View Full Version : Discovery to Launch 6 New HD Channels
AndyHDTV 05-07-07, 09:40 AM News
Discovery to Launch 6 New HD Channels
The new channels are expected this fall and early next year.
By Phillip Swann
Washington, D.C. (May 7, 2007) -- Discovery, which launched Discovery HD Theater five years ago next month, plans to launch four new High-Definition TV network this fall.
That's according to an article in Adweek Magazine. (This was also predicted here last month at TVPredictions.com.)
Discovery tells the publication that it will launch high-def simulcasts of Animal Planet, TLC, The Science Channel and the company's main network, Discovery Channel.
Then, in the first quarter of 2008, Discovery says it will add two more high-def channels.
Animal Planet is going high-def.
"Having established first-mover advantage in the HD space with Discovery HD Theater, this is a step toward growing that leadership," Discovery president and CEO David Zaslav told the publication.
There was no word on which TV providers would carry the additional high-def channels. But DIRECTV is a good bet with the satcaster saying it will offer 100 national HD channels by year's end.
He added that the HD channels will also be available in Discovery's international markets.
With the addition of a Discovery Channel HD simulcast, Zaslav says it will become the company's high-def flagship.
He adds that the time is right for more high-def channels with HDTVs now in 30 million U.S. homes.
"We have to drive ourselves toward really becoming a new-media company with all that entails rather than just sitting back and continuing on as a traditional cable company," he says. "HD is the new analog tier."
John Hendricks, Discovery's founder and chairman, agrees, saying he pushed for a documentary to be produced in high-def years ago when few others took notice.
"I insisted that it was to be done in High-Definition, and back then it was a hugely daunting proposition," Hendricks tells Adweek. "Beyond the expense, we couldn't even say for certain that the cameras would work out in the field given the temperature extremes. At the time, no media company could have undertaken a project of this magnitude on its own."
http://www.tvpredictions.com/discovery050707.htm
MeatChicken 05-07-07, 09:51 AM Do cable/Sat companies generally have to pay "extra" for Simul HD channels or do they get to carry it free if they carry the non-HD version?
With this annoucement, & the rumored SciFi / USA HD's also due before the end of the year, ... I wonder how fast providers will add these ....
Marcus Carr 05-07-07, 09:53 AM Special Report: The Fittest Survive
May 07, 2007
By Anthony Crupi/Mediaweek
NEW YORK It is perhaps the most ARRESTING image in an 11-hour panoply of arresting images, a moment of crisis that is at once starkly isolated and yet one that seems to serve as a portent for the entire planet and everything that creeps and breathes and thrives upon its molted surface.
In the sixth installment of the Discovery Channel's epic documentary series Planet Earth, a polar bear, standing uncertainly on an ice floe in the Arctic, begins to lose his footing as the sheet begins to break apart into the surrounding sea. With his world literally crumbling to pieces around him, the bear has little choice but to swim for the next tenable landmass, which turns out to be some 60 miles distant.
While the polar bear's plight never improves—in a desperate bid for sustenance, he takes on a herd of walruses; after that tactic fails, the wounded and starving bear ultimately dies off-camera—the overall tone of the series is celebratory. In documenting the rich pageantry of the natural world, not only did Planet Earth stir up massive ratings for Discovery, averaging 5.16 million viewers and 2.4 million adults 25-54 over the span of its five-week run—it also marked a return to the channel's roots.
The culmination of an ambitious, five-year project conceived by Discovery Communications founder and chairman John Hendricks as a means to document natural history with the most advanced technology at the network's disposal, Planet Earth also serves as a shining reminder of the company's commitment to HD.
Over the last two months, all of Discovery's original network content has been shot in HD and the company has begun the arduous process of upconverting its archives. Discovery's going to need all the HD content it can get; in the fall, it plans to launch four new HD channels, offering subscribers high-def simulcasts of the flagship net as well as Animal Planet, TLC and The Science Channel. Two additional HD channels will follow by the first quarter of 2008.
"Having established first-mover advantage in the HD space with Discovery HD Theater, this is a step toward growing that leadership," says Discovery president and CEO David Zaslav, adding that the simulcasts will also be available in Discovery's international markets.
