TMC
03-02-2026, 04:36 PM
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We’ve spent plenty of time on this channel roasting UPN — and honestly, a lot of that criticism was earned. The failed sitcoms. The shows that vanished after four episodes. The programming decisions that made absolutely no sense.
In this video, we’re closing the loop.
We’re revisiting UPN’s launch gamble with Star Trek: Voyager, the early financial chaos, and the moment the network pivoted away from trying to beat the Big Three at their own game. We break down how shows like Moesha helped UPN build a loyal, underserved audience, why its genre strategy mattered, and how WWF SmackDown! transformed the network’s fortunes almost overnight.
This isn’t a nostalgia victory lap — and it’s not a flops compilation either. It’s the story of a network that figured out, earlier than most, that you don’t have to win everything to win something. Pick a lane. Find your people. Serve them consistently.
If you’ve only ever thought of UPN as “the network with the bad shows,” this video might change your mind.
👇 JOIN THE CONVERSATION
Were you a Voyager loyalist from day one?
Did UPN’s Monday night comedies become part of your routine?
Were you one of the millions who made SmackDown! the biggest show on the network?
Drop your memories in the comments — we read every single one.
👍 If this video made you rethink UPN, hit Like
📺 Subscribe for more deep dives into forgotten networks, TV experiments, and pop-culture near-misses
🔁 Share this with someone who still thinks UPN never got anything right
The failures are easy to mock.
The real story is messier — and a lot more interesting.
We’ve spent plenty of time on this channel roasting UPN — and honestly, a lot of that criticism was earned. The failed sitcoms. The shows that vanished after four episodes. The programming decisions that made absolutely no sense.
In this video, we’re closing the loop.
We’re revisiting UPN’s launch gamble with Star Trek: Voyager, the early financial chaos, and the moment the network pivoted away from trying to beat the Big Three at their own game. We break down how shows like Moesha helped UPN build a loyal, underserved audience, why its genre strategy mattered, and how WWF SmackDown! transformed the network’s fortunes almost overnight.
This isn’t a nostalgia victory lap — and it’s not a flops compilation either. It’s the story of a network that figured out, earlier than most, that you don’t have to win everything to win something. Pick a lane. Find your people. Serve them consistently.
If you’ve only ever thought of UPN as “the network with the bad shows,” this video might change your mind.
👇 JOIN THE CONVERSATION
Were you a Voyager loyalist from day one?
Did UPN’s Monday night comedies become part of your routine?
Were you one of the millions who made SmackDown! the biggest show on the network?
Drop your memories in the comments — we read every single one.
👍 If this video made you rethink UPN, hit Like
📺 Subscribe for more deep dives into forgotten networks, TV experiments, and pop-culture near-misses
🔁 Share this with someone who still thinks UPN never got anything right
The failures are easy to mock.
The real story is messier — and a lot more interesting.