SCI FI CHANNEL (UNITED STATES)

(Redirected from Sci Fi channel (United States))

'SCI FI' (originally The Sci-Fi Channel, sometimes rendered 'SCI FI Channel' when part of a longer phrase) is an American cable television channel, launched on September 24 1992, specializing in science fiction, fantasy, horror, and paranormal programming. It is part of the entertainment conglomerate NBC Universal.

Contents
History
Sci Fi programming
Series
Sci-Fi Friday
Second run programming
Anime
Miniseries
Sci Fi Pictures original films
Bumpers
Non-science-fiction programming
SciFi.com
Trivia
References
See also
External links

History


The channel was launched on September 24, 1992 as a sister cable channel to USA Network by then-owners Paramount Pictures (which was later acquired by Viacom in 1994) and MCA (then part of Japanese electronic giant Matsushita), the owner of Universal Studios, each with a 50% stake in the venture.
Original Sci-Fi Channel logo, used from 1992-1999.

Second Sci-Fi Channel logo, used from 1999-2002. Around this time, the hyphen was dropped from the channel's name.

The channel was seen as a natural fit with classic film and television series that both studios had in their vaults, including ''Rod Serling's Night Gallery'' (from Universal TV) and Paramount's '' and classic Universal horror films such as ''Dracula'' and ''Frankenstein''. ''Star Trek'' creator Gene Roddenberry and author Isaac Asimov were among those on the advisory board.[1]
In 1997, Seagram, which bought MCA in 1995, purchased Viacom's interest in USA and Sci Fi, and sold the networks to Barry Diller in 1998 to form USA Networks, Inc. Diller later sold USA's non-shopping (film and TV) assets, including Sci-Fi, to Universal's then-parent Vivendi Universal in 2002. Vivendi's film, television, and cable TV assets were then merged with General Electric's NBC to form NBC Universal in 2004.

Sci Fi programming


:''See Sci Fi original programming for the full list.''
Sci Fi's programming includes original television movies, miniseries, and series.
Series

The channel's most prominent series include ''Battlestar Galactica'', ''Farscape'', and ''Stargate SG-1'', (picked up from the cable network Showtime after five seasons, and eventually becoming American television's longest running science-fiction series), and its spin-off ''Stargate Atlantis''. Its 2006 series, ''Eureka'' was the channel's highest-rated series premiere. In addition to ''Stargate SG-1'', Sci Fi also picked up the cancelled Comedy Central series ''Mystery Science Theater 3000'', running three additional seasons of that show. In January 2007, it introduced ''The Dresden Files'' alongside ''Battlestar Galactica'' on Sunday evenings. It's also the US home of the revived ''Doctor Who'' series, with the third season set to begin airing in July 2007.
In 2006, Sci Fi began to air World Wrestling Entertainment's third brand, ''Extreme Championship Wrestling''. Despite very intense criticism of a wrestling show on a science-fiction network, ECW received consistently high ratings. Sci Fi additionally aired the WWE flagship show, Monday Night Raw on 28 August 2006, when the program's usual home, USA Network, broadcast US Open Tennis on that date. Sci Fi will air Raw again on 27 August 2007.[2]
Sci-Fi Friday

One of the channel's most successful nights is a two- to three-hour lineup of series on Friday nights, under the banner Sci Fi Friday. These have included various combinations of ''Heroes'', ''Farscape'', ''Sliders'', ''The Invisible Man'', ''First Wave'', ''Doctor Who'', ''Flash Gordon'', ''Tremors'', ''Stargate SG-1'', ''Stargate Atlantis'', ''Battlestar Galactica'' and ''Painkiller Jane''.
Second run programming

The channel runs many cult classic science fiction TV shows that have been cancelled in recent years such as ''Surface'', ''John Doe'', ''Firefly'', ''Dark Angel'' and the dark comedy ''Dead Like Me''. It also shows reruns of popular shows such as ''The X-Files''. For a very long time, the channel was the home of reruns of the 1960s gothic soap opera ''Dark Shadows''. The series aired on Sci-Fi from 1992-1997, and 1999-2003. The channel just recently started airing episodes of the canceled Star Trek series '' on Mondays from 7PM-11PM Eastern. It also ran the UPN canceled series, Jake 2.0. On June 1, 2007, SCI FI aired the UPN series ''Level 9''. [1] The series ran once and was then pulled from the channel's schedule.
Anime