Since emerging as the nation's first 24/7 HD network in June 2002, Discovery HD Theater has functioned as a showcase for marquee fare like Planet Earth and the ongoing, 30-part series Discovery Atlas while offering exclusive destination and wildlife programming.
The introduction of the new HD nets will "change HD Theater significantly," Zaslav says, as the Discovery Channel simulcast will emerge as the high-def flagship.
With projections anticipating at least one HD set for each of 65 million American homes by 2010, Zaslav says that the time is right for Discovery to go all-in on the format. "We have to drive ourselves toward really becoming a new-media company with all that entails rather than just sitting back and continuing on as a traditional cable company," he says. "HD is the new analog tier."
For Hendricks, the promise of HDTV is not just in the clarity and resolution of the picture; rather, it's an opportunity to bring people together again in a fragmented entertainment universe.
"The key tension, which is defining the task ahead for all of us, is that we need to recognize that the large-screen format is the way we tell each other our stories, and that is going to stay centered in the home," Hendricks says. "That's where people are through being interactive for the day and want to go straight into that storytelling mode. Huddling together for a story—it's genetic."
Hendricks was so enthralled by the potential of HD that even five years ago, when the format was still in the larval stage, he planned to have an entire documentary series produced with the new technology.
"I insisted that it was to be done in high-definition, and back then it was a hugely daunting proposition," Hendricks says. "Beyond the expense, we couldn't even say for certain that the cameras would work out in the field given the temperature extremes. At the time, no media company could have undertaken a project of this magnitude on its own."
The joint production, which was shouldered by both Discovery and the BBC, was budgeted at $25 million, more than $2 million per episode. "There were difficulties when you looked at the cost involved, but you have to have a fundamental faith in the project if you're going to see it through," Hendricks says. "These big-budget HD series are very important to us in that they create an event that each week people will gather around to watch … And they're a great way to promote all of our coming attractions."
In a sense, the success of Planet Earth and the blue-chip investment Hendricks made in the series is emblematic of the direction the company has been moving in since November 2006, when former NBC Universal executive Zaslav was tapped to replace outgoing Discovery president and CEO Judith McHale. Renowned for his business acumen, having taken on every aspect of the cable business from affiliate sales to the oversight of NBCU's ambitious digital-media initiatives, Zaslav is guided by a hyper-accelerated process of natural selection. In order for the herd to thrive, the weak must be culled.
The first winnowing came in February, a little more than a month after Zaslav moved into his new digs at Discovery's Silver Spring, Md., headquarters. In a five-page missive to staffers on Feb. 5, Zaslav broke down his three-point plan for growth, including a call for the elimination of an entire layer of senior management. By the end of the day the memo was sent, Discovery Networks U.S. president Billy Campbell, who had overseen the company's domestic programming assets, was gone, Zaslav having eliminated his position entirely.
Letting Campbell go was both a strategic and a symbolic move in that it removed any dotted lines at the highest levels of Discovery's reporting structure, granting full authority for programming decisions to the heads of the five network brands while freeing Zaslav to go about the business of, well, business.
A second round of layoffs began April 9, resulting in 200 employees being let go, most of them coming from the networks, as well as the education and Discovery Studios units.
Education was the first area to begin downsizing. In December 2006, Discovery began a number of adjustments to the education division, letting go of some 84 employees in order to shift resources over to the company's direct-to-school distribution platform, UnitedStreaming. A similar review has begun with respect to the commerce division, which houses Discovery's 100-plus retail outlets and e-tailing operation.
Some have suggested that education is particularly vulnerable to further cuts, given that it's generally seen as a holdover from the McHale era. But Hendricks counters that the unit shows "a great deal of promise in terms of growth and … UnitedStreaming has been just terrific." The founder added that Discovery will spend less on its consumer-products offerings, noting that the commerce and retail review is not yet complete.
"David is leading the charge there and he's doing a great job," Hendricks says. "He's got great instincts."
