November 13, 1998 One series of promos had Dick Van Dyke (whose own '60s sitcom was a mainstay of the channel in the '90s) depicted as "President of Nick at Nite". Nick at Nite has also occasionally experimented with creating its own shows, sometimes with bizarre and surrealistic results. FOL and TC were there, and various 80s shows such as Silver Spoons, 227, ALF, Diffrent Strokes and Square Pegs alternated on Sundays.
Nick at Nite | Santiago Wikia | Fandom Nickelodeon (through Nick at Nite) ran infomercials in some overnight timeslots from 1987 to 1998 (making Nickelodeon one of the few currently operating kids-targeted channels to discontinue airing paid programming, others include Universal Kids, and it is also only one of two ViacomCBS-owned networks to have removed paid programming from its schedule; sister channel BET had discontinued infomercials in 1997, replacing them with religious programming in overnight/early morning timeslots[8]). The time range of Nick at Nite's programming has shifted over the years, to the point whereby the early 2000s, its classic series consisted primarily of shows from the late 1970s to the late 1990s, and also included series from the early and mid-2000s by the end of that decade and into the early 2010s. Beginning as only an announcer reading off that evening's block of shows and the times they would be on while the list was displayed and music was played, this simple concept would be revised and re-revised many times over. In summer of 2008, Nick at Nite aired a marathon called Battle of the Sexes, which featured episodes of their regular programs that engaged conflict between men and women. Via Nickelodeon, Nick at Nite is available in 92.0 million households in North America as of January 2016.[2]. Nick at Nite Schedule May 18, 2001 | EvanRocks Wiki | Fandom TV Listings for - February 16, 2023 - TV Tango The network also stopped airing the production closing credits for most of its programs (except for those that have tag scenes during the end credits, and originally some series that aired on the network prior to the rebrand that rejoined the network afterward, such as Full House) and began employing network-uniform closing credits which Nickelodeon had been utilizing since at least 2000 (both Nick at Nite and Nickelodeon often omit end tag scenes or blooper reels of some shows using this format).