http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2007-05-05/sci-fi-channel-launches-anime-block

http://tinyurl.com/2wu6pt


Broadcasting & Cable reports that on June 11, the Sci Fi Channel will 
premiere Ani-Monday, a weekly two-hour block of anime programming. 
Episodes, films, and other content for the block will be provided by 
Manga Entertainment, a unit of Starz Media. Starz is the production 
company behind Sci Fi's original series Painkiller Jane. According to 
Sci Fi executive vice-president Dave Howe, this block is a part of an 
overall initiative to redefine Sci Fi as a "lifestyle brand," not just 
a cable TV channel.

The new block, which will air from 11:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m., is 
intended to directly compete with Cartoon Network's Adult Swim block. 
Broadcasting & Cable reports that through the first months of this 
year, Adult Swim has averaged 281,000 male viewers aged 18-34 during 
that timeslot. For the same age bracket and timeslot, Sci Fi Channel's 
average was 44,000 viewers.



http://www.broadcastingcable.com/article/CA6439376.html





In an attempt to lure younger viewers and expand the reach of its 
brand, Sci Fi Channel is launching Ani-Monday, a two-hour late-night 
block of anime programming. Set to premiere June 11, the slate will 
put the network in direct competition with Cartoon Network's 
late-night ratings powerhouse Adult Swim, which programs anime as 
well.

Running from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m., the block will include acquired 
series, movies and shorts.

The content comes from Manga, one of three major U.S. anime 
distributors and a unit of Starz Media, which produces Sci Fi's 
live-action original Painkiller Jane, among other network shows.

Sci Fi, which signed a one-year deal with Starz, is aiming to better 
reach an 18- to 34-year-old male audience and convert those new 
viewers into fans of Sci Fi's other content.

If successful, the move would lower the network's median age 
(currently about 45) and hopefully attract more advertising from young 
male-targeting categories, like movies and electronics. Sci Fi would 
then likely work the formula across other nights.

The network recently got approval from parent company NBC Universal to 
start a business division, which is producing Sci Fi-branded comic 
books in partnership with Virgin Comics. Sci Fi is also considering 
feature films, videogames and mobile products.

"This is part of a whole initiative to target a youth audience and 
figure out how we start to transform the Sci Fi brand away from just 
being a TV cable brand and more into a lifestyle brand that can move 
into other levels," says Executive VP/GM Dave Howe.

Sci Fi has been eyeing late night for years and enters the market at a 
time when the daypart has never been more competitive. Late-night ad 
revenue reached nearly $1 billion for broadcast alone last year, and 
cable networks are increasingly programming in that time period as 
well.

Sci Fi will most directly battle Adult Swim, which targets the same 
young-male audience and programs six nights a week for a total of 45 
hours. (Cartoon Network recently announced a move to expand the block 
to include Fridays.)

For 2007 to date, Adult Swim has averaged 281,000 viewers among men 
18-34 from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. for the six days it programs. For the 
same period, Sci Fi averaged 44,000 males age 18-34 from 11 p.m. to 1 
a.m. on those days. Currently, Sci Fi runs acquired movies during 
those hours. By comparison, the network averaged 121,000 males 18-34 
during prime hours 8-11 p.m.

Viacom's Comedy Central lures just as many 18-34 males as Cartoon with 
its Daily Show/Colbert Report late-night salvo.

And Turner's comedy-focused TBS has also added originals to its 
late-night hours over the past year, including half-hour comedies and 
last summer's experimental, live interactive game show Midnight Money 
Madness.



****************************************************************************

Is it just me, or is Sci-Fi as a "lifestyle brand" hilarious?

The blocks premier offering will be Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone 
Complex - Solid State Society. This is a movie, not a half hour 
series.



xponent

Up Too Early Maru

rob




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