Zaslav says UnitedStreaming is now in more than 70 percent of the nation's classrooms, giving Discovery a direct feed to millions of kids. As such, Zaslav has been mulling over the possibility of serving as a distribution partner to other content players looking to tap into that huge, captive audience.
"The question is, should we be the only one that reaches that asset, or should we be the Comcast of the classroom, where other people piggyback on top of us to get into that screen? We haven't scratched the surface yet," he says.
The importance of education only serves to underscore just how opaque the inner workings of Discovery have been to Wall Street and beyond, given the knottiness of its overall corporate structure.
In July 2005, Liberty Media poured its 50 percent stake in Discovery into the newly created Discovery Holding Co. Following Cox Communications' divestment of its 25 percent stake in the company in late March, Discovery Holdings now owns 66 percent of Discovery Communications, with the remaining 33 percent under the control of Advance/Newhouse. Adding another layer of complexity, although DHC owns the majority of the networks group, it cannot make any major business decisions without the consent of 80 percent of its shareholders. Thus, Advance/Newhouse continues to have a hand in all decisions that come to a vote.
The Cox deal is expected to be finalized sometime over the next two weeks.
In a note to investors last month, Pali Capital media analyst Richard Greenfield said he believed Advance/Newhouse may ultimately decide to consolidate its interest to DHC. Should that be the case, it would free Discovery management "to communicate with the investment community (something that has not been possible since the creation of DHC)," Greenfield wrote. "We believe greater transparency beyond quarterly filings will result in a substantial increase in investor attention paid to DHC."
While Discovery executives say they do not anticipate Advance/Newhouse will look to sell its stake, investors have already begun getting a better look at the inner workings of the company since Zaslav took over.
"He's much more proactive, much more adept at getting the message out there," says one executive who's had dealings with both Zaslav and his predecessor. "There hasn't been any lag time with the guy. He comes in, he starts making moves … There's no mystery as to what's going on."
One of the more populist Wall Street watchers, CNBC's Jim Cramer, praised Zaslav's gimlet-eyed approach to business management during a recent episode of his evening financial program Mad Money.
Leaping full-bore into his hyperbolic hedge-fund-manager-with-Tourette's delivery, Cramer called the new Discovery a "brutal, cut-throat and most brazenly capitalistic cable channel," telling viewers to invest in what is "becoming a real money-making machine."
Shareholders have responded to Zaslav's first few months on the job in kind. Since the year began, Discovery shares have shot up nearly 24 percent, closing on May 1 at $21.56.
While the next several months will find Zaslav juggling a number of different projects—including the HD launches and an effort to define the so-called green channel initiative he first announced during last month's upfront presentation—he's not taking his eye off the resurgent flagship net.
Thanks to Planet Earth, Discovery ended April as the No. 5 ad-supported cable net in prime time, growing its average nightly audience 38 percent to 1.59 million viewers while upping its delivery of adults 18-49 by 32 percent and adults 25-54 by 26 percent.
MPG CEO Charlie Rutman says the Discovery slate manages the tricky feat of "combining what is most certainly a commercial venture with doing good, bringing awareness to things that normally don't get a lot of play on television … They have a terrific mixture of stuff."
Jane Root, executive vp and general manager, Discovery and Discovery Science, says she'll build on the recent ratings boom by focusing on serving the core of the brand. "Right now it's very sexy to be smart, and that has something to do with how new media has taken over the world," she says. "If we modernize our content, offering our viewers a chance to increase their knowledge in an immersive, energetic environment, we're going to be able to keep our momentum."
Next up on the flagship: the previously unannounced mini-series spinoff of Deadliest Catch, which steams out of port May 29. Hosted by Mike Rowe, the four-episode After the Catch will offer fans of the sea-tossed reality series an even more intimate look at the men who make their living fishing for crabs in the freezing waters of the Bering Sea.
While Deadliest Catch and Planet Earth have been stellar ratings draws for Discovery—the April 3 season premiere of Catch lured 3.1 million viewers, a 30 percent increase over the season-two opener—big audience numbers aren't always greeted with a chorus of huzzahs.
