Until 2012, the network had aired shows such as ALF, Mork & Mindy, The Addams Family, The Munsters, Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie, Happy Days, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Growing Pains, The Facts of Life, Diff'rent Strokes, Get Smart and Perfect Strangers, which have been broadcast on other Latin American broadcast and cable channels.
Although the Latin American Nickelodeon was launched in the mid-1990s, it had never carried the Nick at Nite block before; as of April 2010 the Latin American version had since shifted away from classic and defunct Nickelodeon series, between animated series and live-action comedies such as Zoey 101, Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide, True Jackson, VP, Hey Arnold!, Rocko's Modern Life and Rocket Power.
Nick at Nite’s UK and Ireland feed was one of the planned, and advertised, stations as part of Sky's new Multichannels package, but it never launched.
[6] Shows that were put in this slot include iCarly, Victorious, Sam & Cat and Drake & Josh.
(Since the closure of VIVA on December 31, 2018, Comedy Central now occupies that channel space 24 hours a day.)
Its run in the Netherlands ended in 2005, when Nickelodeon began having to share its channel space with Talpa (later Tien, now RTL 8).
Nickelodeon became a 24-hour service again on February 14, 2011, and on that day, TeenNick premiered on the channel, which resembled the original Nick at Nite form as used between 2004 and 2005.
(Spike has since moved to its own 24-hour channel space on some major Dutch pay-TV platforms, expanded back Nick to a 24-hour channel on those providers; on others, and in Belgium, Nick and Spike remained timeshare nightly between 9:05pm and 5:00am CET.)
Shows included Drake & Josh, iCarly, Unfabulous, The Elephant Princess, Doctor Who, Russian News with Leslie Bricusse, True Jackson, VP.
Airing from 8pm to 11pm, it consisted of Drake and Josh, Ninja Hattori, Perman and SpongeBob SquarePants.