Follow TV Tropes

Following

History ScrewedByTheNetwork / Anime

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Actually, Chiller had two Anime blocks. One of them was the Ani-Monday block which aired around my bedtime (I was in JH) and then they moved it to 5am


* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''Literature/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself was a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base after it lost carriage support in 2017, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.

to:

* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''Literature/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself was a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base after it lost carriage support in 2017, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks. Before that, some years earlier, they had an Ani-Monday block, which used to air at about 8-9ishpm and that ain't last long before they moved the timeslot to about 5am.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
This seems to be referring to the Cloverway dub of Magical Doremi that aired in Australia, which evidence suggests is a myth. There is no English dub of the series (neither the 4Kids or Singaporean dub) that seems to extend beyond the first season.


* ''[[Anime/OjamajoDoremi Magical Doremi]]'' was treated well in Australia for its first two seasons...until the show was suddenly taken off the air before the beginning of the Forte [[note]] Motto for those who follow the original [[/note]] season. Why? The later episodes of the show were too sexual in nature, so the show was banned.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* CITV has been somewhat awful at showing action cartoons without losing control of its bowels (''WesternAnimation/{{ReBoot}}'' was infamously canceled in mid-series for being "too violent"). ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' is the only action cartoon they didn't cancel before the strand "evolved" into its channel incarnation. ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' got to the second half of the Sakura Card arc before being yanked and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' only got three episodes of ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'' out of the gate before it suffered the same fate. Cardcaptors, at the very least, got to finish its run as filler for UsefulNotes/FormulaOne races and on GMTV.

to:

* CITV Creator/{{CITV}} has been somewhat awful at showing action cartoons without losing control of its bowels (''WesternAnimation/{{ReBoot}}'' was infamously canceled in mid-series for being "too violent"). ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' is the only action cartoon they didn't cancel before the strand "evolved" into its channel incarnation. ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' got to the second half of the Sakura Card arc before being yanked and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' only got three episodes of ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'' out of the gate before it suffered the same fate. Cardcaptors, at the very least, got to finish its run as filler for UsefulNotes/FormulaOne races and on GMTV.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

*''VideoGame/InazumaEleven'' had it hard in Poland. Cartoon Network originally aired the anime in 2012, but only the first 26 episodes were aired. Few years later TVP's children's channel TVP ABC in June 2017 began airing the series, where it proved to be quite popular. It was popular enough to make TVP ABC dub the entire original series, with new episodes premiering in August 2018. But when it came to ''Inazuma Eleven GO'' things got complicated. Another Polish channel Polsat Games, which had an anime block airing anime like ''Anime/DragonBallSuper'', acquired the rights to air the sequel series and they began airing the anime few days before TVP ABC finished airing the original and of course just like all anime on the channel, except ''Anime/DragonBallSuper'', Polsat Games aired it with VoiceoverTranslation, '''despite original series, having a proper dub'''. It didn't help that Polsat Games has a smaller availability than TVP ABC and other anime on the channel were made for [[{{shonen|Demographic}} different demographic]] than [[{{Kodomomuke}} Inazuma]]. As as a result Polsat Games' broadcast of ''Inazuma Eleven GO'' was a lot less successful and Polsat Games got rid of all anime, except ''Franchise/DragonBall'', with Inazuma leaving the schedule with the beginning of March 2022. Once, TVP ABC realized that Polsat doesn't have the rights anymore, they just got the anime back one year later.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''Literature/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself is a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.

to:

* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''Literature/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself is was a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base, base after it lost carriage support in 2017, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''LightNovel/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself is a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.

to:

* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''LightNovel/IsThisAZombie''), ''Literature/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself is a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.



* When Tetsuya Yanagisawa, Ichiei Ishibumi and Takao Yoshikawa were coming up with a plot for ''LightNovel/HighSchoolDXD [=BorN=]'', Yanagisawa did an about face and changed the storylines from Volumes 5 through 7 substantially to fit the twelve episode timeframe. This eventually led to Ishibumi and Yanagisawa mutually going their separate ways.

to:

* When Tetsuya Yanagisawa, Ichiei Ishibumi and Takao Yoshikawa were coming up with a plot for ''LightNovel/HighSchoolDXD ''Literature/HighSchoolDXD [=BorN=]'', Yanagisawa did an about face and changed the storylines from Volumes 5 through 7 substantially to fit the twelve episode timeframe. This eventually led to Ishibumi and Yanagisawa mutually going their separate ways.



* RCTV in Venezuela was legendary for the mistreatment of every anime series they had their paws on. They either stuck them on the 4-5 am Saturday slot, or began to air it and then stopped without reason after a week or so of episodes, just to be replaced by whatever Disney or Nickelodeon cartoon they were overmilking at the time. ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' managed to get six episodes aired in an acceptable weekday afternoon slot, before being interrupted by a news extra in the middle of the seventh episode. They heavily promoted ''LightNovel/SorcererStabberOrphen'' but never bothered to actually air it, leading to the meme "When RCTV premieres ''Orphen''" as a synonym of "When Pigs Fly" within the local fandom. The only series they treated remotely well was ''Manga/CandyCandy'' on its first run, when they promoted the final episode the same way they promoted their normal soap operas endings, and actually aired it on the announced day... after repeating the early cours of the series at least thrice before that.

to:

* RCTV in Venezuela was legendary for the mistreatment of every anime series they had their paws on. They either stuck them on the 4-5 am Saturday slot, or began to air it and then stopped without reason after a week or so of episodes, just to be replaced by whatever Disney or Nickelodeon cartoon they were overmilking at the time. ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' managed to get six episodes aired in an acceptable weekday afternoon slot, before being interrupted by a news extra in the middle of the seventh episode. They heavily promoted ''LightNovel/SorcererStabberOrphen'' ''Literature/SorcererStabberOrphen'' but never bothered to actually air it, leading to the meme "When RCTV premieres ''Orphen''" as a synonym of "When Pigs Fly" within the local fandom. The only series they treated remotely well was ''Manga/CandyCandy'' on its first run, when they promoted the final episode the same way they promoted their normal soap operas endings, and actually aired it on the announced day... after repeating the early cours of the series at least thrice before that.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** ZigZagged with ''Anime/FZeroGPLegend''. 4Kids gave it heavy promotion and advertising in the early days, only to suddenly dump it with no fanfare after only 15 episodes. In this case it wasn't really 4kids' fault; the anime, along with its [[RecursiveAdaptation tie-in games]], massively underperformed in Japan and wasn't doing much better overseas, so this was less a case of careless neglect and more abandoning a sinking ship.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Zero Context Examples: HOW were they screwed?


* There is an urban legend that ''Naruto'''s [[{{Macekre}} mangled corpse]] was found in a graveyard slot in the United Kingdom. No one attended the funeral because its parents would rather have dinner parties in ''Series/CoronationStreet'' and [[Series/EastEnders Albert Square]].



* ''Anime/{{Superbook}}'' (The original series) was screwed by TBN's Smile of a Child, while its CGI/2009 remake has been [[AdoredByTheNetwork adored]] by other religious networks.

Added: 32142

Changed: 1979

Removed: 32703

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Alphabetizing, + grammar & other fixes


* Creator/{{Syfy}}'s anime block was horribly in this funk. Starting off as a Monday anime block entitled "Ani-Monday" for famous anime movies and such, it later became "Ani-Tuesday" around the time their hit ''Monster'' ended. They then decided to play "motion comics," which almost makes "ani" look like it means nothing. Around the end of Ani-Tuesday, they changed their schedule to play ''Manga/ChronoCrusade'' and ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' Tuesday nights at 11 PM. Then, Thursday nights at 11 PM. Then..., Friday mornings at 2 AM? Finally, ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' was replaced with ''[[Anime/SpaceBattleshipYamato Star Blazers]]'' and, two weeks later, the block went on a "hiatus" that was later confirmed to be an outright cancellation.
* Creator/{{Animax}} Latin America --beginning with its NetworkDecay-- did this:
** ''Manga/BlackCat'' and ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'', originally getting decent time slots on Friday night, were moved to Saturday mornings at 8:00 AM for the second half of each series' run.
** It also killed any chances that they'll air more new ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'' episodes.
** ''Manga/SoltyRei'' was moved in a pretty bad time slot, airing after two live-action shows (''Series/TheMiddleMan'' and ''Series/{{Distraction}}'').
** To add shows that were supposed to air were ''Hell Girl'''s second season, ''Anime/GalleryFake'', ''Monkey Typhoon'', ''[[VisualNovel/PhantomOfInferno Requiem for the Phantom]]'', and ''Anime/DancougarNova''.
** By the time the channel relaunched as Sony Spin, anime as a whole was only aired at early morning hours. This changed in March 2012, when the remaining lineup was replaced by live action shows.
* Canada's Creator/{{YTV}} so completely screwed its Bionix block, it almost makes what Cartoon Network did to Toonami look minor in comparison. The block originally ran on Friday nights (with reruns on Saturday nights) and aired several anime series and Canadian shows. However, when ''Manga/DeathNote'' and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeedDestiny Gundam SEED Destiny]]'' ended, YTV failed to pick up any new shows to replace them with that had been picked up in the States (i.e ''Anime/CodeGeass'' or ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 Gundam 00]]''). As such, the block was significantly shortened and moved exclusively to Saturday nights, isolating more of its viewing audience. After ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' ended, they did pick up ''VideoGame/BlueDragon'', but the run was short, barely lasting 15 or 20 episodes. All they had left at that point was ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'', ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', and ''Manga/ZatchBell'', and they cut ''Zatch Bell'' a few months later. With only ''Naruto'' and ''Bleach'' left, they shifted what was left of the block to run from Midnight to 2:00 AM, pretty much killing off what was left of the audience. Not only that, but '''both''' series were in filler hell, meaning that nobody would really want to watch anyway. The cherry on top? Once the filler episodes ran out, they simply went back to reruns. That's right: no ''Shippuden'', and no ''Arrancar''. With that, YTV pretty much had the perfect excuse to cut mature anime altogether; to this day the only anime on YTV is kiddie fare.
** Despite YTV treating previous adaptations well, Anime/DigimonFusion [[https://imissbionix.wordpress.com/2014/03/17/digimon-fusion-is-airing-on-ytv/ appeared out of nowhere in March 2014 on a Friday morning with zero promotion]] and disappeared soon after. This is despite the show targeting the same crowd as ''Anime/BDamanCrossfire'', which also received no promotion but got a lot better treatment. The best bet for Canadian fans to watch the show was through a nearby [[Creator/TheCW CW]] affiliate that carried Creator/{{Vortexx}}, which was already months ahead of YTV's broadcast anyways.
** YTV's dub of ''Anime/FutariWaPrettyCure'' got a nasty case of this, with episodes only airing early on Friday mornings. To make it worse, YTV '''commissioned the dub'''.
** Back in the ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Anime/PrettyCure'' in its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.
** YTV used to air ''Diamond and Pearl'' on Friday nights, instead of Saturday afternoons. By the time ''Diamond and Pearl: Battle Dimension'' began airing, the channel was airing new episodes on Friday ''mornings'', at a time when the target audience was going to school.
* There used to be several other outlets in Canada that aired anime, such as ''Razer's''[[note]]What used to be the old [[Creator/{{MTV}} MTV Canada]], that is now the current [=MTV2=] Canada[[/note]] ''Kamikaze'' block and [[Creator/{{G4TV}} G4techTV's]] ''Anime Current'' - a direct counterpart to the ''Anime Unleashed'' block in the States. Nowadays, excluding MerchandiseDriven shows aimed at kids, it seems ''the entire Canadian broadcast industry'' wants nothing to do with anime. This means your only options are streaming services and DVD/Blu-Ray releases.
** That would change in 2019, when the French-language Frissons TV debuted their "L'heure du manga" block.
* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''LightNovel/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself is a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.
* CITV has been somewhat awful at showing action cartoons without losing control of its bowels (''WesternAnimation/{{ReBoot}}'' was infamously canceled in mid-series for being "too violent"). ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' is the only action cartoon they didn't cancel before the strand "evolved" into its channel incarnation. ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' got to the second half of the Sakura Card arc before being yanked and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' only got three episodes of ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'' out of the gate before it suffered the same fate. Cardcaptors, at the very least, got to finish its run as filler for UsefulNotes/FormulaOne races and on GMTV.
** ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' was probably one of the most poorly handled programmes at CITV. The series was treated with little regard as episodes were repeated to hell, shown once and never again, or just missed altogether. With ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'', CITV actually ''skipped'' most of the third arc and went straight into the fourth, meaning Kari and Gatomon appeared seemingly out of nowhere and Myotismon's fate went unknown (the arc was broadcast [[OutOfOrder a couple of years later]], albeit at a time when it wasn't really relevant anymore). ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02'' got even worse treatment, with the second half of the series being broadcast at a painfully slow, on-and-off rate until, three episodes from the end, CITV ''dropped the series and aired the first three episodes of ''Anime/DigimonTamers ''in its place!'' To add insult to injury, CITV never broadcast any more Tamers episodes (or even repeated the three they'd shown already), and [[MissingEpisode never broadcast]] the concluding episodes of Adventure 02, which they could've shown anyway had they not decided to replace them with Tamers episodes.