Briefly in the early 1990s, Sci Fi showed anime movies, although they were often edited in order to fit the market pressures often placed on basic cable. It was the first to show the movies ''Robot Carnival'' and ''Akira'' in their original Streamline Pictures English dubs, as well as showing Central Park Media's ''Dominion Tank Police'', ''Gall Force'', and ''Project A-ko''.
Anime was most frequently aired on Saturday mornings in a roughly two-hour-long block entitled "Saturday Anime". Each week, the network would air a different anime feature in this timeslot. During the late summer, Sci Fi used one week of its weeknight primetime slots to feature an anime theme week.
On August 26, 1996, Sci Fi aired the heavily promoted U.S. television premiere of ''Tenchi Muyo in Love'', the first movie of the popular anime series Tenchi Muyo!.[3]
Although most of Sci Fi's anime programming was composed of feature-length films, a few, such as ''Dominion Tank Police'', were OVAs cut together to fit into the feature timeslot. One regular feature of the Saturday Anime rotation was composed of the first three episodes of the 1990 fantasy OVA series ''Record of Lodoss War''; however, the third episode ends on a cliffhanger and Sci Fi never aired further episodes.
Fans of anime features said the reason for the failure of anime on the Sci Fi Channel was most likely because of how the management of the network handled the programming and scheduling of all anime programs. Bad times, lack of information when shows would be seen, as well as fan inputs to their concerns on programming on the channel.
In May 2007, it was announced that anime would be once again returning to Sci Fi Channel. On June 11, Sci Fi aired the first weekly Ani-Monday block from 11:00 pm ET to 1:00 am ET, though it ran till 1:30 am for the first airing, because of the length of the feature. The online schedule lists all following features for the rest of June and all of July as going to the standard 1:00 am. Content for the new block is provided by Manga Entertainment.
The first airing of the block was the world premier of the English version of ''. Sci Fi Channel's airing was June 11 and the DVD for the movie was released on July 3, 2007.
Any nudity in an anime program is blurred or cropped out by the network censors. This was seen most prevalently in the concert scenes in Macross Plus.
The current anime line-up consists of Noein, Tokko and Street Fighter II V, and past aired shows included Macross Plus.
Aired movies included '', and ''.
Upcoming movie to be shown is the 1995 original Ghost in the Shell.
Miniseries

Sci-Fi original programming gained national prominence in 2003 with the airing of ''Steven Spielberg Presents: Taken'', which won the Emmy Award that year for best miniseries. A two-night updating of the 1970s series ''Battlestar Galactica'' ran later that year. Sci Fi miniseries for the 2006-2007 season included ''The Triangle'', '' and ''The Lost Room''.
In 2004, the channel aired the fantasy miniseries ''Earthsea'', based on Ursula K. Le Guin's series of young-reader novels. Le Guin wrote in the webzine ''Slate'' that despite promises by the production company Hallmark Entertainment and the office of executive producer Robert Halmi, Sr. [2], that "the producers had no understanding of what the books are about and no interest in finding out. All they intended was to use the name Earthsea, and some of the scenes from the books, in a generic McMagic movie with a meaningless plot based on sex and violence." Le Guin noted in particular how her people of color protagonists, who were a dusky skin tone evocative of Native Americans and a conscious alternative to the almost universally white heroes of much fantasy fiction, were cast with white actors except for one, Danny Glover, who is African-American.[4]
The channel's latest miniseries is ''Tin Man'', a re-imagining of ''The Wonderful Wizard of Oz'' scheduled for a December 2007 release.
Sci Fi Pictures original films

Main articles: Sci Fi Pictures original films

Since 2002, the channel has earned strong ratings from television movies it commissions. Typically independently-made B movie-quality movies with total budgets of $1 to 2 million, they usually air on Saturday nights.[5] In April 2005, the network announced that it would air 28 original movies on Saturday nights through 2006.[6]
Bumpers

In some of Sci Fi Channel's modern-day bumpers, people and animals are fascinated by fantastical and futuristic occurrences. The bumps themselves are original and inspired vignettes of science-fiction/fantasy (e.g., a car which turns into a cube that goes into a woman's purse, a woman getting pricked by a rose and the woman dissolving into water, etc.) in contrast to the programming content of the network itself, with the preponderance of the programming including such films as: 'Supergator', 'The Snake King', 'Chupacabra: Dark Seas', 'Dead and Deader' and so on. The bumpers end with its slogan, "if", which are two of the letters found in Sci Fi. The channel's current logo debuted during the airing of the first installment of ''Steven Spielberg Presents Taken'' in December 2002.

