I’m a little late to this party… But yes! I remember TV!/Intro Television well. Being an aspiring young media geek in a TCI town, it was something of an addiction for me while it was around. I’d watch practically anything on it—from the morning news blocks from Bloomberg and CNN International, to “TV Diners” and “Essence of Emeril” from (TV) Food Network, to Travel Channel and History Channel in their original formats, to E! celeb interviews, to limited coverage oddballs like Celtic Vision and the Ecology Channel, to even the classic movies from TCM on occasion.
It was my first regular taste of Cartoon Network (back when it was primarily Hanna-Barbers classics; i.e., when it was good). And the late night music video blocks were essential VCR recording for me—country (CMT), Christian (Z Music), pop/rock/hip-hop (The Box)—it didn’t matter the genre. I suspect that contributed to my diverse taste in music today.
For what it was, they also put a fair bit of effort into the presentation, running their own promos and bumpers to give it the feel of a real channel, rather than the glorified barker channel that it probably was. Post-Remote Control Ken Ober even showed up for “TV! Network News Update” segments.
Thanks for this thread,
@fybush. This was quite a nostalgia trip!
TV! aired programming from Cartoon Network, Movieplex, and some other channels based on TV listings that I've seen in newspaper microfilm. Maybe Game Show Network too.
MoviePlex was the channel that replaced it. Though TV!/Intro did run blocks from the original Encore and STARZ.
They never ran Game Show Network IIRC, but they did play some Family Channel Wink Martindale-hosted game shows branded as “Game Net.” Game Net was a network that Family Channel was planning to launch around the same time Sony was planning Game Show Network. But from what I’ve been told, Sony grabbing the Goodson-Todman library seriously damaged Game Net’s shot at getting off the ground, and the project was eventually scrapped.
What would they do for channels such as HBO and Showtime where the language might be too strong for general viewers? Maybe they knew that HBO and Showtime would not have curses in its daytime presentations? Some hours the channel would show the premium movie channels, but only for a few minutes, before moving on to another channel. But by evening, HBO and Showtime were eliminated from the sample channels shown.
TV!/Intro did run occasional free weekend previews of HBO (though I don’t recall them ever running Showtime) as special events. IIRC, they kept it almost entirely PG-13 or tamer. On rare occasions when an R-rated movie did show up, it was either a daytime edit or, if uncut, was only shown late at night.