Nickelodeon en Telemundo

Nickelodeon en Telemundo was an American children's programming block ran on Telemundo with a programming agreement with Nickelodeon from November 9, 1998 until September 30, 2001, and features a Nickelodeon shows aimed at the children between the ages 2 to 14 on weekday morning block (later weekend morning block), it owned by Telemundo Network Group, LLC. (via NBCUniversal) and Nickelodeon (via ViacomCBS), it sourced by Sony Pictures Entertainment and Liberty Media. Including all of Nicktoons and some Nick Jr. Spanish-dubbed shows designed to with originated on the cable network that met educational programming federally mandated requirements guidelines defined by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) via the Children's Television Act.

On September 5, 2000, Nickelodeon en Telemundo will relegated to Saturday and Sunday mornings, which is order to make room for Hoy En El Mundo. Nickelodeon en Telemundo is a schedule of the Monday, Wednesday and Friday aired programming, such as Rocko's Modern Life and Tuesday and Thursday program show aired, Hey Arnold!. The non-Nickelodeon shows are various Sony Pictures Television, Toei Animation and other Spanish-dubbed shows including Dragon Ball Z, Jumanji, Lift Off and Garfield and Friends for the schedule on Monday to Friday morning and Saturday and Sunday mornings from 6:30 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. ET/PT, the programming children block time periods are filled with infomercials.

On September 30, 2001, Nickelodeon en Telemundo discontinued in 2001, The included a three-hour Saturday and Sunday morning block on the network, which is launched turned out of revival as Telemundo Kids on October 6, 2001. However, Nickelodeon's contract with Telemundo ended in November 2001, following the network's acquisition by NBC; Rugrats, The Alpha Squad. Dora the Explorer and Hey Arnold! (all joined by All Grown Up) continued to be aired sporadically for a few years afterward beginning September 18, 2004.

History
On September 15, 1998, Telemundo entered into a programming agreement with Nickelodeon to carry the cable channel's programming as part of a morning children's program block, "Nickelodeon en Telemundo" ("Nickelodeon on Telemundo"). The block, which debuted on November 9, 1998 and was considered a sub-block of Telemundo Infantil, consisted of Spanish dubs of Nickelodeon's animated series aimed at older children and preschool-oriented programs aired by the channel's Nick Jr. block.

Nickelodeon en Telemundo were changed the schedule to a weekend morning block on Saturday and Sunday morning from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. ET/PT, in order to make room for Hoy en el Mundo and/or Esta Manana (with Jose Diaz-Balart). The schedule three Nicktoons' shows (including Doug, Rocko's Modern Life and Aaahh!!! Real Monsters) ended in November 2000, which is were changing mixed the schedule for the shows.

On October 6, 2001, after Nickelodeon en Telemundo was discontinued, Telemundo launched a programming launched a weekend morning block which turned out to be a revival of Telemundo Kids, which aired beginning on October 6, 2001 until September 3, 2006 (But branded differently from the block, Telemundo Infantil from September 16, 1995 to November 7, 1998.). On September 18, 2004, Telemundo Kids returned to an agreement to air shows from Nickelodeon, along with end of agreement for three years ago that led to Nickelodeon airing Spanish-dubbed shows on Telemundo, Nickelodeon en Telemundo which was discontinued on September 30, 2001 (although, as aforesaid, the network's Telemundo programming contract ended after the NBC acquisition). The following Nickelodeon shows, Rugrats, The Alpha Squad, Hey Arnold! and Dora the Explorer returned to the lineup. The block was joined by All Grown Up!, along with shows from other companies.

Schedule issues
Although the Nickelodeon en Telemundo block regularly aired on Monday to Friday mornings, affiliates in some parts of the country deferred certain programs within the lineup to Saturday and Sunday morning time slots to accommodate locally produced programs (such as weekend morning newscasts) or due to scheduling issues with regional or network sports broadcasts that start in time periods normally occupied by the block.

Trivia
Coming soon!