Author Topic: All-Reality TV Channel Planned for 2004  (Read 4339 times)

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Offline Rob

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All-Reality TV Channel Planned for 2004
« on: May 03, 2003, 09:19:44 PM »
By LYNN ELBER, AP Television Writer

LOS ANGELES - The audience appetite for reality television could be tested by a planned cable channel that will offer a diet of all reality, all the time.

Reality Central, scheduled to debut in early 2004, is being developed by Larry Namer, co-founder of E! Entertainment Television, and Blake Mycoskie, a businessman who was a reality show contestant.

Namer and Mycoskie contend that reality TV has proved its staying power and can attract and hold enough viewers for a niche channel.

"Reality is now a genre, just like any other genre," Namer said in an interview last week. The venture was to be announced Monday.

"Right now it has a cultlike following, and we're not saying that's going to exist forever," he said. "But I think this type of programming will remain a genre just by the basic economics of it and what it does for a network."

Networks have found success with such hit series as Fox's "American Idol" and CBS' "Survivor." The shows are especially popular among the young adult viewers favored by advertisers.

But the rush to capitalize on the trend, sometimes unsuccessfully (ABC's "Are You Hot?"), has raised questions about the genre's future.

Reality pioneer Bruce Nash, whose projects include Fox's current "Mr. Personality" with Monica Lewinsky, believes the genre is durable and will survive the current glut and bad shows. He's less certain about how an all-reality channel will fare.

"It's an interesting idea. Whether it will work remains to be seen," Nash said. "I produce 120 hours of reality TV, but if I had to watch it all day I'd go nuts."

However, he added: "Everyone is so niche, why not? Why not an all-reality cable channel?"

Reruns of domestic and imported series will represent half of Reality Central's programming. The rest will be behind-the-scenes looks at the shows and contestants, "all those things that feed the fan appetite," Namer said.

The channel plans to enhance the series repeats with commentary from contestants, such as Richard Hatch (news) offering details on his winning "Survivor" strategy.

Reality "stars" including Hatch, fellow "Survivor" contestant Colby Donaldson and Trista Rehn and Ryan Sutter of "The Bachelorette" have signed on with the channel to promote it.

Prize winners from various shows were the first investors in the channel that has incurred about $1 million in startup costs so far, said Namer and Mycoskie, who was a runner-up on CBS' "The Amazing Race." The investors were not identified.

About $25 million will be required to get the channel up and running through its first year, the partners said.

Reality Central would join the ranks of other cable networks that target very specific audiences with mostly reruns, such as ESPN Classic and SoapNet.

It doesn't take many viewers for such channels to work. The business model for Reality Central is based on a 0.2 rating, or roughly 200,000 homes. Shows that score a 0.5 rating, about a half-million homes, "are big hits for cable," Namer said.

The channel will produce only one reality show: It will detail the development and launch of Reality Central, which is being documented on digital video.

"So the network itself is a reality show," Namer said.

Although there will be original programming about reality TV, the lack of fresh series was met with some skepticism.

Reality is the "kind of genre that has a way of burning itself out," said industry analyst Larry Gerbrandt of Kagan World Media. When reality falls out of favor with networks, he said, Reality Central will have to start creating its own series.

Reality Central expects it will reach a minimum of 3 million homes when it starts and could reach 30 million homes within two years, Namer said. By comparison, Comedy Central (no relation) reaches more than 80 million homes.

Discussions are under way with networks but no deals for specific shows have been made, said Namer, Reality Central's president and chief executive officer, and Mycoskie, its chairman.

CBS has received information on the venture but hadn't seen a formal presentation, spokesman Chris Ender said. Networks are open to finding new revenue streams for existing programs, he added.

Offline Rob

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Re:All-Reality TV Channel Planned for 2004
« Reply #1 on: May 03, 2003, 09:21:20 PM »
Honestly, I can't wait for this TV station to startup. Sounds like we could get reruns of our old Reality TV Shows like the first seasons of Survivor. That would be great.
Maybe they would even bring back the Mole.
Sounds like that CBS is open to this idea.
Rob


Offline Bathfizzy

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Re:All-Reality TV Channel Planned for 2004
« Reply #2 on: May 07, 2003, 01:59:02 AM »
This might be a dangerous channel to have!! I might be watching all day and get nothing else done.  There definitely is a market for it.  I would love to re watch all the seasons of the Amazing Race.  The first Temptation Island was good.  I missed the first Survivor so I would tune in for that.