Non-science-fiction programming


In 2006, Sci Fi began showing some non-sci-fi programming. These have included:

★ '', shown on May 4, 2006[7]

WWE's Extreme Championship Wrestling, started June 13, 2006[8]
In the past, the network has also aired films, such as ''Braveheart'', which do not contain elements of science-fiction, fantasy, or horror. Also, during Cartoon Quest, the animated series ''Rambo and the Forces of Freedom'', based on the Sylvester Stallone action series about a Vietnam War veteran, aired.

SciFi.com


SCIFI.COM is the SCI FI Channel's website, launched in 1995 under the name "The Dominion" (which it dropped in 2000, and which was one of the first large-scale, publicly available, well-advertised, and non-portal based Web sites).[9] In addition to information on the channel's programming, it covers science fiction in general, primarily through its semi-autonomous ''Science Fiction Weekly'' webzine, edited by Scott Edelman, and SciFi Wire newswire.
The site has won a Webby Award and a Flash Forward Award. From 2000-2005, it published original science fiction short stories in a section called SciFiction, edited by Ellen Datlow, who won a 2005 Hugo Award for her work there. The stories themselves won a World Fantasy Award; the first Theodore Sturgeon Award for online fiction (for Lucius Shepard's novella "Over Yonder"), and four of the Science Fiction Writers of America's Nebula Awards, including the first for original online fiction (for Linda Nagata's novella "Goddesses").
'SCIFIpedia' is a commercial wiki special interest encyclopedia owned by the SCI FI Channel as part of its SCIFI.COM web site. Launched on April 22, 2006, SCIFIpedia's topics include anime, comics, science fiction, fantasy, horror, fandom, games and toys, UFOs, genre-related art and audio, and the paranormal.[10]

Trivia



★ As a placeholder for those who were about to receive the Sci Fi channel on cable, a loop of a fly through space in first-person perspective was shown, with a countdown clock in the corner that told viewers exactly when Sci Fi would begin programming. This went on for at least two months before the channel's inception.

★ The first broadcast of the Sci Fi Channel on September 24, 1992, was an installment of ''FTL Newsfeed'', a fictitious, serialized news program reporting current events from the year 2142. The 30-second episodes would continue to run for the channel's first four years, with new episodes on every weekday. The initial installment reported on the recovery of the original '' movie, which the Sci Fi channel then proceeded to air at 8pm as its first feature-length program. The film was said to have been refurbished and was now able to be viewed "in the privacy of your own head."

★ In 1992, there was a block of animated television shows called "Cartoon Quest" which in 1995 was renamed ''The Animation Station''. Among these were '', '', '', and ''Galaxy High'', as well as marionette shows like ''Stingray'' and ''Captain Scarlet''.

★ This channel was the first American basic cable network to air ''Doctor Who''.

★ This channel was also the first to air '', and '' on cable.[11]

★ This channel also aired the popular TV series ''Stargate SG-1'' which was canceled after its 10th season, making it the longest-run American science fiction series ever (surpassing ''The X-Files'' at 9 seasons). ''SG-1'' is still run in syndication on Sci-Fi Friday and Monday.

★ Although ''Vampire Hunter D'' was edited for nudity and with the adult language was censored when it would occasionally air on Saturday mornings at 9AM, the massive amounts of blood and gore were left intact.

★ On August 27, 2007, Sci-Fi aired an episode of ''WWE Monday Night RAW'' when USA Network pre-empted the timeslot for RAW on that Monday night.

References



1. Omni (October 1992): "A Channel for Science Fiction"
2. ''PWInsider'' (August 16, 2006): "Formally Pre-Empted Raw to Air Live in the US, but not on USA..."
3. "''Tenchi Muyo in Love'' to Make U.S. TV Premiere"
4. ''Slate'' (December 16, 2004): "A Whitewashed Earthsea: How the Sci Fi Channel Wrecked my Books", by Ursula K. Le Guin
5. Gary Wolf. "We've Created a Monster!", ''Wired'', October 2004
6. SCI FI Announces Films for '06." press release, 14 April 2005.
7. Schedulebot
8. Schedulebot
9. SCIFI.COM - SCIFIPEDIA
10. Scifipedia Press Release at ''the futon critic''
11. SCI FI Gets "Enterprise", Other Shows


See also



List of DirecTV channels

List of Dish Network channels

External links



Interviews with reality stars of Vh1, MTV, and SciFi

Official Site

Scifipedia official site



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