Since I was a fan of Doug, a slice-of-life cartoon about a pre-teen boy in elementary school created by Jim Jinkins when I was a young tween/pre-teen boy, I used to watch it from time to time in the early-mid 1990s on the cable TV channel Nickelodeon during its first three seasons.
When the animation studio that created Doug, Jumbo Pictures, was purchased by The Walt Disney Company in 1995 at the same time they purchased Capital Cities/ABC, Inc. (the company that owned ABC), the show relaunched as part of ABC's Saturday Morning lineup as Brand Spanking New Doug.
It later aired as one of the many inaugural programs on Disney's One Saturday Morning on ABC as Disney's Doug in 1997. The show lasted for four seasons at The Walt Disney Company, later being reran on Disney's One Too on UPN, with Doug's 1st Movie acting as the show's conclusion in 1999.
I was thrilled when Doug was provided in both sets of seasons (totaling 7 seasons) plus the theatrical Disney film across two different streaming services, that I paid $20 total for CBS All-Access (now Paramount+) for the Nickelodeon Doug seasons and for Disney+ for the ABC Disney's Doug seasons and Doug's 1st Movie, so that I could binge on the entire series all the way to the theatrical film which brought the series to a conclusion, just to watch the story of Doug Funnie, a kid from the city of Bluffington, unfold from the beginning to the very end...
A cartoon like Doug has one of those quirks where half of the rights are owned by Nickelodeon/Paramount, while the other half is owned by The Walt Disney Company...