While the net stirred up an enormous amount of controversy with the March 4 documentary The Lost Tomb of Jesus, which brought in 4.1 million viewers, Root says she doesn't regret airing the program.
"We want to be a network in the present tense, to be a part of the global conversation," she says. "We have a really strong sense of where we're going."
As does Zaslav, who says he's already settled in to his new life in Silver Spring after 20 years at NBC.
"This is chapter two for me," he says. "I wanted new music playing in my ear and some different scenery, and that's what I have right here."
http://www.adweek.com/aw/magazine/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003581394
Steve S 05-07-07, 02:44 PM "Since emerging as the nation's first 24/7 HD network in June 2002, Discovery HD Theater has functioned as a showcase for marquee fare like Planet Earth and the ongoing, 30-part series Discovery Atlas while offering exclusive destination and wildlife programming."
I seem to remember a 24/7 HD network I was watching back in October of 2001, namely HDNet.
Vampz26 05-07-07, 02:48 PM "Since emerging as the nation's first 24/7 HD network in June 2002, Discovery HD Theater has functioned as a showcase for marquee fare like Planet Earth and the ongoing, 30-part series Discovery Atlas while offering exclusive destination and wildlife programming."
I seem to remember a 24/7 HD network I was watching back in October of 2001, namely HDNet.
I think the keyword there might be 24/7. Didn't HDnet for the longest time broadcast only 12 hours? I remember watching it on D* in the beginning and I think that at night they used to switch it over to PPV or something in the evenings...
...of course I could be wrong if my memory fails me...
I seem to remember a 24/7 HD network I was watching back in October of 2001, namely HDNet.
At what point did HDNet goto to the 24 hour schedule? At first they were only 16 hours per day.
Scott G 05-07-07, 04:25 PM What is the odds D* carries these channels at launch ? I would think there would be a good chance.
vurbano 05-07-07, 05:29 PM Great news. Finally more real worthy HD content.
What is the odds D* carries these channels at launch ? I would think there would be a good chance.
Assuming the next DirecTV satellite gets launched (June 10 is the currently scheduled date) and goes into service without major problems, the chances are just about 100%.
afiggatt 05-07-07, 05:58 PM So when do we get Mythbusters in HD? Way past time for that show to be shot and shown in HD.
Ou8thisSN 05-07-07, 06:16 PM man... thats like 20-30 hd nets announced to be launched this year. lets hope cable competes with the satalite folks
Jack Smith 05-07-07, 08:12 PM My movie 'Sinking Of The Lusitania - Terror At Sea' was shot in HD and mastered in 5.1. It premieres this Saturday, May 12, at 9:00 PM, on the Discovery Channel. It's a full drama, not a documentary and stars John Hannah (The Mummy/Returns)...unfortunately we air before the change-over to all HD. Another drama coming in August is 'Super Storm', starring Tom Sizemore. It was also shot in HD/5.1.
mx6bfast 05-07-07, 10:36 PM So will DHDT still be around since they will have a simulcast of the main Discovery channel? I wonder if DHDT will show older programs, kinda like an HBO/Cinemax type deal.
AndyHDTV 05-07-07, 10:52 PM So will DHDT still be around since they will have a simulcast of the main Discovery channel? I wonder if DHDT will show older programs, kinda like an HBO/Cinemax type deal.
Discovery HD Theater might change to Discovery-HD
lvthunder 05-07-07, 11:54 PM Since most providers won't be able to carry all the channels I just wish they would show them on less channels with fewer repeats. I think that's the main problem with TV today. 200 channels yet there's still nothing I want to watch.
nightowl 05-08-07, 01:37 AM Since most providers won't be able to carry all the channels I just wish they would show them on less channels with fewer repeats. I think that's the main problem with TV today. 200 channels yet there's still nothing I want to watch.
Agreed! I'd rather have 50 well programmed channels, use my DVR to record what I want, and trash the rest of the channels out there. I applaud the general idea behind channels like Discovery HD Theater, Home and Garden HD, and Universal HD. Unfortunately, even those channels, except maybe for Discovery, still don't have a big selection of HD programming. I do enjoy that they combine a group of networks' programming into a single channel.