* A curious case occurred in Israel with ''Anime/CowboyBebop''. The then-budding cable comedy channel "Beep" bought the show during the height of anime fever in the early 2000s. The series was aired once, in an after-Midnight slot, presumably due to adult content. Then, after many requests by fans to run it again in a more manageable slot, it was re-aired on Friday mornings -- basically the worst time slot for ''any'' channel or show on Israeli television. It has not been aired since.
* The first Japanese TV run of ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' on TV Tokyo was botched due to overly violent content. Over three months in the spring and summer of 1998, only 11 episodes aired, not including episode 1. Pay TV service WOWOW picked up the series that fall, successfully airing the entire series.
* {{Creator/Aniplex}} was originally going to release ''Manga/DGrayMan Hallow'' on Blu-ray and DVD in Japan starting in September 2016. Unfortunately, issues with the production quality caused the release to be delayed indefinitely at the beginning of that month. By March 2017, Aniplex canceled the release.
* In Canada, ''Anime/DigimonDataSquad'' aired on Creator/{{Family Channel}}'s [[Creator/ToonDisney Jetix]] block, which aired from 6:03 AM through 7:45 AM Eastern on weekend mornings. Not a good slot for the kids the show was aimed at, nor older fans. It should be no surprise to expect this by now, but neither the show nor ''the block itself'' received any promotion.
** In fact, as pointed out above with Creator/{{YTV}}'s treatment of ''Anime/DigimonFusion'', Canada has NOT treated ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' very well in recent years. This could be due to the franchise as a whole not being as popular with kids in North America as it used to be, as well as [[Anime/DigimonAdventureTri recent]] [[VideoGame/DigimonStoryCyberSleuth attempts]] to target the PeripheryDemographic who grew up watching ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'' who, as again noted above, Canadian networks seemingly want nothing to do with.
* ''Anime/DigimonFrontier'' got very little exposure in the U.S. due to Disney giving it to UPN's ''[[Creator/OneSaturdayMorning One Too]]'' block, with [[InvisibleAdvertising practically nothing to promote it with]] as it was paired with ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'' to conclude the block. Most people who found out that the series existed in the first place did so by catching the reruns on [[Creator/{{Freeform}} ABC Family]] and later Creator/{{Jetix}}. Granted, this was the first ''Digimon'' series to air after Fox Kids Worldwide (Which controlled the block and produced the dub) was sold to Disney, and the latter only localized future ''Digimon'' entries out of a contractual obligation before they were given the opportunity to drop the license.
* Anime such as ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' and ''Anime/{{Robotech}}'' were screwed over in U.S. syndication when the episodes were shown in early morning dead time slots, mostly between 6:00 and 8:00 am.



** ''Anime/AfterWarGundamX'' suffered this in Japan when it got moved from 5:00 PM on Fridays to 6:00 AM on Saturdays; its 49-episode run was also cut down to 39 episodes. The only other time this happened to an entry in the franchise? The aforementioned ''Gundam 0079''.
* Anime such as ''Anime/{{Robotech}}'' and ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' were screwed over in U.S. syndication when the episodes were shown in early morning dead timeslots, mostly between 6:00 and 8:00 am.

to:

** ''Anime/AfterWarGundamX'' suffered this in Japan when it got moved from 5:00 PM on Fridays to 6:00 AM on Saturdays; its 49-episode run was also cut down to 39 episodes. The only other time this happened to an entry in the franchise? The aforementioned ''Gundam 0079''.
* Anime When Tetsuya Yanagisawa, Ichiei Ishibumi and Takao Yoshikawa were coming up with a plot for ''LightNovel/HighSchoolDXD [=BorN=]'', Yanagisawa did an about face and changed the storylines from Volumes 5 through 7 substantially to fit the twelve episode timeframe. This eventually led to Ishibumi and Yanagisawa mutually going their separate ways.
* When Creator/HideakiAnno left as director of the anime adaptation of ''Manga/HisAndHerCircumstances'' due to CreativeDifferences with Masami Tsuda, it was unable to be renewed for a second season, so flashback episodes had to be made.
* While ''[[VideoGame/PriPara Idol Time [=PriPara=]]]'' was successful and well-received among the target audience and fans, it fell victim to this trope due to Takara Tomy's four-year rule, where their anime series and their respective arcade games will usually not get renewed after four seasons.
* The UK treatment of ''VideoGame/InazumaEleven'' is, frankly, a Shakespearean tale of woe. In short, the game was released in English in Europe at the start of 2011; however, Nintendo of Europe decided the UK needed to air the dub of the anime first (in a country that is notorious for not giving anything more intellectual than ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' a look-in anime wise) and then the anime only aired for a month in the summer.
** ''Inazuma Eleven'' suffered from this in Latin America. For no apparent reason, the show was put in graveyard slots in different countries, sometimes at ''5:00 AM'', eventually pulling it out of the schedule. It seemed they were screwing the show on purpose. The show is very popular in Chile and Brazil, due to networks there giving it a decent schedule (i.e, it's aired in Chile around 7 AM, at 3 episodes a day rate). Some fans think it's because they're afraid of the "superpowered soccer" and the NostalgiaFilter about ''Manga/CaptainTsubasa'', which is '''very''' strong down the South, have something to do with the ExecutiveMeddling and ScrewedByTheNetwork.
* ''Manga/InuYasha'' had this treatment in Hungary. RTL Klub, the country's leading commercial TV network, possessed exclusive rights to airing the series, while Animax, a former anime station, had rights to airing those episodes that have already been shown on RTL. However RTL has abruptly canceled the series after episode 113. RTL received complaints from people shocked that
such content was handled as ''Anime/{{Robotech}}'' a Sunday morning cartoon, and ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' though RTL began crassly censoring the episodes and giving them the appropriate rating, more viewer letters and the media authorities forced them to cancel the series. It has also been suggested that they canceled it due to a conflict with their distributors. For a while, they did rerun unedited episodes, but no one watched them due to the impossible airtimes (3-4 AM) that constantly kept changing. Animax, to make up for not being able to air these episodes, tried acquiring rights for the ''The Final Act'', the finishing part of the series, but their distributor denied them the rights, with the alleged explanation that episodes 114-167 have to be shown first.\\\
More than half a decade later, fans are still pestering RTL to do something, but they refuse to continue airing the remainder episodes, even on their several sister-channels. Animax, meanwhile, was terminated after a heavy dose of NetworkDecay, since its daddy-network AXN no longer considers importing anime to be gainful, which in itself is a major screw-over for all potential anime releases in the country.
* You're Italia Uno, an Italian network whose main audience is made of young people and children, so everyday you broadcast various cartoons, mostly Japanese, in the after-lunch and pre-evening time slots, and you also have the obligatory Saturday-morning cartoon marathon. The latter two are directed to more young children, while the first is supposed to appeal to adolescents. Whenever a cartoon in the after-lunch slot manages to have a decent rating (despite the Mackering policy the channel applies to Japanese animation), what can you do to valorize it? Move it to one of the other two time slots, what else? The ratings decrease because children don't find appealing an anime created for an older audience and because on Saturday mornings adolescents are at school? [[SarcasmMode How could this possibly happen?]]
* ''Anime/KemonoFriends'' is an example of this [[LaserGuidedKarma that ended up being costly to the network in question]]. Completely out of the blue Kadokawa, one member of the group of companies that owns the rights of Kemono Friends franchise, fired Director Tatsuki and Studio Yaoyorozu, following this up with easily disproved claims that Tatsuki had "pirated" Kemono Friends to make commercials without permission and that Yaoyorozu had already resigned weeks beforehand. They then had the voice actresses apologize... to Kadokawa, for inconveniencing the corporation. Given that [[SleeperHit the anime was a hit]] primarily because of Director Tatsuki (who rewrote the entire script, redid all the 3D CGI models in his spare time for free, and did so after Kadokawa had written the entire series off as a loss and thus gave them no budget) fans
were [[{{Understatement}} somewhat less than pleased]]. After several hundred million tweets and Nico-Nico posts complaining, a rather significant letter writing campaign, as well as several huge names in the anime industry (including Kadokawa's parent company's CEO and the CEO of the largest TV network in Japan) speaking out about it publicly, Kadokawa's CEO made a public apology and has returned to the negotiating table with Yaoyorozu. In the end, [[https://twitter.com/fukuhara_ystd/status/945943082431758336 Yaoyorozu and Tatsuki will not return for the second season]].
* ''Manga/LoveHina'''s Latin American Spanish dub was
screwed by both the voice actors and the network ''at the same time''. While ''Love Hina'' is infamous for being extremely hard to dub, the Latin American Spanish dub suffered from being dubbed almost entirely by amateur voice actors (due of a voice actors' strike in Mexico after WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons' original voice actors were replaced with non-unionized actors). Due to the subpar performance of almost all the voice cast, and because it aired overnight, Cartoon Network pulled out the series after its first run.
* In the United States, ''Franchise/LoveLive'''s two seasons were seen on Mnet America, a ''very'' obscure South Korean music channel. [[Creator/NipponIchi NIS America]]'s English dub premiered on Friday, February 5th, 2016 at 6PM. Throughout its run, the show has been aired on Saturdays at 4PM, Sundays at 10 PM, and finally, weekdays at 11AM. Even the show's content rating was constantly in flux, going from TV-G to TV-PG and back again.
* ''[[Anime/OjamajoDoremi Magical Doremi]]'' was treated well in Australia for its first two seasons...until the show was suddenly taken off the air before the beginning of the Forte [[note]] Motto for those who follow the original [[/note]] season. Why? The later episodes of the show were too sexual in nature, so the show was banned.
* Creator/G4TV seemed to screw
over ''Anime/MagicalShoppingArcadeAbenobashi'' by airing it late at night over a course of eight days, not rerunning the whole series, then completely washing their hands of it. It's rumored they were uneasy about some of the content, as some things couldn't be edited out due to them being plot-important. No other show on ''Anime Unleashed'' got such cruel treatment.
* ''Anime/MegaManNTWarrior'' deserves a mention. On Creator/KidsWB, its time slot was constantly being shifted, and new episodes tended to be delayed. Sometimes it was cycling between new episodes and reruns without warning, delaying it for weeks before going back to new episodes, and then taking it off the air completely before deciding to air ''Axess'' (The second series). Then the show was moved to weekday afternoons, but at a time when most kids were still
in school, and then moved back to Saturday mornings before it was taken off the air. Not only did they not air the rest of the season, but the later seasons weren't even dubbed thanks to the cancellation.
* [[NoExportForYou Unlike other countries]], Spain '''did''' show ''Manga/MermaidMelodyPichiPichiPitch'' thanks to ''Clan TVE''. However, the show began airing in July and, while it was on a decent time slot (11:30 AM), they kept shuffling it a half-hour back or forward every other week, whenever the previous/next show ended its run. Then they changed its time slot on a ''Wednesday'', because it was October 1, meaning ''the entire schedule'' was rearranged without prior warning. If that wasn't enough, they changed it ''again'' one week and a half later, this time being shoved to 2:00 PM right against newscasting and ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. Even with these changes, they at least managed to show the previous episode.
* There is an urban legend that ''Naruto'''s [[{{Macekre}} mangled corpse]] was found in a graveyard slot in the United Kingdom. No one attended the funeral because its parents would rather have dinner parties in ''Series/CoronationStreet'' and [[Series/EastEnders Albert Square]].
* [[Bowdlerise/AnimeAndManga As previously documented]], Creator/FourKidsEntertainment's adaptation of ''Manga/OnePiece'', which first aired on the [[Creator/{{Fox}} FoxBox]], is '''infamous''' for its many content edits in their attempts to make the show kid friendly, as well as skipping the '''entire''' ''Little Garden'' and ''Laboon'' arcs. Despite their dub still being insanely popular at the time, it was removed from the block, right before the start of the Alabasta arc, and later moved to Creator/CartoonNetwork.
* Channel One (then known as ORT) was responsible for the biggest wave of Pokémania Russia had ever witnessed. The success was cut short when MoralGuardians interfered with crazy stories, shaming the government channel for brainwashing their kids. It was taken off the air, effectively killing the franchise in Russia forever. None of the subsequent attempts to relaunch broadcast on cable and OTA networks ever gained the same amount of success as ORT's first run attempt. The last network which attempted to schedule Pokémon was 2x2, which promotes itself as an ''adults-only'' network. This definitely takes away a big part of potential fandom, leaving only established grown-up fans who, for the most part, remember the ORT's original run - and they never wanted or cared about new episodes in the first place. Virtually all discussion on channel-affiliated social media pages on Pokemon is about asking the network to either show ORT's old episodes or bring back the original voice actors. Eventually they gave up after season 20.
* Creator/KidsWB in the
U.S. syndication when the , and [=TF1=] in France screwed around with ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'', airing as many new episodes they could, and then airing reruns for several months (often airing episodes OutOfOrder or certain ones to death) when they exhausted them. They did this for a few years until fans started to get annoyed and move on to other shows, while the anime itself declined in popularity.
* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter
were shown also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened during the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY XY]]'' arc: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions [=VAs=] outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Thus, the company took heed and the change didn't happen for ''Kalos Quest'', but then for ''XYZ'' they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Usefulnotes/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.
* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' has been treated like this by Malaysian network [=NTV7=] after Pokémania in the country died in the mid 2000s, when [=NTV7=] opted to stop bringing in the show after the anime had transitioned to the ''Advance Generation''. The ''Black & White'' and ''X & Y'' series mark the return of the series to Malaysian TV, but by then they've switched to being a Malay dub, switched network to [=TV9=], and skipped some episodes. Not only that, their main MO appears to be to only air Pokemon during the school breaks... And then preempting the series once the holidays are over, regardless of whether the season has ended proper. Thankfully, you can catch the show in English on Disney XD Asia if you have the Astro pay TV service and Disney XD doesn't drop episodes either. However, with the shutdown of Disney XD in Asia in 2020...
* Telecinco, another Spanish channel, used to broadcast Pokémon during the height of Pokémania, with millions of viewers. The executives didn't like people watching them so they started to broadcast it sooner and sooner and repeating episodes, all so they could kill any interest in the franchise. After they managed to put the series at 6AM, it slowly died.
* The Italian run of ''[[Anime/PrettyRhythmAuroraDream Pretty Star]]'' was treated fairly for 35 episodes...until it was replaced by ''WesternAnimation/MiaAndMe'' without warning.
* [[MeanwhileBackAtThe Meanwhile, back in Japan]]... After the 2011 Sendai earthquake, MBS, the station with first airing rights for ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'' refused to air the final two episodes for over a month, far in excess of what happened to any other series, some of which could well be argued to be less sensitive about the tragedy than the events of ''Madoka''. Though, this ultimately failed to screw the series, as it continued to be mind-bendingly popular, and the day it did air ended up causing retroactive symbolism: [[spoiler: It aired on Good Friday, and the titular character became the embodiment of hope.]]
* RCTV in Venezuela was legendary for the mistreatment of every anime series they had their paws on. They either stuck them on the 4-5 am Saturday slot, or began to air it and then stopped without reason after a week or so of episodes, just to be replaced by whatever Disney or Nickelodeon cartoon they were overmilking at the time. ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' managed to get six episodes aired in an acceptable weekday afternoon slot, before being interrupted by a news extra in the middle of the seventh episode. They heavily promoted ''LightNovel/SorcererStabberOrphen'' but never bothered to actually air it, leading to the meme "When RCTV premieres ''Orphen''" as a synonym of "When Pigs Fly" within the local fandom. The only series they treated remotely well was ''Manga/CandyCandy'' on its first run, when they promoted the final episode the same way they promoted their normal soap operas endings, and actually aired it on the announced day... after repeating the
early morning dead timeslots, mostly between 6:00 and 8:00 am.cours of the series at least thrice before that.



