How could've Fox Family Channel survived had it not been sold to Disney in 2001?

In 2001 Disney Purchased Fox Family Worldwide, a division of 20th Century Fox jointly owned by Power Rangers creator Haim Saban. The deal gave Disney ownership of Fox Family Channel (currently Freeform), Saban Entertainment, the international Fox Kids channels, and all the programing the company had owned up to that point, including the Power Rangers franchise.

The sale of Fox Family effectively took Fox/News Corporation out of the kids television business for good. The company was once one of the biggest players in children's television with its Fox Kids Network, home to Power Rangers, Digimon, and X-Men. But it's failure to turn Fox Family Channel (an ill-fated relaunch of the 90s Family Channel) into a viable threat against Disney Channel, Nickelodeon, and Cartoon Network resulted in them.

But, what if News Corp. agreed to buy Saban's stake in Fox Family in 2001? How would Fox go about fixing up the floundering cable channel post-Saban? I think following might have been an effective strategy.

* Shifting focus to a youth audience, rather than just kids - I think one strategy that could've differentiated Fox Family from the big three kids networks would be to target young people in general, rather than just the standard 6 to 11 demo. A network that targeted Kids and teens during the day, and teens and twenty-somethings in the evening and night. It would've made Fox Family stand out more compared the other three, and really make it a "Kids network" in the broadest possible sense, as it'd target youth and youth culture in general, rather than just childhood.

* Be the edgier "tween channel" - Disney Channel and Nickelodeon were starting to see success with a "tween" audience in the 2000s with live-action and animated shows like Lizzie McGuire, Even Stevens, As Told By Ginger, Kim Possible, and others. But these were kid friendly shows at their core, targeting a younger 9 to 12 year old audience with a comedy focus. I think Fox Family would want to counter than by positioning itself as the "Cool", "Hip" and "Mature" tween channel targeting the older 11 to 14 year old kids, which would occupy a space between the squeaky clean Disney Channel fare, and the harder edge channels teen-skewing channels like MTV. So while Disney and Nick could be sticking to TV-Y7 and TV-G fare, Fox Family could be making more dramatic TV-PG and even TV-14 rated shows that skewed older. Of course, they could still air younger-aimed fare during the daytime.

* Additional focus on anime - Fox Kids and Fox Family during this time aired a lot of anime titles that were dubbed by Saban and other distributors. Such as Digimon, Escaflowne, Mon Colle Knights and Medabots. I think Fox Family could've really developed this further, and launch a Toonami-style afternoon block of edgier anime as well for older viewers. It could've given Cartoon Network/Adult Swim some much needed competition in that regard, and provide a home for more girl centric titles that other networks didn't want. They already would have Saban's studio infrastructure built in, so it would've made sense to keep using it.These are a few things that Fox could've done had they taken full control of the network in 2001 instead of selling it to Disney.