My movie 'Sinking Of The Lusitania - Terror At Sea' was shot in HD and mastered in 5.1. It premieres this Saturday, May 12, at 9:00 PM, on the Discovery Channel. It's a full drama, not a documentary and stars John Hannah (The Mummy/Returns)...unfortunately we air before the change-over to all HD. Another drama coming in August is 'Super Storm', starring Tom Sizemore. It was also shot in HD/5.1.
Sinking of the Lusitania will run on Discovery HD Theater on Sunday, June 3 at 8pm.
samii1031 05-11-07, 09:08 AM Discovery HD Theater might change to Discovery-HD
It looks like HD Theater will stay the same and they are adding simulcasts Discovery, Animal Planet, TLC and Science with 2 more next year
Does anyone have an educated guess as to what content will be used for the two unspecified HD channels from Discovery?
yudaman33 05-11-07, 06:51 PM I'll go out on a whim and guess the Travel Channel and Military Channel.
nakedeye 05-11-07, 10:21 PM discovery times?
CycloneGT 05-11-07, 10:40 PM I think that Discovery is in the process of unloading the Travel Channel, or has already done so.
barth2k 05-12-07, 12:47 PM 6? They could probably cram all the HD content they have into 1 channel.
AndyHDTV 05-12-07, 01:01 PM "On March 29, 2007 Discovery Communications announced their intent to sell the Travel Channel to Cox Communications as part of a larger multi-billion dollar transaction."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travel_Channel
looks like Discovery won't be launching the Travel Channel in HD.
Which 2 out of 5 will be next.
Here's the rest of their networks:
Discovery Health
Discovery Times
Discovery Kids
Discovery Home
The Military Channel
diat150 05-12-07, 02:20 PM I hope discovery times is one of the two. definitely my favorite non hd channel.
cavalierlwt 05-12-07, 07:41 PM So, if I understand it correctly, I'll be seeing 'Mythbusters' in HD soon?
Also, I too hope that Discover Times goes HD...great stuff, especially the Thomas L Friedman specials.
pen15nv 05-13-07, 12:40 AM "On March 29, 2007 Discovery Communications announced their intent to sell the Travel Channel to Cox Communications as part of a larger multi-billion dollar transaction."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Travel_Channel
looks like Discovery won't be launching the Travel Channel in HD.
Which 2 out of 5 will be next.
Here's the rest of their networks:
Discovery Health
Discovery Times
Discovery Kids
Discovery Home
The Military Channel
Let's hope it's not Discovery Health (aka the Discovery Birthing and Breast Enlargement Channel). I'm not sure I can handle all that blood in HD
URFloorMatt 05-13-07, 01:10 AM It would not be in their interest to convert DHDT into Discovery HD unless they can guarantee widespread carriage of their other channels. Otherwise, most of their flagship non-Discovery shows are going to lose their HD audiences.
sneals2000 05-13-07, 10:30 AM My movie 'Sinking Of The Lusitania - Terror At Sea' was shot in HD and mastered in 5.1. It premieres this Saturday, May 12, at 9:00 PM, on the Discovery Channel. It's a full drama, not a documentary and stars John Hannah (The Mummy/Returns)...unfortunately we air before the change-over to all HD. Another drama coming in August is 'Super Storm', starring Tom Sizemore. It was also shot in HD/5.1.
Yep - Super Storm has already aired in HD on BBC HD in the UK. Looked good - though I didn't really get pulled into the story - felt a bit too close to "The Day After Tomorrow" done for TV if I'm honest. (Casting a well known UK soap star as a scientist didn't really help it either)
mx6bfast 05-13-07, 01:06 PM Let's hope it's not Discovery Health (aka the Discovery Birthing and Breast Enlargement Channel). I'm not sure I can handle all that blood in HD
Honestly I'd like to see this channel in HD, and my wife even more. She's a nurse. And 2, I could drop down a package from D* and save a few bucks per month.