** When Creator/{{Toonami}} (back when it was a daytime [[UsefulNotes/BlockProgramming block]] on Creator/CartoonNetwork with anime series that were moderately-to-heavily edited for content) picked up the show two years after its cancellation from syndication, it got a better timeslot (3:30pm at first, then 4:00pm, which is when a lot of kids would already be home from school[[note]]unless they had extracurricular activities, detention, or a long ride home[[/note]]) and aired all the episodes beyond the first 65 (read: the episodes seen in ''Sailor Moon S'' and ''Sailor Moon Super S'', along with the movies) under a new dubbing studio.

to:

** When Creator/{{Toonami}} (back when it was a daytime [[UsefulNotes/BlockProgramming block]] on Creator/CartoonNetwork with anime series that were moderately-to-heavily edited for content) picked up the show two years after its cancellation from syndication, it got a better timeslot time slot (3:30pm at first, then 4:00pm, which is when a lot of kids would already be home from school[[note]]unless they had extracurricular activities, detention, or a long ride home[[/note]]) and aired all the episodes beyond the first 65 (read: the episodes seen in ''Sailor Moon S'' and ''Sailor Moon Super S'', along with the movies) under a new dubbing studio.



* There is tell of an urban legend that ''Naruto'''s [[{{Macekre}} mangled corpse]] was found in a graveyard slot in the United Kingdom. No one attended the funeral because its parents would rather have dinner parties in ''Series/CoronationStreet'' and [[Series/EastEnders Albert Square]].

to:

* There is tell The Swedish dub of an urban legend that ''Naruto'''s [[{{Macekre}} mangled corpse]] was found in a graveyard slot Anime/SailorMoon got this treatment from TV 4.
** During its first run (1996-1997) it aired most Sunday mornings as part of the program Junior, except for the third Sunday
in the United Kingdom. No month when they showed a movie instead. Episodes 15 and 18 were skipped because of damaged tapes. When Junior was canceled Sailor Moon was supposed to be part of its successor Lattjo Lajban... except one attended of the funeral executives decided it was too violent, leaving us with only 21 out of 88 episodes aired. After this followed two years of producers being dead-set on letting the license run out and fans fighting and pleading.
** In 1999 this paid off as the second run started from the beginning, airing once a week and finally showing episodes 15 and 18. Episode 4 was skipped because of MoralGuardians, but things seemed good until 2000... when episodes 34, 40, and 46 aired without the songs, episode 62's song got replaced with a few seconds of Heart Moving, episodes 49, 54 and 68 got skipped over, and the series suddenly stopped after episode 78.
** During its third run (2001) it ended up in time slots when the kids were in school. It didn't help that TV 4 kept shifting the time 5-10 minutes without telling, so anyone trying to record the episodes - especially the new ones - wound up missing chunks. Once again 34, 40 and 46 missed their songs, and once again 49, 54 and 68 were skipped because of "damaged tapes". Two weeks before TV 4's license ran out they finally aired episode 88... sans song.
** The kicker? Fans managed to find out the reason most of the songs were missing: TV 4 were worried people wouldn't understand the Japanese words. 49, 54 and 68 didn't get dubbed because the songs couldn't be removed.\\
In contrast, after Kanal 5 picked up the license they aired the dub 6 times in 2,5-3 years. They were even looking into buying the rest of the series before the license pull happened.
* ''Anime/ShinkansenHenkeiRoboShinkalion'', which pulled in good ratings and beat its contemporaries in ''Franchise/KamenRider'' and ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' in toy sales, was canceled in July of 2019 to make room for a program counting down to the 2020 Olympics, of all things; a move rendered moot after the games were postponed by the UsefulNotes/CoronavirusDisease2019Pandemic .
* The Creator/FourKidsEntertainment dub of ''Anime/SonicX'' had this treatment in Australia, having been aired on Channel 7 at 6:30 AM on Saturdays -- just before the "Saturday Creator/{{Disney}}" programming block started. It was blatantly OutOfOrder, thus rendering the entire third season utterly incomprehensible (due to its ongoing plot with few [[{{Filler}} filler episodes]]). There was next to no sign it was even on, and when its time slot was suddenly replaced with ''WesternAnimation/{{WITCH}}'' instead, nobody could tell if it was because the series had ended or not due to the random episode order[[note]]they would pretty much have to ''write down'' which episodes had been aired and consult a series episode guide somewhere to figure it out[[/note]]. Kids who got up early were ''very'' confused.
* ''Anime/{{Superbook}}'' (The original series) was screwed by TBN's Smile of a Child, while its CGI/2009 remake has been [[AdoredByTheNetwork adored]] by other religious networks.
* The ''Anime/{{Tamagotchi}}'' anime had this treatment on [=GO!=], thanks to their [[AdoredByTheNetwork network pet]] ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}''. They also kept pushing the schedule around and showing the same 26 episodes for a whopping 4 years.
** ''Tamagotchi Friends'', the dub of ''Tamagotchi! Yume Kira Dream'', replaces the theme song and insert songs and splits the episodes in three-minute parts. It doesn't even dub all the episodes (there are 49 episodes of ''Yume Kira Dream''; seven of these episodes were dubbed for ''Tamagotchi Friends'').
* ''Manga/TokyoMewMew'' (AKA ''Mew Mew Power'') was pretty much screwed over by Creator/FourKidsTV in close to a dozen foreign languages that were based off of their version. It was the highest rated show on their Saturday morning kids block at one time, but only 26 of the 52 episodes were dubbed into English, and only 23 were actually broadcast in the U.S. Apparently, 4Kids cared a lot more about merchandise sales than ratings. The show wasn't able to get a merchandise deal at all in the U.S.
because its parents would rather modest 52 episode run was too short compared to the giant franchises that dominated the toy shelves, and no licensor was interested in it. Despite the show's ratings success, 4Kids pretty much stopped caring about it since then. Episode 26 ended on a ''sharp'' cliffhanger, which 4Kids spared U.S viewers from by not showing the last 3 dubbed episodes. However, all 26 episodes of ''Mew Mew Power'' were broadcast in some parts of the world, namely the Anglophone countries, Latin America and in certain European countries.
** 4KidsTV also screwed up ''Anime/KirbyRightBackAtYa'' and ''Manga/ShamanKing'' by airing them at the same time that Kids WB ran ''Pokemon'' and ''Yu-Gi-Oh!''. The latter two were 4Kids' biggest cash cows, which means they basically sacrificed ''Kirby'' and ''Shaman King'' to the competing timeslots. They also initially skipped two episodes of ''Kirby'' (which, thankfully, weren't plot relevant); One of said episodes was likely skipped because they didn't want to show the title character getting [[DemonicPossession possessed by a demon frog]] and attacking the residents of Dream Land. The other one was preempted by sports and may
have dinner parties in ''Series/CoronationStreet'' specifically been sacrificed (4Kids having not particularly cared about episode order) due to, once again, the episode's plot being questionable[[note]]It was the episode where Escargoon's shell breaks, leading to a whole mess of NakedPeopleAreFunny jokes and [[Series/EastEnders Albert Square]].King Dedede wondering what snails look like under their shells.[[/note]]
* NHK made the anime adaptation of ''Manga/TsubasaReservoirChronicle'' more appealing to younger audiences as with ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura''; for the second season, Bee Train produced {{filler}} episodes. The lukewarm reception of the series, combined with CLAMP's discontent with the anime adaptation, resulted in the series being axed altogether.



* A curious case occurred in Israel with ''Anime/CowboyBebop''. The then-budding cable comedy channel "Beep" bought the show during the height of anime fever in the early 2000s. The series was aired once, in an after-Midnight slot, presumably due to adult content. Then, after many requests by fans to run it again in a more manageable slot, it was re-aired on Friday mornings -- basically the worst time slot for ''any'' channel or show on Israeli television. It has not been aired since.

