Monday, April 10, 2006

SONY Launching new Horror Network


From Moviesonline, "Comcast and Sony Pictures Entertainment today announced plans to premiere a new Horror and Thriller multi-platform network on Halloween, October 31, 2006. Plans for the new advertising-supported network were unveiled today at the NCTA National Show in Atlanta by Diane Robina, Comcast's newly appointed President of Emerging Networks and Steve Mosko, President of Sony Pictures Television.

The network will captivate fear seekers and fans of the horror film genre - one of the fastest-growing genres at the box office. It will debut on video on demand and the Internet at launch, and will add a wireless platform in the future. The channel is the first multi-platform network that leverages the combined assets of the Sony and MGM libraries, which make up the largest collection of its kind in the world. Comcast and Sony
announced their intent to create new distribution platforms for this content when the companies and other investors purchased the MGM library last year.

Horror and thriller films have emerged on the mainstream film scene in the last several years with box office numbers skyrocketing. Twenty percent of the feature films released by major studios in 2005 were in this category, and one in three of those debuted at number one at the box office. The genre, which now features top Hollywood stars and grosses more than $1 billion a year, has a growing fan base in the sought-after 18-34 demographic.

"Horror fans not only like this genre, they are passionate about it. This is the first channel of its kind devoted solely to serving this expanding audience and a great advertising opportunity to reach this demographic," says Robina. "The number of horror fans is growing exponentially, and they are hungry for this kind of multimedia experience. This is the perfect time and the ideal platform to introduce a dedicated horror experience."

"We are excited to be launching the first of our joint channels with our partners at Comcast," said Mosko. "More and more people are looking to a variety of sources for their entertainment, and this new channel will be available on multiple platforms simultaneously, redefining the idea of what a network is."

The network will feature film and TV contemporary thrillers, suspense dramas, horror titles and more on Comcast's ON DEMAND service on October 31 and will launch its multimedia fan website the same day. "The depth of offerings available from the Sony and MGM libraries is unparalleled," adds Robina. "We have hundreds of titles at our disposal to satisfy every thrill seeker." Horror movie fans will get the online experience they want through a video-rich, multimedia online environment that will become the horror destination for the fan community, and will include: exclusive horror outtakes, music downloads, a scream fest, original animation and behind-the- scenes footage. The network will add a wireless component that will feature horror ringtones, sound effects and other features designed specifically for the mobile experience.

The companies will announce the new network's name and additional details about the multimedia content in the coming months"

3 comments:

Octopunk said...

Oh man, I really have to get cable. And a TV. Isn't The Horror Channel trying to do this, too? Isn't that why they're called "The Horror Channel?"

More to the point, why is the fan base getting so big? Is it that people are catching on, or that the world is more horrible and we need this escape?

Remember that statistic about the Amish. A higher percentage of them are choosing to remain in the church than at any point in their history.

JPX said...

Yeah, I remember that they were promoting the hell out of the Horror Channel about a year ago, then I heard nothing. They have a pretty good site on the net, but alas I still don't see anything about the channel. However, I remember how excited I was when I heard that the Sci-Fi Channel was coming into existence - and we all now what a crap-fest that channel turned out to be. The two worst words, "original programming". I thought sci-fi was going to be crammed full of old sci-fi flicks; instead I find nothing of interest on that channel.

Octopunk said...

At least "original programming" isn't the complete suck fest it used to be. HBO wasted years of everyone's time until they got the Sopranos. And even Sci-Fi's efforts aren't universally bad, there's the very good Battlestar Galactica series. It's all by itself, of course, but it's there.

That said, I'm with you. The Sci-Fi channel should be old SF movies and TV shows; then I'd be all over it.

Salem's Lot 1979 and Salem's Lot 2024

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