I remember gravitating to ABC in my earliest years since they had my favorite "genres" in the early morning hours.
Super Friends and
Thundar The Barbarian were two of my favorites. There were also those silly but awesome ABC educational videos that ran between toy and cereal commercials. Subjects ranged from: the inner workings of government (I'm Just a Bill), grammar (Conjunction Junction), how better to portion those less than healthy condiments (Don't Drown You Food), the beauty that IS cheese (Hanker for a Hunk of Cheese), and even bodily hygiene (They Call Me Yuck Mouth). Apparently there were a ton of them but those are the ones I remember instantly through the magic of song.
I'd shift to CBS later in the morning and get some of my favorite "live shows" like,
The Shazam!/Isis hour and
Jason of Star Command (though I barely remember
Space Academy).
Land of the Lost, was on NBC. It rocked (with a banjo at any rate).
I also liked the
Smurfs,
Fat Albert,
Kidd Video, and several weird shows that did cartoon versions of popular live sitcoms running at the time. Of course those cartoons had totally outrageous plot twists that more than distinguished them from their live prime-time inspirations.
I was too young to recall Star Trek TAS, but there was also that very short yet glorious period with the Star Wars cartoons: Droids and Ewoks (though and I didn't like
Ewoks as much). C3-P0 even had his own cereal!
I have to say though... There was always one
really kooky thing about watching programing on different networks. Even as a little kid I remember noticing everything on different channels looked or even "felt" different, and I've never been able to adequately describe the sensation. I'm not sure if it was during cartoon time or my days watching soap operas with baby sitters that I picked up on it, but I was pretty young when I started noticing subtle yet discrete (to me) visual distinctions between the three big networks and their affiliates (in my neck of the woods). It some ways it was visceral, more mystery than measurable. I don't know how, given the big digital overhaul and all, but to this day, I can still tell which one of the big 3 I am watching just from that "quirky something" in the visual presentation. It's always been apparent in the local news, but I started to think maybe my network notions were all in my head until I was introduced to
Castle a few years ago, in late-night syndication on our CBS affiliate. When I got caught up story-wise and started watching first run season 4 episodes on ABC, there it was. That... thing. They still just "feel" different, and I've always been able to tell which version I was watching, even on DVR. Weird.
Oh well. I still loved after school cartoons and syndicated programing, but they never seemed to have the same luster as the Saturday morning line ups.