* You're Italia Uno, an Italian network whose main public is made of young people and children, so everyday you broadcast various cartoons, mostly Japanese, in the after-lunch and pre-evening timeslots, and you also have the obligatory Saturday-morning cartoon marathon. The latter two are directed to more young children, while the first is supposed to appeal to adolescents. Whenever a cartoon in the after-lunch slot manages to have a decent rating (despite the Mackering policy the channel applies to Japanese animation), what can you do to valorize it? Move it to one of the other two timeslots, what else? The ratings decrease because children don't find appealing an anime created for an older public and because on Saturday mornings adolescents are at school? [[SarcasmMode How could this possibly happen?]]
* [[NoExportForYou Unlike other countries]], Spain '''did''' show ''Manga/MermaidMelodyPichiPichiPitch'' thanks to ''Clan TVE''. However, the show began airing in July and, while it was on a decent timeslot (11:30 AM), they kept shuffling it a half-hour back or forward every other week, whenever the previous/next show ended its run. Then they changed its timeslot on a ''Wednesday'', because it was October 1, meaning ''the entire schedule'' was rearranged without prior warning. If that wasn't enough, they changed it ''again'' one week and a half later, this time being shoved to 2:00 PM right against newscasting and ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''. Even with these changes, they at least managed to show the previous episode.
* Telecinco, another Spanish channel, used to broadcast Pokémon during the height of Pokémania, with millions of viewers. The executives didn't like people watching them so they started to broadcast it sooner and sooner and repeating episodes, all so they could kill any interest in the franchise. After they managed to put the series at 6AM, it slowly died.
* ''Anime/DigimonFrontier'' got very little exposure in the U.S. due to Disney giving it to UPN's ''[[Creator/OneSaturdayMorning One Too]]'' block, with [[InvisibleAdvertising practically nothing to promote it with]] as it was paired with ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfTarzan'' to conclude the block. Most people who found out that the series existed in the first place did so by catching the reruns on [[Creator/{{Freeform}} ABC Family]] and later Creator/{{Jetix}}. Granted, this was the first ''Digimon'' series to air after Fox Kids Worldwide (Which controlled the block and produced the dub) was sold to Disney, and the latter only localized future ''Digimon'' entries out of a contractual obligation before they were given the opportunity to drop the license.
* Canada's Creator/{{YTV}} so completely screwed its Bionix block, it almost makes what Cartoon Network did to Toonami look minor in comparison. The block originally ran on Friday nights (with reruns on Saturday nights) and aired several anime series and Canadian shows. However, when ''Manga/DeathNote'' and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeedDestiny Gundam SEED Destiny]]'' ended, YTV failed to pick up any new shows to replace them with that had been picked up in the States (i.e ''Anime/CodeGeass'' or ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 Gundam 00]]''). As such, the block was significantly shortened and moved exclusively to Saturday nights, isolating more of its viewing audience. After ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' ended, they did pick up ''VideoGame/BlueDragon'', but the run was short, barely lasting 15 or 20 episodes. All they had left at that point was ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'', ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', and ''Manga/ZatchBell'', and they cut ''Zatch Bell'' a few months later. With only ''Naruto'' and ''Bleach'' left, they shifted what was left of the block to run from Midnight to 2:00 AM, pretty much killing off what was left of the audience. Not only that, but '''both''' series were in filler hell, meaning that nobody would really want to watch anyway. The cherry on top? Once the filler episodes ran out, they simply went back to reruns. That's right: no ''Shippuden'', and no ''Arrancar''. With that, YTV pretty much had the perfect excuse to cut mature anime altogether; to this day the only anime on YTV is kiddie fare.
** Back in ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Anime/PrettyCure'' in its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.
** YTV used to air ''Diamond and Pearl'' on Friday nights, instead of Saturday afternoons. By the time ''Diamond and Pearl: Battle Dimension'' began airing, the channel was airing new episodes on Friday ''mornings'', at a time when the target audience was going to school.
** YTV's dub of ''Anime/FutariWaPrettyCure'' got a nasty case of this, with episodes only airing early on Friday mornings. To make it worse, YTV '''commissioned the dub'''.
** Despite YTV treating previous adaptations well, Anime/DigimonFusion [[https://imissbionix.wordpress.com/2014/03/17/digimon-fusion-is-airing-on-ytv/ appeared out of nowhere in March 2014 on a Friday morning with zero promotion]] and disappeared soon after. This is despite the show targeting same crowd as ''Anime/BDamanCrossfire'', which also received no promotion but got a lot better treatment. The best bet for Canadian fans to watch the show was through a nearby [[Creator/TheCW CW]] affiliate that carried Creator/{{Vortexx}}, which was already months ahead of YTV's broadcast anyways.
* There used to be several other outlets in Canada that aired anime, such as ''Razer's''[[note]]What used to be the old [[Creator/{{MTV}} MTV Canada]], that is now the current [=MTV2=] Canada[[/note]] ''Kamikaze'' block and [[Creator/{{G4TV}} G4techTV's]] ''Anime Current'' - a direct counterpart to the ''Anime Unleashed'' block in the States. Nowadays, excluding MerchandiseDriven shows aimed at kids, it seems ''the entire Canadian broadcast industry'' wants nothing to do with anime. This means your only options are streaming services and DVD/Blu-Ray releases.
** That would change in 2019, when the French-language Frissons TV debuted their "L'heure du manga" block.
* Creator/{{Animax}} Latin America --beginning with its NetworkDecay-- did this:
** ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'' and ''Manga/BlackCat'', originally getting decent time slots on Friday night were moved to Saturday mornings at 8:00 AM for the second half of each series' run.
** ''Manga/SoltyRei'' was moved in a pretty bad time slot, airing after two live-action shows (''Series/TheMiddleMan'' and ''Series/{{Distraction}}'').
** It also killed any chances that they'll air more new ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'' episodes.
** To add shows that were supposed to air were ''Hell Girl'''s second season, ''Anime/GalleryFake'', ''Monkey Typhoon'', ''[[VisualNovel/PhantomOfInferno Requiem for the Phantom]]'', and ''Anime/DancougarNova''.
** By the time the channel relauched as Sony Spin, anime as a whole was only aired at early morning hours. This changed in March 2012, when the remaining lineup was replaced by live action shows.
* Creator/KidsWB in the U.S., and [=TF1=] in France screwed around with ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'', airing as many new episodes they could, and then airing reruns for several months (often airing episodes OutOfOrder or certain ones to death) when they exhausted them. They did this for a few years until fans started to get annoyed and move on to other shows, while the anime itself declined in popularity.
* [[MeanwhileBackAtThe Meanwhile, back in Japan]]... After the 2011 Sendai earthquake, MBS, the station with first airing rights for ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'' refused to air the final two episodes for over a month, far in excess of what happened to any other series, some of which could well be argued to be less sensitive about the tragedy than the events of ''Madoka''. Though, this ultimately failed to screw the series, as it continued to be mind-bendingly popular, and the day it did air ended up causing retroactive symbolism: [[spoiler: It aired on Good Friday, and the titular character became the embodiment of hope.]]
* Creator/{{Syfy}}'s anime block was horribly in this funk. Starting off as a Monday anime block entitled "Ani-Monday" for famous anime movies and such, it later became "Ani-Tuesday" around the time their hit ''Monster'' ended. They then decided to play "motion comics," which almost makes "ani" look like it means nothing. Around the end of Ani-Tuesday, they changed their schedule to play ''Manga/ChronoCrusade'' and ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' Tuesday nights at 11 PM. Then, Thursday nights at 11 PM. Then..., Friday mornings at 2 AM? Finally, ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'' was replaced with ''[[Anime/SpaceBattleshipYamato Star Blazers]]'' and, two weeks later, the block went on a "hiatus" that was later confirmed to be an outright cancellation.
* ''Anime/MegaManNTWarrior'' deserves a mention. On Creator/KidsWB, its time slot was constantly being shifted, and new episodes tended to be delayed. Sometimes it was cycling between new episodes and reruns without warning, delaying it for weeks before going back to new episodes, and then taking it off the air completely before deciding to air ''Axess'' (The second series). Then the show was moved to weekday afternoons, but at a time when most kids were still in school, and then moved back to Saturday mornings before it was taken off the air. Not only did they not air the rest of the season, but the later seasons weren't even dubbed thanks to the cancellation.
* ''Manga/TokyoMewMew'' (AKA ''Mew Mew Power'') was pretty much screwed over by Creator/FourKidsTV in close to a dozen foreign languages that were based off of their version. It was the highest rated show on their Saturday morning kids block at one time, but only 26 of the 52 episodes were dubbed into English, and only 23 were actually broadcast in the U.S. Apparently, 4Kids cared a lot more about merchandise sales than ratings. The show wasn't able to get a merchandise deal at all in the U.S. because its modest 52 episode run was too short compared to the giant franchises that dominated the toy shelves, and no licensor was interested in it. Despite the show's ratings success, 4Kids pretty much stopped caring about it since then. Episode 26 ended on a ''sharp'' cliffhanger, which 4Kids spared U.S viewers from by not showing the last 3 dubbed episodes. However, all 26 episodes of ''Mew Mew Power'' were broadcast in some parts of the world, namely the Anglophone countries, Latin America and in certain European countries.
** 4KidsTV also screwed ''Anime/KirbyRightBackAtYa'' and ''Manga/ShamanKing'' by airing them at the same time that Kids WB ran ''Pokemon'' and ''Yu-Gi-Oh!''. The latter two were 4Kids' biggest cash cows, which means they basiclly sacrificed ''Kirby'' and ''Shaman King'' to the competing timeslots. They also initially skipped two episodes of ''Kirby'' (which, thankfully, weren't plot relevant); One of said episodes was likely skipped because they didn't want to show the title character getting [[DemonicPossession possessed by a demon frog]] and attacking the residents of Dream Land. The other one was pre-empted by sports and may have specifically been sacrificed (4Kids having not particularly cared about episode order) due to, once again, the episode's plot being questionable[[note]]It was the episode where Escargoon's shell breaks, leading to a whole mess of NakedPeopleAreFunny jokes and King Dedede wondering what snails look like under their shells.[[/note]]
* The UK treatment of ''VideoGame/InazumaEleven'' is, frankly, a Shakespearean tale of woe. In short, the game was released in English in Europe at the start of 2011; however, Nintendo of Europe decided the UK needed to air the dub of the anime first (in a country that is notorious for not giving anything more intellectual than ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' a look-in anime wise) and then the anime only aired for a month in the summer.
** ''Inazuma Eleven'' suffered from this in Latin America. For no apparent reason, the show was put in graveyard slots in different countries, sometimes at ''5:00 AM'', eventually pulling it out of the schedule. It seemed they were screwing the show on purpose. The show is very popular in Chile and Brazil, due to networks there giving it a decent schedule (i.e, it's aired in Chile around 7 AM, at 3 episodes a day rate). Some fans think it's because they're afraid of the "superpowered soccer" and the NostalgiaFilter about ''Manga/CaptainTsubasa'', which is '''very''' strong down the South, have something to do with the ExecutiveMeddling and ScrewedByTheNetwork.
* ''Anime/{{Superbook}}'' (The original series) was screwed by TBN's Smile of a Child, while its CGI/2009 remake has been [[AdoredByTheNetwork adored]] by other religious networks.
* ''Manga/LoveHina'''s Latin American Spanish dub was screwed by both the voice actors and the network ''at the same time''. While ''Love Hina'' is infamous for being extremely hard to dub, the Latin American Spanish dub suffered from being dubbed almost entirely by amateur voice actors (due of a voice actors' strike in Mexico after WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons' original voice actors were replaced with non-unionized actors). Due of the subpar performance of almost all the voice cast, and because it aired overnight, Cartoon Network pulled out the series after its first run.
* CITV has been somewhat awful at showing action cartoons without losing control of its bowels (''WesternAnimation/{{ReBoot}}'' was infamously cancelled in mid-series for being "too violent"). ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' is the only action cartoon they didn't up and out cancel before the strand "evolved" into its channel incarnation. ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' got to the second half of the Sakura Card arc before being yanked and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' only got three episodes of ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'' out of the gate before it suffered the same fate. Cardcaptors, at the very least, got to finish its run as filler for UsefulNotes/FormulaOne races and on GMTV.
** ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' was probably one of the most poorly handled programmes at CITV. The series was treated with little regard as episodes were repeated to hell, shown once and never again, or just missed altogether. With ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'', CITV actually ''skipped'' most of the third arc and went straight into the fourth, meaning Kari and Gatomon appeared seemingly out of nowhere and Myotismon's fate went unknown (the arc was broadcast [[OutOfOrder a couple of years later]], albeit at a time when it wasn't really relevant anymore). ''Anime/DigimonAdventure02'' got even worse treatment, with the second half of the series being broadcast at a painfully slow, on-and-off rate until, three episodes from the end, CITV ''dropped the series and aired the first three episodes of ''Anime/DigimonTamers ''in its place!'' To add insult to injury, CITV never broadcast any more Tamers episodes (or even repeated the three they'd shown already), and [[MissingEpisode never broadcast]] the concluding episodes of Adventure 02, which they could've shown anyway had they not decided to replace them with Tamers episodes.
* Creator/G4TV seemed to screw over ''Anime/MagicalShoppingArcadeAbenobashi'' by airing it late at night over a course of eight days, not rerunning the whole series, then completely washing their hands of it. It's rumored they were uneasy about some of the content, as some things couldn't be edited out due to them being plot-important. No other show on ''Anime Unleashed'' got such cruel treatment.
* RCTV in Venezuela was legendary on the mistreatment of every anime series they had their paws on it. They either stuck them on the 4-5 am Saturday slot, or began to air it and then stopped without reason after a week or so worth of episodes, just to be replaced by whatever Disney or Nickelodeon cartoon they were overmilking at the time. ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' managed to get six episodes aired in a acceptable weekday afternoon slot, before being interrupted by an news extra on the middle of the seventh episode. They heavily promoted ''LightNovel/SorcererStabberOrphen'' but never bothered to actually air it, leading to the meme "When RCTV premieres ''Orphen''" as a synonym of "When Pigs Fly" within the local fandom. The only series they treated remotely well was ''Manga/CandyCandy'' on its first run, when they promoted the final episode the same way they promoted their normal soap operas endings, and actually aired it on the announced day... after repeating the early cours of the series at least thrice before that.
* ''Manga/InuYasha'' had this treatment in Hungary. RTL Klub, the country's leading commercial TV network, possessed exclusive rights to airing the series, while Animax, a former anime station, had rights to airing those episodes that have already been shown on RTL. However RTL has abruptly canceled the series after episode 113. RTL received complaints from people shocked that such content was handled as a Sunday morning cartoon, and though RTL began crassly censoring the episodes and giving them the appropriate rating, more viewer letters and the media authorities forced them to cancel the series. It has also been suggested that they canceled it due to a conflict with their distributors. For a while, they did rerun unedited episodes, but no one watched them due to the impossible airtimes (3-4 AM) that constantly kept changing. Animax, to make up for not being able to air these episodes, tried acquiring rights for the ''The Final Act'', the finishing part of the series, but their distributor denied them the rights, with the alleged explanation that episodes 114-167 have to be shown first.\\\
More than half a decade later, fans are still pestering RTL to do something, but they refuse to continue airing the remainder episodes, even on their several sister-channels. Animax, meanwhile, was terminated after a heavy dose of NetworkDecay, since its daddy-network AXN no longer considers importing anime to be gainful, which in itself is a major screw-over for all potential anime releases in the country.
* The Swedish dub of Anime/SailorMoon got this treatment from TV 4.
** During its first run (1996-1997) it aired most Sunday mornings as part of the program Junior, except for the third Sunday in the month when they showed a movie instead. Episodes 15 and 18 were skipped because of damaged tapes. When Junior was canceled Sailor Moon was supposed to be part of its successor Lattjo Lajban... except one of the executives decided it was too violent, leaving us with only 21 out of 88 episodes aired. After this followed two years of producers being dead-set on letting the license run out and fans fighting and pleading.
** In 1999 this payed off as the second run started from the beginning, airing once a week and finally showing episodes 15 and 18. Episode 4 was skipped because of MoralGuardians, but things seemed good until 2000... when episodes 34, 40, and 46 aired without the songs, episode 62's song got replaced with a few seconds of Heart Moving, episodes 49, 54 and 68 got skipped over, and the series suddenly stopped after episode 78.
** During its third run (2001) it ended up in time slots when the kids were in school. It didn't help that TV 4 kept shifting the time 5-10 minutes without telling, so anyone trying to record the episodes - especially the new ones - wound up missing chunks. Once again 34, 40 and 46 missed their songs, and once again 49, 54 and 68 were skipped because of "damaged tapes". Two weeks before TV 4's license ran out they finally aired episode 88... sans song.
** The kicker? Fans managed find out the reason most of the songs were missing: TV 4 were worried people wouldn't understand the Japanese words. 49, 54 and 68 didn't get dubbed because the songs couldn't be removed.\\
In contrast, after Kanal 5 picked up the license they aired the dub 6 times in 2,5-3 years. They were even looking into buying the rest of the series before the license pull happened.
* The ''Anime/{{Tamagotchi}}'' anime had this treatment on [=GO!=], thanks to their [[AdoredByTheNetwork network pet]] ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}''. They also kept pushing the schedule around and showing the same 26 episodes for a whopping 4 years.
** ''Tamagotchi Friends'', the dub of ''Tamagotchi! Yume Kira Dream'', replaces the theme song and insert songs and splitting the episodes in three-minute parts. It doesn't even dub all the episodes (there are 49 episodes of ''Yume Kira Dream''; seven of these episodes were dubbed for ''Tamagotchi Friends'').
* The Creator/FourKidsEntertainment dub of ''Anime/SonicX'' had this treatment in Australia, having been aired on Channel 7 at 6:30 AM on Saturdays -- just before the "Saturday Creator/{{Disney}}" programming block started. It was blatantly OutOfOrder, thus rendering the entire third season utterly incomprehensible (due to its ongoing plot with few [[{{Filler}} filler episodes]]). There was next to no sign it was even on, and when its time slot was suddenly replaced with ''WesternAnimation/{{WITCH}}'' instead, nobody could tell if it was because the series had ended or not due to the random episode order[[note]]they would pretty much have to ''write down'' which episodes had been aired and consult a series episode guide somewhere to figure it out[[/note]]. Kids who got up early were ''very'' confused.
* The first Japanese TV run of ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' on TV Tokyo was botched due to overly violent content. Over three months in the spring and summer of 1998, only 11 episodes aired, not including episode 1. Pay TV service WOWOW picked up the series that fall, successfully airing the entire series.
* When it first aired in Hungary, ''Anime/YuGiOhGX'' was canceled after one season, along with a number of other kid-oriented anime series. Following the downfall of Creator/{{Animax}} Central Europe, owned by Sony, a station called Viasat6 began showing interest in anime, and in 2014 they redubbed ''GX'', airing its first two seasons. After some downtime, it was placed back into their midday animation block, leading viewers to think its third season would follow. Instead, in 2015, it was taken out of the block again, its reruns relegated to an early morning timeslot, with the station confirming that they won't be dubbing anime anymore. This raised suspicion among certain fans as this happened shortly after Sony had taken ownership of the channel. In reality, the decision came earlier -- the station wants to reach out to an older audience, whereas ''GX'' and their only other anime series, ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', was mostly watched by people in their late teens and late twenties.
* In the summer of 2015, Chiller, having already aired anime from sister network Syfy (see above), decided to air a two-hour block of anime from Creator/FUNimation. However, the InvisibleAdvertising, a time-slot of Wednesdays at midnight (a work night for most people within the target demographic, meaning they're usually asleep), a lineup mostly consisting of lower-tier series released during the collapse of the U.S. anime market (the most recent series in the lineup was 2011's ''LightNovel/IsThisAZombie''), and the fact that Chiller itself is a niche, non-HD channel with a very small subscriber base, all lead to the block being axed after only three weeks.
* The Italian run of ''[[Anime/PrettyRhythmAuroraDream Pretty Star]]'' was treated fairly for 35 episodes...until it was replaced by ''WesternAnimation/MiaAndMe'' without warning.
* ''[[Anime/OjamajoDoremi Magical Doremi]]'' was treated well in Australia for its first two seasons...until the show was suddenly taken off the air before the beginning of the Forte [[note]] Motto for those who follow the original [[/note]] season. Why? The later episodes of the show were too sexual in nature, so the show was banned.



