BBC Worldwide, ITV SVOD Venture BritBox Launches With $6.99 Monthly Price

brejust

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Oct 25, 2014
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Positioning itself as the "destination for lovers of British TV," it will feature such shows as the original 'Office,' 'Blackadder,' "Iconic Detectives" and more.
BBC Worldwide, the commercial arm of the BBC, and U.K. TV giant ITV on Tuesday launched subscription VOD service BritBox in the U.S. with a price tag of $6.99 per month after an introductory free trial period.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/ne...ure-britbox-launches-699-monthly-price-983887
The service, also backed by AMC Networks, which has a joint venture with BBC Worldwide for cable channel BBC America, promises "the most comprehensive collection of British television, across all genres, available anywhere in the U.S." with thousands of hours of programming at launch, the majority exclusive.

It features U.S. premieres of new dramas, a "Now" category that serves up British soaps and other programs as soon as 24 hours after their U.K. broadcast and a library of iconic series.
 
If this service included live tv, or at least something like "new BBC / ITV shows available on demand within 24 hours or less of UK airing" and that it applied to virtually all such shows, it would be a lot more interesting.

As is, what this service shows is there is a ton of BBC and ITV content that could be licensed for BBC America but instead they choose to show 20+ hours a day of American shows. Why are we paying for BBCA?
 
If this service included live tv, or at least something like "new BBC / ITV shows available on demand within 24 hours or less of UK airing" and that it applied to virtually all such shows, it would be a lot more interesting.

As is, what this service shows is there is a ton of BBC and ITV content that could be licensed for BBC America but instead they choose to show 20+ hours a day of American shows. Why are we paying for BBCA?
For Star Trek TNG repeats. The show is so obviously British. ;)
 
I was actually surprised to see BBCA airing episodes of Sherlock yesterday. They could at least air repeats of Torchwood, Dr. Who, Robin Hood, Orphan Black and the like.
 
I read that Patrick Stewart is naturalizing in the US for political reasons. Any more commentary than that will require ThePit.
 
Yeah, there is confusion over that. England was technically a principality controlled by Kenya. After the big war, in general, Africa, left unblown up, was left in control and they seized most of Europe. The Star Trek canon doesn't dwell too much on this. :D
Ah, I see!!! :)
 

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