Syracuse, New York is being used as a test market starting June 18th, and if all goes well, TWC plans on rolling out the restructed lineups to the rest of its systems across the country by August. TWC's systems in Wisconsin and Ohio already use theme lineups, and it's more or less same here in Los Angeles since the transition over from Comcast in 2006.
This restructing also comes with a twist...those with HD or HD-DVR recievers won't have to worry about duplication of SD and HD versions of networks and stations. Very similar to what DirecTV has with their HD/HD DVR boxes, TWC subscribers will only recieve the HD version of a particular network/station (if said channel has a HD equivalent), while standard-definition digital cable subscribers will simply get the SD version. Essentially, from my understanding, there will not be a more separate HD tier for subscribers.
Here are the themed tiers...
100s: General Entertainment/Life & Style: ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC stations plus popular networks like TNT, USA, FX, MTV, ETC.
Low 200s: News networks
250-270: Kids networks: Disney and Nickelodeon (and their respective spinoff networks), Cartoon Network, PBS Spourt, Boomerang, etc.
285-299: Music networks: MTV Jams, MTV Hits, CMT Pure Country, Palladia, etc.
300s: Sports
460s: Religious
480s: Shopping
500-650s: Movies: including on-demand content, premium networks, basic movie networks like Sundance, IFC, TCM
650s: Pay-per-view events
700s: Sports packages: NBA League Pass, MLB Extra Innings, ESPN's college basketball and football packages, and NHL Center Ice
800-900s: Latino
1000s: On-Demand
1200s: Local programming including subchannels
1400s: International
1800s: Adult programming
1900s: Music Choice
http://www.cnyradio.com/2013/05/21/time-warner-announces-massive-channel-lineup-shuffle/
This restructing also comes with a twist...those with HD or HD-DVR recievers won't have to worry about duplication of SD and HD versions of networks and stations. Very similar to what DirecTV has with their HD/HD DVR boxes, TWC subscribers will only recieve the HD version of a particular network/station (if said channel has a HD equivalent), while standard-definition digital cable subscribers will simply get the SD version. Essentially, from my understanding, there will not be a more separate HD tier for subscribers.
Here are the themed tiers...
100s: General Entertainment/Life & Style: ABC, CBS, Fox, NBC stations plus popular networks like TNT, USA, FX, MTV, ETC.
Low 200s: News networks
250-270: Kids networks: Disney and Nickelodeon (and their respective spinoff networks), Cartoon Network, PBS Spourt, Boomerang, etc.
285-299: Music networks: MTV Jams, MTV Hits, CMT Pure Country, Palladia, etc.
300s: Sports
460s: Religious
480s: Shopping
500-650s: Movies: including on-demand content, premium networks, basic movie networks like Sundance, IFC, TCM
650s: Pay-per-view events
700s: Sports packages: NBA League Pass, MLB Extra Innings, ESPN's college basketball and football packages, and NHL Center Ice
800-900s: Latino
1000s: On-Demand
1200s: Local programming including subchannels
1400s: International
1800s: Adult programming
1900s: Music Choice
http://www.cnyradio.com/2013/05/21/time-warner-announces-massive-channel-lineup-shuffle/