Four (New Zealand)

"FOUR" redirects here. For the coma scale, see FOUR score. For the album by One Direction, see Four (One Direction album).
Four
Launched 29 June 1997
Closed July 2016
Owned by MediaWorks New Zealand
Picture format PAL (576i) 16:9
Slogan "NZ's Most (Facebook) Liked TV channel" & "feels like Four"
Country New Zealand
Broadcast area national
metropolitan
Formerly called TV4, C4
Sister channel(s) TV3, The Edge TV
Timeshift service
  • Four Plus 1
  • (terrestrial only)
Website www.four.co.nz
Availability
Terrestrial
DVB 64-QAM on band IV
Satellite
DVB QPSK on 12456 MHz
Cable
DVB QAM

Four (stylised as FOUR) is the second New Zealand television channel owned and operated by MediaWorks New Zealand, broadcast via the state-owned Kordia transmission network. The channel launched on 29 June 1997 as TV4 and was replaced by C4 on 3 October 2003. It was relaunched on 6 February 2011 as a separate channel from C4.

On 3 May 2016, it was announced that Mediaworks will close FOUR in July 2016 and replace it with Bravo as part of a deal with NBC Universal. [1]

In general, the channel's target audience is 18- to 49-year-olds and can be broader in its appeal, with programming which attracts a wider, and more mature audience. During early mornings and late afternoons the channel will screen a range of children's programming such as Sesame Street and in the evenings will screen shows aimed at the mainstream audience. Overnight and late mornings – early afternoons the channel will screen Infomercials and Auto TV (Car Commercials). Four broadcasts mostly American programming, with the exemption of Sticky TV and Smash which are in-house produced Auckland hosted youth shows and the Pukana youth show which is produced from a Maori language government fund. Pukana also airs on one of the two government funded Maori language channels.

History

Previous TV4 logo used from 1997 to 2003
Alternative previous TV4 logo

The history of Four dates back to 1997 when TV3 decided to launch a second channel as TV4. TV4 was an entertainment network and screened a wide range of imported shows such as South Park, Beverly Hills 90210, Beavis and Butthead. After the millennium new programming was scarce, with the infiltration of 1980's and 1990s repeats. In 2003 TV4 was replaced by a music channel C4.

In October 2010 MediaWorks announced TV4 would return as Four, the new network would now focus on children's programming during the day and in the evenings will screen a range of shows aimed at the 18- to 49-year-old audience. The first programme to air on Four was The Simpsons episode "Elementary School Musical" (not coincidentally featuring New Zealand's own Flight of the Conchords).

At the end of 2012, Four began screening some new episodes of shows within seven days of the show being broadcasting in the United States under the Fast Four brand. Examples of shows include The Simpsons, Family Guy, Glee and How I Met Your Mother. New Zealand TV networks typically start screening most US television series around five months after the original release, usually first screening in late January or February at the end of the New Zealand summer, catching up to the US at the end of the season as all 22 episodes are broadcast week-after-week, not spread out over nine months as in the US. The transition of shows like Glee from TV3 to Four also lost the NZ On Air funding that is given to TV3 to get EIA-608 captions converted from source masters to the preferred Teletext format by TVNZ's Access Services. As New Zealand broadcasters are completely reliant on this process for program subtitling.

Content

Current

Local

Primetime

Daytime

Late Night

Late night burn off

Revoked

Television output deals

Note: SD material for Four only shows with archived subtitles for some re-runs.

Four Plus 1

Four Plus 1 logo

Mediaworks launched a timeshift service, Four Plus 1, on 27 June 2014. It is a standard hour delayed timeshift channel of the Four broadcast. Four Plus 1 was initially only available on digital terrestrial with satellite launched a week later on Sky's fifth digital transport.[2]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, May 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.