** In the United Kingdom, the show only aired on Saturdays at 7:30AM and 7PM. To add insult to injury, the episodes with "The Sleepover" and "Yo-Kai Fidgephant" were skipped in this run due to their subject matter [[note]] The first for having the boys trying to watch a show with Next Harmeowny in swimsuits, and the second for being about a PottyEmergency, as Cartoon Network UK, for whatever reason, finds episodes of any show where a character suffers from one taboo.[[/note]] The show was dropped after episode 26 and was replaced with re-runs of ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime''.
* In Canada, ''Anime/DigimonDataSquad'' aired on Creator/{{Family Channel}}'s [[Creator/ToonDisney Jetix]] block, which aired from 6:03AM through 7:45AM Eastern on weekend mornings. Not a good slot for the kids the show was aimed at, nor older fans. It should be no surprise to expect this by now, but neither the show nor ''the block itself'' received any promotion.
** In fact, as pointed out above with Creator/{{YTV}}'s treatment of ''Anime/DigimonFusion'', Canada has NOT treated ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' very well in recent years. This could be due to the franchise as a whole not being as popular with kids in North America as it used to be, as well as [[Anime/DigimonAdventureTri recent]] [[VideoGame/DigimonStoryCyberSleuth attempts]] to target the PeripheryDemographic who grew up watching ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'' who, as again noted above, Canadian networks seemingly want nothing to do with.
* [[Bowdlerise/AnimeAndManga As previously documented]], Creator/FourKidsEntertainment's adaption of ''Manga/OnePiece'', which first aired on the [[Creator/{{Fox}} FoxBox]], is '''infamous''' for its many content edits in their attempts to make the show kid friendly, as well as skipping the '''entire''' ''Little Garden'' and ''Laboon'' arcs. Despite their dub still being insanely popular at the time, it was removed from the block, right before the start of the Alabasta arc, and later moved to Creator/CartoonNetwork.
* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' has been treated like this by Malaysian network [=NTV7=] after Pokémania in the country died in the mid 2000s, when [=NTV7=] opted to stop bringing in the show after the anime had transitioned to the ''Advance Generation''. The ''Black & White'' and ''X & Y'' series mark the return of the series to Malaysian TV, but by then they've switched to being a Malay dub, switched network to [=TV9=], and skipped some episodes. Not only that, their main MO appears to be to only air Pokemon during the school breaks... And then preempting the series once the holidays are over, regardless of whether the season has ended proper. Thankfully, you can catch the show in English on Disney XD Asia if you have the Astro pay TV service and Disney XD doesn't drop episodes either. However, with the shutdown of Disney XD in Asia in 2020...
* In the United States, ''Franchise/LoveLive'''s two seasons were seen on Mnet America, a ''very'' obscure South Korean music channel. [[Creator/NipponIchi NIS America]]'s English dub premiered on Friday, February 5th, 2016 at 6PM. Throughout its run, the show has been aired on Saturdays at 4PM, Sundays at 10 PM, and finally, weekdays at 11AM. Even the show's content rating was constantly in flux, going from TV-G to TV-PG and back again.
* While ''[[VideoGame/PriPara Idol Time [=PriPara=]]]'' was successful and well-recieved among the target audience and fans, it fell victim to this trope due to Takara Tomy's four-year rule, where their anime series and their respective arcade games will usually not get renewed after four seasons.
* {{Creator/Aniplex}} was originally going to release ''Manga/DGrayMan Hallow'' on Blu-ray and DVD in Japan starting in September 2016. Unfortunately, issues with the production quality caused the release to be delayed indefinitely at the beginning of that month. By March 2017, Aniplex canceled the release.
* When Creator/HideakiAnno left as director of the anime adaptation of ''Manga/HisAndHerCircumstances'' due to CreativeDifferences with Masami Tsuda, it was unable to be renewed for a second season, so flashback episodes had to be made.
* NHK made the anime adaptation of ''Manga/TsubasaReservoirChronicle'' more appealing to younger audiences as with ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura''; for the second season, Bee Train produced {{filler}} episodes. The lukewarm reception of the series, combined with CLAMP's discontent with the anime adaptation, resulted in the series being axed altogether.
* ''Anime/KemonoFriends'' is an example of this [[LaserGuidedKarma that ended up being costly to the network in question]]. Completely out of the blue Kadokawa, one member of the group of companies that owns the rights of Kemono Friends franchise, fired Director Tatsuki and Studio Yaoyorozu, following this up with easily disproven claims that Tatsuki had "pirated" Kemono Friends to make commercials without permission and that Yaoyorozu had already resigned weeks beforehand. They then had the voice actresses apologize... to Kadokawa, for inconveniencing the corporation. Given that [[SleeperHit the anime was a hit]] primarily because of Director Tatsuki (who rewrote the entire script, redid all the 3D CGI models in his spare time for free, and did so after Kadokawa had written the entire series off as a loss and thus gave them no budget) fans were [[{{Understatement}} somewhat less than pleased]]. After several hundred million tweets and Nico-Nico posts complaining, a rather significant letter writing campaign, as well as several huge names in the anime industry (including Kadokawa's parent company's CEO and the CEO of the largest TV network in Japan) speaking out about it publicly, Kadokawa's CEO made a public apology and has returned to the negotiating table with Yaoyorozu. In the end, [[https://twitter.com/fukuhara_ystd/status/945943082431758336 Yaoyorozu and Tatsuki will not return for the second season]].
* Channel One (then known as ORT) was responsible for the biggest wave of Pokémania Russia had ever witnessed. The success was cut short when MoralGuardians interfered with crazy stories, shaming the government channel for brainwashing their kids. It was taken off the air, effectively killing the franchise in Russia forever. None of the subsequent attempts to relaunch broadcast on cable and OTA networks ever gained the same amount of success as ORT's first run attempt. The last network which attempted to schedule Pokémon was 2x2, which promotes itself as an ''adults-only'' network. This definitely takes away a big part of potential fandom, leaving only established grown-up fans who, for the most part, remember the ORT's original run - and they never wanted or cared about new episodes in the first place. Virtually all discussion on channel-affiliated social media pages on Pokemon is about asking the network to either show ORT's old episodes or bring back the original voice actors. Eventually they gave up after season 20.
* ''Anime/ShinkansenHenkeiRoboShinkalion'', which pulled in good ratings and beat its contemporaries in ''Franchise/KamenRider'' and ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' in toy sales, was cancelled in July of 2019 to make room for a program counting down to the 2020 Olympics, of all things; a move rendered moot after the games were postponed by the UsefulNotes/CoronavirusDisease2019Pandemic .
* When Tetsuya Yanagisawa, Ichiei Ishibumi and Takao Yoshikawa were coming up with a plot for ''LightNovel/HighSchoolDXD [=BorN=]'', Yanagisawa did an about face and changed the storylines from Volumes 5 through 7 substantially to fit the twelve episode timeframe. This eventually led to Ishibumi and Yanagisawa mutually going their separate ways.
* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened during the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY XY]]'' arc: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions [=VAs=] outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Thus, the company took heed and the change didn't happen for ''Kalos Quest'', but then for ''XYZ'' they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Usefulnotes/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.