Marcus Carr 05-14-07, 04:20 PM Cox Closes Discovery Deal
-- Multichannel News, 5/14/2007 11:01:00 AM
Cox Communications and Discovery Communications said they closed the exchange of Cox’s 25% stake in Discovery for Travel Channel and Travel Channel.com parent Travel Media and $1.3 billion in cash.
http://www.multichannel.com/article/CA6441972.html
Marcus Carr 12-04-07, 06:08 PM December 4, 2007
Discovery Set to Launch Two New HD Channels in January
By Jon Lafayette
Discovery Communications plans to launch two more high definition channels in January.
David Zaslav, CEO of Discovery, said HD was a big part of the company’s future, but he declined to name new channels following remarks at the UBS Global Media & Communications Conference in New York Tuesday.
Discovery this year has launched HD versions of Discovery Channel, TLC, Animal Planet and Science Channel, in addition to its HD Theater service.
Mr. Zaslav said creating the HD channels was a cost but by gaining distribution now, the company was securing “beach front property” from cable operators and satellite providers.
"As more people get HD sets, Discovery will have seven of the 30 to 40 channels people will want to watch on their new equipment," he said. "We look great in HD.”
http://www.tvweek.com/news/2007/12/discovery_set_to_launch_two_ne.php
URFloorMatt 12-04-07, 06:53 PM Someone needs to ask Zaslav whether he's going to starve even more bitrate from these new channels to cram a few more useless Discovery networks down the pipe.
BigDaddyRoy 12-04-07, 09:19 PM December 4, 2007
Discovery Set to Launch Two New HD Channels in January
By Jon Lafayette
David Zaslav, CEO of Discovery, said HD was a big part of the company’s future, but he declined to name new channels....
Oh, fun. I want to guess, too. Since they are selling Travel, and people seem to be discounting that because of it, I'll guess;
Discovery Health - Other than Travel, the only one left in Discovery's top five highest rated networks not yet available in HD
Military Channel - to keep up with competing History Channel, which is already HD.
Just my opinion. Take this as such.
MPEG-2 @ 12.5Mbps ABR and 15Mbps peaks for a 1080i30 video channel = garbage
kevin j 12-06-07, 02:27 PM How much of the programming on the Discovery channel HD version is in true HD?[most of what i've seen today looks to be upconverted]
NetworkTV 12-06-07, 02:55 PM MPEG-2 @ 12.5Mbps ABR and 15Mbps peaks for a 1080i30 video channel = garbage
Especially if it starts out as 1440x1080.
MPEG-2 @ 12.5Mbps ABR and 15Mbps peaks for a 1080i30 video channel = garbage
I'm guessing if it's carried on Directv, that won't matter due to their use of MPEG4 compression?
Marcus Carr 04-17-08, 08:27 PM Discovery Channel HD has a new bug.
mx6bfast 04-17-08, 10:49 PM Discovery Channel HD has a new bug.
Yeah I saw it last night. Annoying, as usual.
Can't anyone change to a better, non-obtrusive bug?
Jeremy W 04-18-08, 12:40 AM Can't anyone change to a better, non-obtrusive bug?
Ironically enough, The Science Channel did just that. Their current bug is much better than their original one.
mx6bfast 04-18-08, 08:50 AM Ironically enough, The Science Channel did just that. Their current bug is much better than their original one.
Guess I need to check it out. As long as it isn't as bad as the Anizal Planet bug.
So what were the two new channels?
mp3trojan 07-27-08, 07:59 PM If I were to speculate, Disc. Times and Health. And don't the have an avaition channel?
AndyHDTV 07-27-08, 08:53 PM well planet green launched in HD in june, and used to be called discovery home.
so thats probably 1 of the two HD channels that was going to launch in HD.
then theirs on discovery health which is set to change to OWN-Network in jan. 2009.
URFloorMatt 07-27-08, 09:46 PM Yeah I saw it last night. Annoying, as usual.
Can't anyone change to a better, non-obtrusive bug?
Didn't they do just that? The new bug isn't near as large as the old now that it's just the D. The globe might be a tad more opaque.
rolltide1017 07-27-08, 10:09 PM Yea, 2 more HD channels that BHN will take years to add, if ever.
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