in 1999-2000)
* ''Series/TheWeakestLink'' (unaired Robinson episodes {moved from NBC} and syndicated episodes with George Gray)
* ''Totally Pets'' (2003-04)
* ''Series/TwentyOne'' (2000; moved from NBC, reruns plus un-aired episodes)

PAX is also known to have aired repeats of ''Born Lucky'', a Lifetime game show from 1992-93. Ion also owns (and holds) the original 1987-88 version of ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' and placed it in a 2005 "Viewers' Vote" on their website, but nothing ever came of it (a shame, too, since that version is relatively scarce).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
* ''Wrestling/WWEMainEvent'' (2012-14)
[[/folder]]
----

to:

[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ion_television.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''Positively Entertaining'']]
In 1998, Lowell "Bud" Paxson (most famous for unleashing the ''Creator/HomeShoppingNetwork'' on America's credit cards) established PAX as the seventh commercial broadcast television network in the United States. Paxson, himself a [[MoralGuardians born-again Christian]] felt that the major networks were too raunchy and violent, and wanted PAX to be TheMoralSubstitute. Despite airing a few notable original dramas (such as ''Doc'', which starred Billy Ray Cyrus, and ''Series/SueThomasFBEye''), it didn't take off.

A problem that dogged PAX from day one was that its initial station roster was descended from PAX's spiritual predecessor, a network named "inTV", also owned by Paxson, whose entire schedule consisted of {{infomercial}}s [[note]](mostly the infamous Alumaloy infomercial, produced for approximately $6.47 and a couple bus tokens)[[/note]]. In addition, PAX was made up mostly of second-string independent stations purchased by Paxson which either carried religious programming or didn't step up their game with the rise of Creator/{{Fox}}, Creator/{{UPN}}, and Creator/TheWB in the last 15 years and lagged behind everybody else. Most of these stations were high on the UHF dial and weren't licensed to the largest city in their market [[note]](for example, the UsefulNotes/WashingtonDC market needed two PAX stations to make it in: one in West Virginia, the other in Virginia)[[/note]]. And like its predecessor, Pat Robertson's The Family Channel, PAX promoted itself as a family network but its programming skewed much older than the coveted 18-34 demographic most networks crave. In addition to the infomercials and rare original series, most of the schedule consisted of (often {{Bowdlerise}}d) reruns of older programs like ''Series/RemingtonSteele'', ''Series/ScarecrowAndMrsKing'', and ''Series/{{Bonanza}}''; public-domain movies; and several GameShows (including the third incarnations of ''Series/SupermarketSweep'' and ''Series/ShopTilYouDrop''). Most of these programs were also carried on The Family Channel prior to its acquisition by Fox and its subsequent revamp as Fox Family (it is now Disney-owned Creator/{{Freeform}}).

They at one point formed an alliance of sorts with Creator/{{NBC}} (they had acquired a 32% stake in Paxson Communications in 1999)- NBC and Pax would share some programming, and certain affiliates would provide engineering and back-office services for local Pax stations; in addition, most NBC affiliates would also rebroadcast their newscasts on the area Pax station (and in some cases, produce exclusive newscasts- WKYC-3, the NBC station for UsefulNotes/{{Cleveland}}, would produce a newscast for the Pax station's area of license, Akron, branded as "Channel 23 News"[[note]]This was because said Akron station used to be that city's Creator/{{ABC}} affiliate but eventually had to give it up because of Cleveland's ABC station, WEWS finally succeeding at a decades-long campaign to strip that station of their ABC affiliation and become the exclusive ABC affiliate for the region. The newscast was retained mainly to keep some form of Akron news on the air.[[/note]])

However, the NBC/Pax partnership was problematic, to say the least. Paxson was hoping to merge with NBC, but NBC was looking to buy Creator/{{Telemundo}} instead; in late 2001, Paxson sued NBC to prevent that from happening. The courts sided with NBC and the Telemundo acquisition went without a hitch. Around this time, Paxson began to bleed money and cut back on original programs while increasing infomercials; by 2003, Pax was operating 5-6½ hours a day when they ''weren't'' airing infomercials, infuriating NBC and local cable providers. In November 2005, NBC divested its minority stake in Paxson.

The network [[NetworkDeath changed its name]] to "i" (for "independent", as it intended to give small producers a platform to air their programming) in 2005 (ending their programming deal and newscast deals with NBC at the same time). The "i" era schedule still consisted mainly of {{infomercial}}s; an industry RunningGag was that the "i" name stood for "infomercial", and the only show to result out of the "independent programming" initiative was ''Palmetto Pointe'', a naked ''Series/DawsonsCreek'' ripoff that only had a few episodes (because it had low ratings and bled money) whose only difference was that it was set in Charleston, South Carolina and shamelessly promoted South Carolina tourism and Cheerwine. The rest of the schedule is made up of movies, overnight and Sunday morning religious programming, and reruns of various shows, mostly in the CriminalProcedural genre. In the same year, the content editing stopped (except for certain movies which have to meet [[MediaWatchdog FCC]] regulations; usually the default 'TV cut' is now taken) when Paxson left the network; it might shock viewers who remember the old PAX to see ''Film/{{Scarface 1983}}'' on a network that was formerly home to ''Promised Land'' and ''Hope Island''.