to:

** In the United Kingdom, the show only aired on Saturdays at 7:30AM and 7PM. To add insult to injury, the episodes with "The Sleepover" and "Yo-Kai Fidgephant" were skipped in this run due to their subject matter [[note]] The first for having the boys trying to watch a show with Next Harmeowny in swimsuits, and the second for being about a PottyEmergency, as Cartoon Network UK, for whatever reason, finds episodes of any show where a character suffers from one taboo.[[/note]] The show was dropped after episode 26 and was replaced with re-runs reruns of ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime''.
* In Canada, ''Anime/DigimonDataSquad'' aired on Creator/{{Family Channel}}'s [[Creator/ToonDisney Jetix]] block, which aired from 6:03AM through 7:45AM Eastern on weekend mornings. Not a good slot for the kids the show was aimed at, nor older fans. It should be no surprise to expect this by now, but neither the show nor ''the block itself'' received any promotion.
** In fact, as pointed out above with Creator/{{YTV}}'s treatment of ''Anime/DigimonFusion'', Canada has NOT treated ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' very well in recent years. This could be due to the franchise as a whole not being as popular with kids in North America as
When it used to be, as well as [[Anime/DigimonAdventureTri recent]] [[VideoGame/DigimonStoryCyberSleuth attempts]] to target the PeripheryDemographic who grew up watching ''Anime/DigimonAdventure'' who, as again noted above, Canadian networks seemingly want nothing to do with.
* [[Bowdlerise/AnimeAndManga As previously documented]], Creator/FourKidsEntertainment's adaption of ''Manga/OnePiece'', which
first aired on the [[Creator/{{Fox}} FoxBox]], is '''infamous''' for its many content edits in their attempts to make the show kid friendly, as well as skipping the '''entire''' ''Little Garden'' and ''Laboon'' arcs. Despite their dub still being insanely popular at the time, it Hungary, ''Anime/YuGiOhGX'' was removed from the block, right before the start of the Alabasta arc, and later moved to Creator/CartoonNetwork.
* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' has been treated like this by Malaysian network [=NTV7=] after Pokémania in the country died in the mid 2000s, when [=NTV7=] opted to stop bringing in the show after the anime had transitioned to the ''Advance Generation''. The ''Black & White'' and ''X & Y'' series mark the return of the series to Malaysian TV, but by then they've switched to being a Malay dub, switched network to [=TV9=], and skipped some episodes. Not only that, their main MO appears to be to only air Pokemon during the school breaks... And then preempting the series once the holidays are over, regardless of whether the season has ended proper. Thankfully, you can catch the show in English on Disney XD Asia if you have the Astro pay TV service and Disney XD doesn't drop episodes either. However, with the shutdown of Disney XD in Asia in 2020...
* In the United States, ''Franchise/LoveLive'''s two seasons were seen on Mnet America, a ''very'' obscure South Korean music channel. [[Creator/NipponIchi NIS America]]'s English dub premiered on Friday, February 5th, 2016 at 6PM. Throughout its run, the show has been aired on Saturdays at 4PM, Sundays at 10 PM, and finally, weekdays at 11AM. Even the show's content rating was constantly in flux, going from TV-G to TV-PG and back again.
* While ''[[VideoGame/PriPara Idol Time [=PriPara=]]]'' was successful and well-recieved among the target audience and fans, it fell victim to this trope due to Takara Tomy's four-year rule, where their anime series and their respective arcade games will usually not get renewed after four seasons.
* {{Creator/Aniplex}} was originally going to release ''Manga/DGrayMan Hallow'' on Blu-ray and DVD in Japan starting in September 2016. Unfortunately, issues with the production quality caused the release to be delayed indefinitely at the beginning of that month. By March 2017, Aniplex
canceled the release.
* When Creator/HideakiAnno left as director of the anime adaptation of ''Manga/HisAndHerCircumstances'' due to CreativeDifferences with Masami Tsuda, it was unable to be renewed for a second
after one season, so flashback episodes had to be made.
* NHK made the
along with a number of other kid-oriented anime adaptation of ''Manga/TsubasaReservoirChronicle'' more appealing to younger audiences as with ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura''; for series. Following the second season, Bee Train produced {{filler}} episodes. The lukewarm reception downfall of the series, combined with CLAMP's discontent with the anime adaptation, resulted Creator/{{Animax}} Central Europe, owned by Sony, a station called Viasat6 began showing interest in the series being axed altogether.
* ''Anime/KemonoFriends'' is an example of this [[LaserGuidedKarma that ended up being costly
anime, and in 2014 they redubbed ''GX'', airing its first two seasons. After some downtime, it was placed back into their midday animation block, leading viewers to the network think its third season would follow. Instead, in question]]. Completely 2015, it was taken out of the blue Kadokawa, one member of the group of companies that owns the rights of Kemono Friends franchise, fired Director Tatsuki and Studio Yaoyorozu, following this up with easily disproven claims that Tatsuki had "pirated" Kemono Friends block again, its reruns relegated to make commercials without permission and that Yaoyorozu had already resigned weeks beforehand. They then had the voice actresses apologize... to Kadokawa, for inconveniencing the corporation. Given that [[SleeperHit the anime was a hit]] primarily because of Director Tatsuki (who rewrote the entire script, redid all the 3D CGI models in his spare an early morning time for free, and did so after Kadokawa had written the entire series off as a loss and thus gave them no budget) fans were [[{{Understatement}} somewhat less than pleased]]. After several hundred million tweets and Nico-Nico posts complaining, a rather significant letter writing campaign, as well as several huge names in the anime industry (including Kadokawa's parent company's CEO and the CEO of the largest TV network in Japan) speaking out about it publicly, Kadokawa's CEO made a public apology and has returned to the negotiating table with Yaoyorozu. In the end, [[https://twitter.com/fukuhara_ystd/status/945943082431758336 Yaoyorozu and Tatsuki will not return for the second season]].
* Channel One (then known as ORT) was responsible for the biggest wave of Pokémania Russia had ever witnessed. The success was cut short when MoralGuardians interfered with crazy stories, shaming the government channel for brainwashing their kids. It was taken off the air, effectively killing the franchise in Russia forever. None of the subsequent attempts to relaunch broadcast on cable and OTA networks ever gained the same amount of success as ORT's first run attempt. The last network which attempted to schedule Pokémon was 2x2, which promotes itself as an ''adults-only'' network. This definitely takes away a big part of potential fandom, leaving only established grown-up fans who, for the most part, remember the ORT's original run - and they never wanted or cared about new episodes in the first place. Virtually all discussion on channel-affiliated social media pages on Pokemon is about asking the network to either show ORT's old episodes or bring back the original voice actors. Eventually they gave up after season 20.
* ''Anime/ShinkansenHenkeiRoboShinkalion'', which pulled in good ratings and beat its contemporaries in ''Franchise/KamenRider'' and ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' in toy sales, was cancelled in July of 2019 to make room for a program counting down to the 2020 Olympics, of all things; a move rendered moot after the games were postponed by the UsefulNotes/CoronavirusDisease2019Pandemic .
* When Tetsuya Yanagisawa, Ichiei Ishibumi and Takao Yoshikawa were coming up with a plot for ''LightNovel/HighSchoolDXD [=BorN=]'', Yanagisawa did an about face and changed the storylines from Volumes 5 through 7 substantially to fit the twelve episode timeframe. This eventually led to Ishibumi and Yanagisawa mutually going their separate ways.
* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this
slot, with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least station confirming that they won't be dubbing anime anymore. This raised suspicion among certain fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over as this happened during shortly after Sony had taken ownership of the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY XY]]'' arc: channel. In reality, the voice of Ash had moved decision came earlier -- the station wanted to Portugal reach out to an older audience, whereas ''GX'' and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not their only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having other anime series, ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', was mostly watched by people in the auditions [=VAs=] outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Thus, the company took heed their late teens and the change didn't happen for ''Kalos Quest'', but then for ''XYZ'' they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Usefulnotes/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.late twenties.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Up To Eleven is a defunct trope


** ''Tamagotchi Friends'', the dub of ''Tamagotchi! Yume Kira Dream'', takes it UpToEleven by replacing the theme song and insert songs and splitting the episodes in three-minute parts. It doesn't even dub all the episodes (there are 49 episodes of ''Yume Kira Dream''; seven of these episodes were dubbed for ''Tamagotchi Friends'').

to:

** ''Tamagotchi Friends'', the dub of ''Tamagotchi! Yume Kira Dream'', takes it UpToEleven by replacing replaces the theme song and insert songs and splitting the episodes in three-minute parts. It doesn't even dub all the episodes (there are 49 episodes of ''Yume Kira Dream''; seven of these episodes were dubbed for ''Tamagotchi Friends'').
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Canada's Creator/{{YTV}} so completely screwed its Bionix block, it almost makes what Cartoon Network did to Toonami look minor in comparison. The block originally ran on Friday nights and aired several anime series and Canadian shows. However, when ''Manga/DeathNote'' and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeedDestiny Gundam SEED Destiny]]'' ended, YTV failed to pick up any new shows to replace them with that had been picked up in the States (i.e ''Anime/CodeGeass'' or ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 Gundam 00]]''). As such, the block was significantly shortened and moved to Saturday nights, isolating more of its viewing audience. After ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' ended, they did pick up ''VideoGame/BlueDragon'', but the run was short, barely lasting 15 or 20 episodes. All they had left at that point was ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'', ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', and ''Manga/ZatchBell'', and they cut ''Zatch Bell'' a few months later. With only ''Naruto'' and ''Bleach'' left, they shifted what was left of the block to run from Midnight to 2:00 AM, pretty much killing off what was left of the audience. Not only that, but '''both''' series were in filler hell, meaning that nobody would really want to watch anyway. The cherry on top? Once the filler episodes ran out, they simply went back to reruns. That's right: no ''Shippuden'', and no ''Arrancar''. With that, YTV pretty much had the perfect excuse to cut mature anime altogether.

to:

* Canada's Creator/{{YTV}} so completely screwed its Bionix block, it almost makes what Cartoon Network did to Toonami look minor in comparison. The block originally ran on Friday nights (with reruns on Saturday nights) and aired several anime series and Canadian shows. However, when ''Manga/DeathNote'' and ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeedDestiny Gundam SEED Destiny]]'' ended, YTV failed to pick up any new shows to replace them with that had been picked up in the States (i.e ''Anime/CodeGeass'' or ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 Gundam 00]]''). As such, the block was significantly shortened and moved exclusively to Saturday nights, isolating more of its viewing audience. After ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' ended, they did pick up ''VideoGame/BlueDragon'', but the run was short, barely lasting 15 or 20 episodes. All they had left at that point was ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'', ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', and ''Manga/ZatchBell'', and they cut ''Zatch Bell'' a few months later. With only ''Naruto'' and ''Bleach'' left, they shifted what was left of the block to run from Midnight to 2:00 AM, pretty much killing off what was left of the audience. Not only that, but '''both''' series were in filler hell, meaning that nobody would really want to watch anyway. The cherry on top? Once the filler episodes ran out, they simply went back to reruns. That's right: no ''Shippuden'', and no ''Arrancar''. With that, YTV pretty much had the perfect excuse to cut mature anime altogether.altogether; to this day the only anime on YTV is kiddie fare.



