Al Timiter said:BTW, sorry to be ignorant but what is RTN??? It's not on our system.
Lkeller said:How reprehensible! TV Land will be producing original programming and employing more people in the industry, instead of running Sanford & Son episodes for the 4,000th time.
Doesn't Viacom own TV Land? They also own Comedy Central. Maybe they'll cancel that tacky Daily Show and ridiculous Colbert Report and start running Sanford & Son there instead. Those two shows are just dead weight, anyway.
Besides, what's more topical that a 30 year old sitcom?
BRNout said:Lkeller said:How reprehensible! TV Land will be producing original programming and employing more people in the industry, instead of running Sanford & Son episodes for the 4,000th time.
Doesn't Viacom own TV Land? They also own Comedy Central. Maybe they'll cancel that tacky Daily Show and ridiculous Colbert Report and start running Sanford & Son there instead. Those two shows are just dead weight, anyway.
Besides, what's more topical that a 30 year old sitcom?
This comment (in its sarcastic way) nicely sums up the mindset that has led to these changes, yet also misses the point entirely. There are LOTS of cable channels out there that offer "reality" programming tailored to the sub-100 IQ crowd aged 25-54. However, TV Land was the go-to channel for classic TV. That was it's purpose. In this age of narrowcasting, that's the point. Serving a specific audience. Hundreds of channels offer the dreck that TVL is set to add. Very, very few offer shows like Sanford, Hogan, etc.
No, Viacom is greedy and has elected to raise its bottom line by 0.025 percent by tossing TVL's audience over the rail in favor of some "better" demographics. Which is fine for general entertainment networks, but leaves a very bad taste when a channel is created to serve a specific niche and then abandons that niche. That's why people are ticked off.
Frankly, Viacom has enough channels in place to cover all the bases from ages 2 to 100. Making all of the channels into basic clones of one another just removes more and more viewing options for an audience that already pays to gain access to these channels. Another reason why people are ticked off. Basically, every channel that Viacom has touched in the last 10 years has sunk to the lowest common denominator of programming quality.
Why should we have expected anything different for TV Land?![]()
Lkeller said:How reprehensible! TV Land will be producing original programming and employing more people in the industry, instead of running Sanford & Son episodes for the 4,000th time.
Doesn't Viacom own TV Land? They also own Comedy Central. Maybe they'll cancel that tacky Daily Show and ridiculous Colbert Report and start running Sanford & Son there instead. Those two shows are just dead weight, anyway.
Besides, what's more topical that a 30 year old sitcom?
kms575 said:Lkeller said:How reprehensible! TV Land will be producing original programming and employing more people in the industry, instead of running Sanford & Son episodes for the 4,000th time.
Doesn't Viacom own TV Land? They also own Comedy Central. Maybe they'll cancel that tacky Daily Show and ridiculous Colbert Report and start running Sanford & Son there instead. Those two shows are just dead weight, anyway.
Besides, what's more topical that a 30 year old sitcom?
You're kidding, right? Just wanted to check
Though, I think TVLand's original intent was to air re-runs. Maybe we need a new channel...The Re-Run Channel (Hey, hey, hey!).
imhomerjay said:Networks aren't bound to do exactly what they did at sign on. They target a demographic group in many cases, and as the people within that demo change, so too does the programming. MTV would be a joke if they tried to do now what worked for teens a generation ago.
What TV Land offered was a type of programming that appealed to a specific age. The original audience is, yes, older, and it's not Viacom's sole responsibility that not as many advertisers want to reach those people now. Instead, they're moving back to the age group they wanted in the first place, which consists of people with different tastes and different experiences, and yes, that can include the dreaded "reality" type show as part of what they like in entertainment (and not all shows that fit in such a large--too large--bucket are created equal, any more than all "comedies" or "dramas" can be categorized so broadly).
flytrap said:"that 70's show is also in syndication on local tv as well. they run several shows a day in my town on more than one station. Since the same company owns 2 full power and 1 low power in my town they repeat the same shows on different stations. It gets confusining sometimes, especially when they run promo's for things assocated with the other stations.
For classic TV just dump the cable. Cable is nothing but the same old crap over and over. Most everything except for sports is just the same movies and shows that have already been seen for free over the air. CSI, Law and Order, Everybody Loves Raymond. Why pay for that? Plus too many reality shows. Booooring.
They have classic TV for free on the RTN network which can be seen with an antenna on some stations digital sub-channels in many cities. Lots of good stuff.
rch66 said:flytrap said:"that 70's show is also in syndication on local tv as well. they run several shows a day in my town on more than one station. Since the same company owns 2 full power and 1 low power in my town they repeat the same shows on different stations. It gets confusining sometimes, especially when they run promo's for things assocated with the other stations.
For classic TV just dump the cable. Cable is nothing but the same old crap over and over. Most everything except for sports is just the same movies and shows that have already been seen for free over the air. CSI, Law and Order, Everybody Loves Raymond. Why pay for that? Plus too many reality shows. Booooring.
They have classic TV for free on the RTN network which can be seen with an antenna on some stations digital sub-channels in many cities. Lots of good stuff.
Agreed. It doesnt make sense to have cable for just classic tv. Probably makes more sense for a combined internet, phone, cable tv deal - and you won't watch most the channels. Mainly the HD channels if you have a HD set. One is prob better off buying and then selling DVD sets used from half.com, or new with a rewards member and discount from Borders or Best Buy for TV shows. The RTN network sounds nice but most markets don't have it. The ion network, Hallmark, WGN, and AmericanLife Television (carried on Fios) are other choices.