Ion Television would adapt its current name in 2007. While the network's programming remained largely unchanged at the time, the infomercial block, which formerly made up 2/3 of i's broadcast day, is down now to 6-8 hours per day, par for the course with many cable networks. Today, Ion's programming is predominately made up of all-day marathons of one-or-two crime dramas. In 2013, for instance, they seemed to fixate on ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'' (gaining the rights to [[Series/LawAndOrder the mothership]] and ''[[Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit Special Victims Unit]]'' by 2016), ''Series/{{Psych}}'' and ''Series/CriminalMinds''. Clearly, this strategy has worked; as of 2019, Ion regularly outrates Creator/TheCW and Creator/MyNetworkTV in total viewership, something Pax could never do to to either UPN or The WB.

Outside of reruns, they had aired new episodes of ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'' as part of a unique deal with Creator/{{CBS}} to air the series outside the summer months. In March 2012, they signed a deal to air Arena Football League games, and later that October, premiered The C-Level Wrestling/{{WWE}} ''[[Wrestling/WWEMainEvent Main Event]]'' (The show would move to the WWE Network in 2014). In 2017, Ion would pick up exclusive broadcast rights to the [[Creator/GlobalTelevisionNetwork Global TV]] detective series ''Private Eyes''.

Prior to Ion Media's acquisition by the E. W. Scripps Company, The network operated three digital subchannels until February 28, 2021. The first two being Ion Plus, which carries more of the same (prior to July 2019, it was called Ion Life and showed health programs), and Creator/{{Qubo}}, with children's entertainment on its stations. Both subchannels have more feature programming than the main feed, with the latter also having aired on some Creator/{{NBC}} and Telemundo stations (it was created in conjunction with [=NBCUniversal=], which owns the aforementioned networks, though since the Comcast deal where PBS Kids Sprout joined the NBC family, their programming became the new NBC EdutainmentShow block in July 2012). A remnant subchannel of the Paxson era, The Worship Network [[note]](which carried a FunForSome format of nature scenery and light music combined with Bible verses projected on the screen)[[/note]], left the Ion airwaves in January 2010 but remained on some satellite systems until 2013. [=DirecTV=] and some Comcast systems [[note]]In markets where ION doesn't have a over-the-air station[[/note]] air an infomercial-free version of the main Ion feed, a reaction to threats of the network being dropped by the both of them.

In 2012, a network called Shop TV began to air on the network's fourth subchannel, which soon devolved into 24/7 infomercials and was ignored by everyone but the [[MoneyDearBoy Ion accounting department]]. In August 2013, Ion and QVC came to an agreement to carry that shopping network on their fifth digital subchannel, finishing a year where that formerly cable-only network now is carried on broadcast television in some form. Finally it all came back to Bud Paxson's first creation when a couple months later, HSN was added to Ion's sixth subchannel.

As of 2016, Ion began to open up to affiliating with traditional commercial stations via digital subchannel in order to get their signal on the air in markets where getting a new station on the air was impossible. This didn't come with the subchannels, but it helps Ion and those stations thanks to the network establishing a quality schedule that was far from the lows it had in 2005.

On September 24, 2020, it was announced that Ion and its parent company would be acquired by the E. W. Scripps Company, a TV station owner with a growing national network portfolio, in a deal funded in part by Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway. The deal closed on January 7, 2021, after which the Ion owned-and-operated stations kept by Scripps became sister stations to some established Scripps-owned network affiliates. On February 28, 2021, Ion Plus, Ion Shop, and Qubo went off the air to make way for sister networks owned by now-sister company Katz Broadcasting.

In February 2022, Ion took over Creator/CourtTV Mystery, changing it to Creator/IonMystery. The lineup remained the same, however, and most markets keep it under the same channel number.

Not to be confused with the manga ''Manga/{{ION}}'', the play by Euripides, the Saturn car model, or the chemical entity. A company called "Positive Ions" with nothing to do with television filed suit against the network's name, but was [[FrivolousLawsuit laughed out of court]].

