| # | Air Date | Episode Name | Watched? |
|---|---|---|---|
| E6 | Feb 07, 2012 | ||
| E7 | Feb 14, 2012 | ||
| E8 | Feb 21, 2012 | ||
| E9 | Feb 28, 2012 | ||
| E10 | Mar 06, 2012 | ||
| E11 | Mar 13, 2012 | ||
| E12 | Mar 20, 2012 | ||
| E13 | Mar 27, 2012 | ||
| E14 | Apr 03, 2012 | ||
| E15 | |||
| E16 | |||
| E17 | |||
| E18 | |||
| E19 | |||
| E20 | |||
| E21 | |||
| E22 | |||
| E23 | |||
| E24 | Sep 04, 2012 | ||
| E25 | Sep 11, 2012 | ||
| E26 | Sep 18, 2012 |
UFC Tonight remains a definitive pillar of sports television, having concluded its influential run on Fox Sports 1. The series served as the primary news magazine for mixed martial arts during the sport's most explosive period of mainstream growth. By blending high-level technical analysis with the charismatic personalities of former champions and contenders, it transformed how combat sports were presented to a global audience. It moved beyond simple fight promotion to offer deep dives into the strategic nuances of the Octagon, setting a production standard that current broadcasts still strive to replicate.
For fans, the show remains a rewatch staple because it captures the golden era of the UFC's expansion into the Fox network family. The chemistry between hosts like Kenny Florian and Michael Bisping provided a mix of humor and insight that felt more like a roundtable of experts than a stiff news broadcast. Its legacy lives on in the DNA of modern sports desk shows, proving that niche combat sports could sustain a polished, journalistic format while maintaining the raw energy that defines the fight game.