Get ready to binge on retro television and relive the DECADES on WBAY-TV 2.3.

ABC decided to end the Live Well Network, which currently airs on WBAY’s subchannel 2.3.

WBAY is helping launch DECADES — a new, national network with more than 100 classic TV series and the “ultimate TV time machine.”

It starts at 4 a.m. Friday, January 16, with “DECADES binge TV.” DECADES presents its entire library of shows with back-to-back-to-back episodes. First are more than 200 episodes of “The Millionaire” until early Tuesday, January 20. It picks up with the 56-episode run of “The Mothers-in-Law,” followed by “Family Affair,” and so on. Check the program schedule at http://wbay.com/tv-listings or get printable program listings at http://wbay.com/category/about-wbay.

When DECADES makes its formal launch on May 25, each day will have a different theme — a date in history or a topic — and a day of TV shows, movies and news and entertainment videos devoted to that theme. For example, if the day’s theme is “April 15, 1983″ programming might include that week’s top movie, “Flashdance,” followed by an episode of “Cheers” when mail carrier Cliff Clavin forgot to mail his taxes. DECADES presents different themes, movies and TV shows each day.

Shows include:

Beverly Hills 90210

Burke’s Law

Cheers

Colonel March of Scotland Yard

The Doris Day Show

F Troop

Family Affair

The Fugitive

Get Smart

Happy Days

Honey West

I Love Lucy

The Millionaire

The Mothers-in-law

The Phil Silvers Show

Route 66

Star Trek

Star Trek: The Next Generation

Star Trek: Deep Space 9

Star Trek: Voyager

Star Trek: Enterprise

plus historical news archives from CBS News and Entertainment Tonight

“Relive, Remember and Relate” to the historical events and culture that shaped our world today. The assassination of John F. Kennedy. Neil Armstrong walking on the moon. Michael Jackson’s moon walking. The Beatles’ debut on “The Ed Sullivan Show.” The birth of Microsoft and Apple. How “Happy Days” brought the term “jump the shark” into modern vernacular. DECADES connects these events to what people were watching on television, seeing at the movies and experiencing as a nation.