** YTV's dub of ''Anime/FutariWaPrettyCure'' got a nasty case of this, with episodes only airing on Friday mornings. To make it worse, YTV '''commissioned the dub'''.
** Despite YTV treating previous adaptions well, Anime/DigimonFusion [[https://imissbionix.wordpress.com/2014/03/17/digimon-fusion-is-airing-on-ytv/ appeared out of nowhere in March 2014 on a Friday morning with zero promotion]] and disappeared soon after. This is despite the show targeting same crowd as ''Anime/BDamanCrossfire'', which also received no promotion but got a lot better treatment. The best bet for Canadian fans to watch the show was through a nearby [[Creator/TheCW CW]] affiliate that carried Creator/{{Vortexx}}, which was already months ahead of YTV's broadcast anyways.

to:

** YTV's dub of ''Anime/FutariWaPrettyCure'' got a nasty case of this, with episodes only airing early on Friday mornings. To make it worse, YTV '''commissioned the dub'''.
** Despite YTV treating previous adaptions adaptations well, Anime/DigimonFusion [[https://imissbionix.wordpress.com/2014/03/17/digimon-fusion-is-airing-on-ytv/ appeared out of nowhere in March 2014 on a Friday morning with zero promotion]] and disappeared soon after. This is despite the show targeting same crowd as ''Anime/BDamanCrossfire'', which also received no promotion but got a lot better treatment. The best bet for Canadian fans to watch the show was through a nearby [[Creator/TheCW CW]] affiliate that carried Creator/{{Vortexx}}, which was already months ahead of YTV's broadcast anyways.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened during the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY XY]]'' arc: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions VAs outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Thus, the company took heed and the change didn't happen for ''Kalos Quest'', but then for ''XYZ'' they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Usefulnotes/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.

to:

* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened during the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY XY]]'' arc: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions VAs [=VAs=] outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Thus, the company took heed and the change didn't happen for ''Kalos Quest'', but then for ''XYZ'' they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Usefulnotes/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened in Season 19: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions VAs outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Then they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Useful/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.

to:

* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened in Season 19: during the ''[[Anime/PokemonTheSeriesXY XY]]'' arc: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions VAs outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Then Thus, the company took heed and the change didn't happen for ''Kalos Quest'', but then for ''XYZ'' they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Useful/RioDeJaneiro, Usefulnotes/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* Like in the United States, ''Pokémon'' in Brazil had this with the fourth and fifth movies: the former came out in theaters three years after its American release, due to taking a while for Europa Filmes to purchase the rights, and the latter were also screwed by Buena Vista\Disney, who never officially released the movie, only broadcast it twice on Jetix in 2007 (at least fans [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes recorded that to ensure it keeps in circulation]]). Though what fans agree to be the ultimate screw-over happened in Season 19: the voice of Ash had moved to Portugal and thus recorded remotely. Once a new company took over the dub, they decided to do what had been done with Creator/GabrielRamos in the Latin American dub (who also changed countries and was forcibly replaced) and first tried to recast Ash, with outcry not only from fans, but the dubbing industry, even having in the auditions VAs outright refusing once they recognized what they were up for. Then they chose a radical approach, and moved the dub from Usefulnotes/SaoPaulo to Useful/RioDeJaneiro, finishing a 16 year run and not even warning the old cast beforehand.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Back in ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Franchise/PrettyCure'' in its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.

to:

** Back in ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Franchise/PrettyCure'' ''Anime/PrettyCure'' in its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Dewicking Anime/Pokemon, as the contents have been reorganized under Pokemon The Series.


** Back in ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'s'' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Franchise/PrettyCure'' in its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.

to:

** Back in ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'s'' ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Franchise/PrettyCure'' in its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.



* Creator/KidsWB in the U.S., and [=TF1=] in France screwed around with ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'', airing as many new episodes they could, and then airing reruns for several months (often airing episodes OutOfOrder or certain ones to death) when they exhausted them. They did this for a few years until fans started to get annoyed and move on to other shows, while the anime itself declined in popularity.

to:

* Creator/KidsWB in the U.S., and [=TF1=] in France screwed around with ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'', ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'', airing as many new episodes they could, and then airing reruns for several months (often airing episodes OutOfOrder or certain ones to death) when they exhausted them. They did this for a few years until fans started to get annoyed and move on to other shows, while the anime itself declined in popularity.



* The UK treatment of ''VideoGame/InazumaEleven'' is, frankly, a Shakespearean tale of woe. In short, the game was released in English in Europe at the start of 2011; however, Nintendo of Europe decided the UK needed to air the dub of the anime first (in a country that is notorious for not giving anything more intellectual than ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'' a look-in anime wise) and then the anime only aired for a month in the summer.

to:

* The UK treatment of ''VideoGame/InazumaEleven'' is, frankly, a Shakespearean tale of woe. In short, the game was released in English in Europe at the start of 2011; however, Nintendo of Europe decided the UK needed to air the dub of the anime first (in a country that is notorious for not giving anything more intellectual than ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'' ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' a look-in anime wise) and then the anime only aired for a month in the summer.



* CITV has been somewhat awful at showing action cartoons without losing control of its bowels (''WesternAnimation/{{ReBoot}}'' was infamously cancelled in mid-series for being "too violent"). ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'' is the only action cartoon they didn't up and out cancel before the strand "evolved" into its channel incarnation. ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' got to the second half of the Sakura Card arc before being yanked and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' only got three episodes of ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'' out of the gate before it suffered the same fate. Cardcaptors, at the very least, got to finish its run as filler for UsefulNotes/FormulaOne races and on GMTV.

to:

* CITV has been somewhat awful at showing action cartoons without losing control of its bowels (''WesternAnimation/{{ReBoot}}'' was infamously cancelled in mid-series for being "too violent"). ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'' ''Anime/PokemonTheSeries'' is the only action cartoon they didn't up and out cancel before the strand "evolved" into its channel incarnation. ''Manga/CardcaptorSakura'' got to the second half of the Sakura Card arc before being yanked and ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' only got three episodes of ''[[Anime/DigimonTamers Tamers]]'' out of the gate before it suffered the same fate. Cardcaptors, at the very least, got to finish its run as filler for UsefulNotes/FormulaOne races and on GMTV.



** In the United States, the show was [[AdoredByTheNetwork beloved]] by Creator/DisneyXD at first. By its third season, the series was dropped and was replaced with ''Anime/InazumaElevenAres'' in its weekend and weekday time slots alongside ''Anime/BeybladeBurstTurbo'' and ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}''.

to:

** In the United States, the show was [[AdoredByTheNetwork beloved]] by Creator/DisneyXD at first. By its third season, the series was dropped and was replaced with ''Anime/InazumaElevenAres'' in its weekend and weekday time slots alongside ''Anime/BeybladeBurstTurbo'' and ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}''.''Anime/PokemonTheSeries''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* Depending on what local station aired ''Anime/SailorMoon'', viewers could see it as early as 4:00 in the morning [[note]](when most kids would be asleep)[[/note]] or as late as 2:30 in the afternoon [[note]](which is when kids are either waiting to get out of school or on their way home)[[/note]]. After 65 episodes (ending on the ''Sailor Moon R'' episode "Sibling Rivalry"[[note]]or, if you're familiar with the Japanese titles, "Cold-Hearted Rubeus! The Four Sisters of Sorrow"[[/note]]), the show was canceled.

to:

* Depending on what local station aired ''Anime/SailorMoon'', viewers could see it as early as 4:00 in the morning [[note]](when most kids would be asleep)[[/note]] or as late as 2:30 in the afternoon [[note]](which is when kids are either waiting to get out of school or on their way home)[[/note]]. After 65 episodes (ending on the ''Sailor Moon R'' episode "Sibling Rivalry"[[note]]or, if you're familiar with the Japanese titles, "Cold-Hearted Rubeus! The Four Sisters of Sorrow"[[/note]]), the show was canceled. However, it aired in early-morning time slots on some affiliates until '''2004,''' when the show was gone from Toonami, and those same 65 episodes were already repeated to death by this point, leaving longtime fans annoyed for many reasons.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' has been treated like this by Malaysian network [=NTV7=] after Pokémania in the country died in the mid 2000s, when [=NTV7=] opted to stop bringing in the show after the anime had transitioned to the ''Advance Generation''. The ''Black & White'' and ''X & Y'' series mark the return of the series to Malaysian TV, but by then they've switched to being a Malay dub, switched network to [=TV9=], and skipped some episodes. Not only that, their main MO appears to be to only air Pokemon during the school breaks... And then preempting the series once the holidays are over, regardless of whether the season has ended proper. Thankfully, you can catch the show in English on Disney XD Asia if you have the Astro pay TV service and Disney XD doesn't drop episodes either.

to:

* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' has been treated like this by Malaysian network [=NTV7=] after Pokémania in the country died in the mid 2000s, when [=NTV7=] opted to stop bringing in the show after the anime had transitioned to the ''Advance Generation''. The ''Black & White'' and ''X & Y'' series mark the return of the series to Malaysian TV, but by then they've switched to being a Malay dub, switched network to [=TV9=], and skipped some episodes. Not only that, their main MO appears to be to only air Pokemon during the school breaks... And then preempting the series once the holidays are over, regardless of whether the season has ended proper. Thankfully, you can catch the show in English on Disney XD Asia if you have the Astro pay TV service and Disney XD doesn't drop episodes either. However, with the shutdown of Disney XD in Asia in 2020...
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Anime/{{Superbook}}'' (The original series) was screwed by TBN's Smile of a Child, while it's CGI/2009 remake has been [[AdoredByTheNetwork adored]] by other religious networks.

to:

* ''Anime/{{Superbook}}'' (The original series) was screwed by TBN's Smile of a Child, while it's its CGI/2009 remake has been [[AdoredByTheNetwork adored]] by other religious networks.



* ''[[Anime/OjamajoDoremi Magical Doremi]]'' was treated well in Australia for it's first two seasons...until the show was suddenly taken off the air before the beginning of the Forte [[note]] Motto for those who follow the original [[/note]] season. Why? The later episodes of the show were too sexual in nature, so the show was banned.

to:

* ''[[Anime/OjamajoDoremi Magical Doremi]]'' was treated well in Australia for it's its first two seasons...until the show was suddenly taken off the air before the beginning of the Forte [[note]] Motto for those who follow the original [[/note]] season. Why? The later episodes of the show were too sexual in nature, so the show was banned.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** Back in ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'s'' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Franchise/PrettyCure'' in its' time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.

to:

** Back in ''Anime/{{Pokemon}}'s'' ''Diamond and Pearl'' era, YTV gave it this treatment. Episodes were often months behind the United States' airings and when new ones would air, the network would sometimes show ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'', ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'', or even ''Franchise/PrettyCure'' in its' its time slot. The worst case happened on Victoria Day 2009, when they were supposed to air a marathon of new episodes but a ''[=SpongeBob=]'' marathon played instead.