----
!!Main Channel Current Programming:
* ''Series/BlueBloods''
* ''Series/ChicagoFire''
* ''Series/ChicagoPD''
* ''Series/CriminalMinds''
* ''Series/HawaiiFive0''
* ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit''
* ''Series/{{NCIS}}''
* ''Series/NCISLosAngeles''
* ''Series/NCISNewOrleans''

!!Former programming:
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Fiction]]
* ''Body and Soul'' (2002-03, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Doc'' (2001-04, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Durham County'' (2007-10)
* ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'' ([[http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110125006261/en/ION-Television-Acquires-Popular-Police-Drama-%E2%80%9CFlashpoint%E2%80%9D second half of Season 4 and entirety of Season 5]]; the first three-and-a-half seasons aired on Creator/{{CBS}})
* ''Hope Island'' (1999-2000)
* ''Series/JustCause'' (2002-03, with repeats into 2004)
* ''Little Men'' (1998-99)
* ''Series/MysteriousWays'' (2000-02)
* ''Palmetto Pointe'' (August-October 2005)
* ''The Ponderosa'' (2001-02, with repeats in 2005-06; prequel of ''Series/{{Bonanza}}'')
* ''Private Eyes'' (2017-present)
* ''Series/SueThomasFBEye'' (2002-05, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Twice In A Lifetime'' (1999-2001)
* ''Series/YoungBlades'' (January-June 2005, with repeats into 2006)
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Game/Reality Shows]]
* ''America's Most Talented Kids'' (2004-05, moved from Creator/{{NBC}}; repeats of both aired into 2006)
* ''Animal Tails'' (2003-04)
* ''Balderdash'' (2004-05)
* ''Series/BeatTheClock'' (2002-03)
* ''Series/CandidCamera'' (2001-04, moved from Creator/{{CBS}})
* ''Dirty Rotten Cheater'' (January-April 2003)
* ''Ed [=McMahon=]'s Next Big Star'' (2001-02, remake of ''Star Search'')
* ''The Emeril Lagasse Show'' (April-July 2010)
* ''Series/FamilyFeud'' (2002-2008; reruns of Anderson, Karn and O'Hurley versions)
* ''Hollywood Showdown'' (January-November 2000, essentially a remake of ''Series/{{Jackpot}}''; moved to being a Creator/{{GSN}} exclusive)
* ''It's A Miracle'' (1998-2004, with repeats into 2006)
* ''Lie Detector'' (March-June 2005)
* ''Miracle Pets'' (2000-05)
* ''On The Cover'' (2004-05)
* ''Series/{{Pyramid}}'' (2004-05; reruns of ''Donnymid'')
* ''The Reel-To-Reel Picture Show'' (August-September 1998, with repeats into October)
* ''Series/ShopTilYouDrop'' (2000-02/2003-05, with repeats in 2002-03 and 2005-06; PAX also aired repeats of Lifetime and [[Creator/{{Freeform}} Family Channel]]-era episodes in 1999-2000)
* ''Series/SupermarketSweep'' (2000-03, with repeats into 2004; PAX also aired repeats of Lifetime episodes in 1999-2000)
* ''Series/TheWeakestLink'' (unaired Robinson episodes {moved from NBC} and syndicated episodes with George Gray)
* ''Totally Pets'' (2003-04)
* ''Series/TwentyOne'' (2000; moved from NBC, reruns plus un-aired episodes)

PAX is also known to have aired repeats of ''Born Lucky'', a Lifetime game show from 1992-93. Ion also owns (and holds) the original 1987-88 version of ''Series/{{Lingo}}'' and placed it in a 2005 "Viewers' Vote" on their website, but nothing ever came of it (a shame, too, since that version is relatively scarce).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Professional Wrestling]]
* ''Wrestling/WWEMainEvent'' (2012-14)
[[/folder]]
----
[[redirect:Creator.IonTelevision]]

Changed: 31

Removed: 474

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


In February 2022, Ion took over Creator/CourtTV Mystery, changing it to Ion Mystery. The lineup remained the same, however, and most markets keep it under the same channel number.

to:

In February 2022, Ion took over Creator/CourtTV Mystery, changing it to Ion Mystery.Creator/IonMystery. The lineup remained the same, however, and most markets keep it under the same channel number.



!!Ion Mystery Current Programming:
* ''American Greed''
* ''Born Behind Bars''
* ''Crime Stories''
* ''Crime Watch Daily''
* ''Series/{{CSI}}''
* ''Series/CSIMiami''
* ''Series/CSINewYork''
* ''Series/DaVincisInquest''
* ''Series/TheFirst48''
* ''Series/ForensicFiles''
* ''I Killed My BFF''
* ''Series/LawAndOrder''
* ''Series/{{Leverage}}''
* ''Murderous Affairs''
* ''Series/{{Scandal}}''
* ''Someone They Knew with Tamron Hall''
* ''Swift Justice with Nancy Grace''
* ''Series/UnsolvedMysteries''

!!Original series include:

to:

!!Ion Mystery Current Programming:
* ''American Greed''
* ''Born Behind Bars''
* ''Crime Stories''
* ''Crime Watch Daily''
* ''Series/{{CSI}}''
* ''Series/CSIMiami''
* ''Series/CSINewYork''
* ''Series/DaVincisInquest''
* ''Series/TheFirst48''
* ''Series/ForensicFiles''
* ''I Killed My BFF''
* ''Series/LawAndOrder''
* ''Series/{{Leverage}}''
* ''Murderous Affairs''
* ''Series/{{Scandal}}''
* ''Someone They Knew with Tamron Hall''
* ''Swift Justice with Nancy Grace''
* ''Series/UnsolvedMysteries''

!!Original series include:
!!Former programming:

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