* ''Anime/ShinkansenHenkeiRoboShinkalion'', which pulled in good ratings and beat its' contemporaries in ''Franchise/KamenRider'' and ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' in toy sales, was cancelled in July of 2019 to make room for a program counting down to the 2020 Olympics, of all things; a move rendered moot after the games were postponed by the UsefulNotes/CoronavirusDisease2019Pandemic .

to:

* ''Anime/ShinkansenHenkeiRoboShinkalion'', which pulled in good ratings and beat its' its contemporaries in ''Franchise/KamenRider'' and ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' in toy sales, was cancelled in July of 2019 to make room for a program counting down to the 2020 Olympics, of all things; a move rendered moot after the games were postponed by the UsefulNotes/CoronavirusDisease2019Pandemic .
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Manga/TokyoMewMew'' (AKA ''Mew Mew Power'') was pretty much screwed over by Creator/FourKidsTV in close to a dozen foreign languages that were based off of their version. It was the highest rated show on their Saturday morning kids block at one time, but only 26 of the 52 episodes were dubbed into English, and only 23 were actually broadcast in the U.S. Apparently, 4Kids cared a lot more about merchandise sales than ratings. The show wasn't able to get a merchandise deal at all in the U.S. because its modest 52 episode run was too short compared to the giant franchises that dominated the toy shelves, and no licensor was interested in it. Despite the show's ratings success, 4Kids pretty much stopped caring about it, and never bothered to license the second half of the series for an international release. Episode 26 ended on a ''sharp'' cliffhanger, which 4Kids spared U.S viewers from by not showing the last 3 dubbed episodes. However, all 26 episodes of ''Mew Mew Power'' were broadcast in some parts of the world, namely the Anglophone countries, Latin America and in certain European countries.

to:

* ''Manga/TokyoMewMew'' (AKA ''Mew Mew Power'') was pretty much screwed over by Creator/FourKidsTV in close to a dozen foreign languages that were based off of their version. It was the highest rated show on their Saturday morning kids block at one time, but only 26 of the 52 episodes were dubbed into English, and only 23 were actually broadcast in the U.S. Apparently, 4Kids cared a lot more about merchandise sales than ratings. The show wasn't able to get a merchandise deal at all in the U.S. because its modest 52 episode run was too short compared to the giant franchises that dominated the toy shelves, and no licensor was interested in it. Despite the show's ratings success, 4Kids pretty much stopped caring about it, and never bothered to license the second half of the series for an international release.it since then. Episode 26 ended on a ''sharp'' cliffhanger, which 4Kids spared U.S viewers from by not showing the last 3 dubbed episodes. However, all 26 episodes of ''Mew Mew Power'' were broadcast in some parts of the world, namely the Anglophone countries, Latin America and in certain European countries.


* ''Manga/TokyoMewMew'' (AKA ''Mew Mew Power'') was pretty much screwed over by Creator/FourKidsTV in close to a dozen foreign languages that were based off of their version. It was the highest rated show on their Saturday morning kids block at one time, but only 26 of the 52 episodes were dubbed into English, and only 23 were actually broadcast in the U.S. Apparently, 4Kids cared a lot more about merchandise sales than ratings. The show wasn't able to get a merchandise deal at all in the U.S. because its modest 52 episode run was too short compared to the giant franchises that dominated the toy shelves, and no licensor was interested in it. Despite the show's ratings success, 4Kids pretty much stopped caring about it, and never bothered to license the second half of the series for an international release. Episode 26 ended on a ''sharp'' cliffhanger, which 4Kids spared U.S viewers from by not showing the last 3 dubbed episodes. However, all 26 episodes of ''Mew Mew Power'' were broadcast in Canada, Australia, the UK, and pretty much... every other country around the world!

to:

* ''Manga/TokyoMewMew'' (AKA ''Mew Mew Power'') was pretty much screwed over by Creator/FourKidsTV in close to a dozen foreign languages that were based off of their version. It was the highest rated show on their Saturday morning kids block at one time, but only 26 of the 52 episodes were dubbed into English, and only 23 were actually broadcast in the U.S. Apparently, 4Kids cared a lot more about merchandise sales than ratings. The show wasn't able to get a merchandise deal at all in the U.S. because its modest 52 episode run was too short compared to the giant franchises that dominated the toy shelves, and no licensor was interested in it. Despite the show's ratings success, 4Kids pretty much stopped caring about it, and never bothered to license the second half of the series for an international release. Episode 26 ended on a ''sharp'' cliffhanger, which 4Kids spared U.S viewers from by not showing the last 3 dubbed episodes. However, all 26 episodes of ''Mew Mew Power'' were broadcast in Canada, Australia, some parts of the UK, world, namely the Anglophone countries, Latin America and pretty much... every other country around the world!in certain European countries.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** That would change in 2019, when the French-language Frissons TV debuted their "Manga Time" block.

to:

** That would change in 2019, when the French-language Frissons TV debuted their "Manga Time" "L'heure du manga" block.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


*** When Creator/{{Toonami}} (back when it was a daytime [[UsefulNotes/BlockProgramming block]] on Creator/CartoonNetwork with anime series that were moderately-to-heavily edited for content) picked up the show two years after its cancellation from syndication, it got a better timeslot (3:30pm at first, then 4:00pm, which is when a lot of kids would already be home from school[[note]]unless they had extracurricular activities, detention, or a long ride home[[/note]]) and aired all the episodes beyond the first 65 (read: the episodes seen in ''Sailor Moon S'' and ''Sailor Moon Super S'', along with the movies) under a new dubbing studio.
*** Until 2014, the final season was never licensed to be dubbed because of legal issues surrounding the franchise, the details of which are still speculated. Thankfully, Creator/VizMedia got its hands on that season, along with the rest of the series. Instead of television, ''Sailor Stars'' was streamed online and eventually released on DVD.
*** In the UK, the show had two graveyard slots: One very early in the morning before kids were up, and another in the early afternoon when the target audience was still in school, and the episodes aired in order spread across the two slots - so fans had to watch twice a day to keep up. This problem was bypassed with time as the show was repeated to death, due to the network only owning two seasons. At the end of the second season, [[LeftHanging a clip show summing up the past two seasons and advertising the arrival of season 3 was left in]] despite the network not having the rights to season 3.

to:

*** ** When Creator/{{Toonami}} (back when it was a daytime [[UsefulNotes/BlockProgramming block]] on Creator/CartoonNetwork with anime series that were moderately-to-heavily edited for content) picked up the show two years after its cancellation from syndication, it got a better timeslot (3:30pm at first, then 4:00pm, which is when a lot of kids would already be home from school[[note]]unless they had extracurricular activities, detention, or a long ride home[[/note]]) and aired all the episodes beyond the first 65 (read: the episodes seen in ''Sailor Moon S'' and ''Sailor Moon Super S'', along with the movies) under a new dubbing studio.
*** ** Until 2014, the final season was never licensed to be dubbed because of legal issues surrounding the franchise, the details of which are still speculated. Thankfully, Creator/VizMedia got its hands on that season, along with the rest of the series. Instead of television, ''Sailor Stars'' was streamed online and eventually released on DVD.
*** ** In the UK, the show had two graveyard slots: One very early in the morning before kids were up, and another in the early afternoon when the target audience was still in school, and the episodes aired in order spread across the two slots - so fans had to watch twice a day to keep up. This problem was bypassed with time as the show was repeated to death, due to the network only owning two seasons. At the end of the second season, [[LeftHanging a clip show summing up the past two seasons and advertising the arrival of season 3 was left in]] despite the network not having the rights to season 3.

Added: 946

Changed: 3002

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Anime/SailorMoon'' was screwed over in U.S. syndication when the episodes were shown in early morning dead timeslots on weekdays only[[note]]mostly 8:00 am, which is when most kids are either arriving at school or leaving the house to get to school[[/note]], though, depending on what local station aired the show, viewers could see this show as early as 4:00 in the morning [[note]](when most kids would be asleep)[[/note]] or as late as 2:30 in the afternoon [[note]](which is when kids are either waiting to get out of school or on their way home)[[/note]]. After 65 episodes (ending on the ''Sailor Moon R'' episode "Sibling Rivalry"[[note]]or, if you're familiar with the Japanese titles, "Cold-Hearted Rubeus! The Four Sisters of Sorrow"[[/note]]), the show was canceled. When Creator/{{Toonami}} (back when it was a daytime [[UsefulNotes/BlockProgramming block]] on Creator/CartoonNetwork with anime series that were moderately-to-heavily edited for content) picked up the show two years after its cancellation from syndication, it got a better timeslot (3:30pm at first, then 4:00pm, which is when a lot of kids would already be home from school[[note]]unless they had extracurricular activities, detention, or a long ride home[[/note]]) and aired all the episodes beyond the first 65 (read: the episodes seen in ''Sailor Moon S'' and ''Sailor Moon Super S'', along with the movies) under a new dubbing studio.
** Until 2014, the final season was never licensed to be dubbed because of legal issues surrounding the franchise, the details of which are still speculated. Thankfully, Creator/VizMedia got its hands on that season, along with the rest of the series. Instead of television, ''Sailor Stars'' was streamed online and eventually released on DVD.
** Sailor Moon was similarly screwed over in syndication in the UK. The show had two graveyard slots, showing during the very early morning before kids were up, and in the early afternoon when their target audience was still in school, and the episodes aired in order spread across the two slots - so fans had to watch twice a day to keep up. This problem was bypassed with time as the show was repeated to death, due to the network only owning two seasons. At the end of the second season, a clip show summing up the past two seasons and advertising the arrival of season 3 was left in despite the network not having the rights to season 3.

to:

* ''Anime/SailorMoon'' was Anime such as ''Anime/{{Robotech}}'' and ''Anime/DragonBallZ'' were screwed over in U.S. syndication when the episodes were shown in early morning dead timeslots on weekdays only[[note]]mostly timeslots, mostly between 6:00 and 8:00 am, which is when most kids are either arriving at school or leaving the house to get to school[[/note]], though, depending am.
* Depending
on what local station aired the show, ''Anime/SailorMoon'', viewers could see this show it as early as 4:00 in the morning [[note]](when most kids would be asleep)[[/note]] or as late as 2:30 in the afternoon [[note]](which is when kids are either waiting to get out of school or on their way home)[[/note]]. After 65 episodes (ending on the ''Sailor Moon R'' episode "Sibling Rivalry"[[note]]or, if you're familiar with the Japanese titles, "Cold-Hearted Rubeus! The Four Sisters of Sorrow"[[/note]]), the show was canceled. canceled.
***
When Creator/{{Toonami}} (back when it was a daytime [[UsefulNotes/BlockProgramming block]] on Creator/CartoonNetwork with anime series that were moderately-to-heavily edited for content) picked up the show two years after its cancellation from syndication, it got a better timeslot (3:30pm at first, then 4:00pm, which is when a lot of kids would already be home from school[[note]]unless they had extracurricular activities, detention, or a long ride home[[/note]]) and aired all the episodes beyond the first 65 (read: the episodes seen in ''Sailor Moon S'' and ''Sailor Moon Super S'', along with the movies) under a new dubbing studio.
** *** Until 2014, the final season was never licensed to be dubbed because of legal issues surrounding the franchise, the details of which are still speculated. Thankfully, Creator/VizMedia got its hands on that season, along with the rest of the series. Instead of television, ''Sailor Stars'' was streamed online and eventually released on DVD.
** Sailor Moon was similarly screwed over in syndication in *** In the UK. The UK, the show had two graveyard slots, showing during the slots: One very early in the morning before kids were up, and another in the early afternoon when their the target audience was still in school, and the episodes aired in order spread across the two slots - so fans had to watch twice a day to keep up. This problem was bypassed with time as the show was repeated to death, due to the network only owning two seasons. At the end of the second season, [[LeftHanging a clip show summing up the past two seasons and advertising the arrival of season 3 was left in in]] despite the network not having the rights to season 3.

Top