Nickelodeon (TV channel)

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Nickelodeon
Launched December 1, 1977
Owned by Viacom
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
1080i (HDTV)
Country United States
Headquarters New York City
Formerly called Pinwheel (1977-1981)
Sister channel(s) The N, Noggin, TV Land, Nicktoons Network, Nick at Nite, TEENick, Nick Jr.
Website http://www.nick.com
Availability
Satellite
DirecTV Channel 299 (East)
Channel 300 (West)
Channel 1300 (VOD)
Dish Network Channel 170 (East)
Channel 171 (West)
AMC 11
N/Central America/Caribbean
4060 H / 29270 / 3/4
Channel 630
(Transponder 18)
AMC 10
N/Central America/Caribbean
3920 V / 29270 / 3/4
Channel 140
(Transponder 11)
Tata Sky Channel 609
Cable
UPC Romania Channel 126 (digital)

Nickelodeon is an American cable television channel owned by the MTV Networks division of Viacom. It was founded in 1977 as Pinwheel. The Pinwheel name was used until 1981. The channel can be found in many different countries, including Nick UK and Nickelodeon Australia. It is often referred to by its shortened name, Nick, a practice that dates back to the early days of the channel. As of 2009, Nick currently has only one block, Nick at Nite. Since 2006, Nickelodeon has been run by MTVN Kids & Family Group president Cyma Zarghami. The channel is aimed mostly at children ages 6–15, with the exception of their prime time block that is aimed at children ages 12–17.

Contents

[edit] History

Nickelodeon was launched on December 1, 1977 as Pinwheel channel in Columbus, Ohio alongside the QUBE cable system (now Time Warner Cable)[1].

During its broadcast day, it would air shows such as the long running Pinwheel along with other TV shows such as Video Comic Book, America Goes Bananaz, Nickel Flicks and By the Way.

The original Nickelodeon "Pinball" logo used by the channel from 1981 to 1984
Current Nickelodeon splat logo from 1984 to present

On April 1, 1979, the channel went national [2] when they expanded to another QUBE system in Buffalo, New York. During the day, Nickelodeon had begun playing "filler" segments in between shows. The channel's sign-on featured a pair of hands, which were in some of the fillers. Other fillers featured a male mime. Nickelodeon was mostly famous for 2 things in 1982: You Can't Do That on Television and the sign off, which involved silver circles which combined to say Nickelodeon. (During its early years Nickelodeon ended its programming at 9 p.m. Eastern Time, turning its channel over to the Alpha Repertory Television Service and, later for about a year, A&E Network). At one point the channel just went to a test screen after a sign-off. The channel was approved by the National Education Association.

In 1980, Geraldine Laybourne joined Nickelodeon's production team. She would become President of Nickelodeon in 1983.

On April 1, 1981, the channel had expanded nationwide as Nickelodeon, the first channel just for kids.

Nickelodeon became known for its iconic green slime, originally featured in the channel's first major hit TV show, the 1980s Canadian comedy show You Can't Do That on Television. The green slime was then adopted by the station as a primary feature of many of its shows. In the later years, other shows such as Livewire, Standby: Lights, Camera, Action, The Third Eye, Mr. Wizard's World and more were part of the regular Nickelodeon time slots.

In December of 1984, the original silver "Pinball" logo, which was used since 1981, was replaced with the current "orange splat" logo, designed by Tom Corey, Scott Nash and Alan Goodman, which retains the same color scheme and text, and comes in thousands of different shapes.[3][4]

In the same manner as its sister channel, MTV, Nickelodeon commissioned several continuity idents during the 1980s and into the 1990s.

The network was threated with discontinued carriage from Time Warner Cable, along with all of Viacom's networks in a compensation dispute at the end of 2008, a dispute that was resolved shortly before the January 1, 2009 deadline of 12:01am.[5]

[edit] Programming

[edit] Nicktoons

[edit] Programming blocks

Various types of program are broadcast on Nickelodeon in named programming blocks.

[edit] Sister channels

Nickelodeon has spun off several other cable channels, as described below;

[edit] Nick HD

The channel broadcasts a limited schedule of programming in 1080i high definition, which is carried by most of the major American cable providers on a simulcast schedule which programs based on a Eastern/Central and a Pacific/Mountain schedule.

[edit] Nickelodeon Games and Sports

Nickelodeon Games and Sports for Kids (commonly referred to as Nickelodeon GAS, Nick GAS or GAS), was a U.S. satellite television channel that was launched on March 1, 1999 as part of MTV Networks' suite of digital cable channels. Olympic "Porcupine." swimmer and Figure It Out host Summer Sanders was named the Commissioner of Nick GAS. Dave Aizer and Vivianne Collins were the channel's original on-air hosts, with Mati Moralejo joining soon after.

Nick GAS ended their run on digital cable and DirecTV on December 31, 2007. On this date, another Nickelodeon-based channel, The N, took GAS's channel position. An automated loop of GAS programming remained on Dish Network until April 23, 2009 due to channel bandwidth concerns which kept The N on a split-channel with Noggin on Dish. After a channel shift that day, the channel ended quietly on Dish Network. Cartoon Network's west coast feed replaced Nick GAS on that channel.

[edit] Nicktoons Network

Nicktoons Network, once known as Nicktoons TV and simply Nicktoons, is a digital cable and satellite television channel that airs classic Nicktoons but also new Nicktoons that originated on their own channel.

[edit] The N

The N is a television channel in the United States aimed at teenagers and young adults. The channel was once sharing the evening portion of each day with Noggin. But on December 31, 2007 it took over Nickelodeon GAS's positions. It was announced in February 2009 that The N will be renamed TEENick as of September 2009.

[edit] Noggin

Noggin is a television channel in the United States aimed at preschool-aged and early elementary-school-aged children. The channel has only programming promotions in lieu of commercials and is usually carried on a digital cable tier, and the basic tiers of satellite providers. It was announced in February 2009 that Noggin will be renamed Nick Jr starting in September 2009.

[edit] Nick 2

The logo for Nick 2, which is rarely used on-air or on the Nickelodeon website.

Nick Two is the on-air name for a feed provided by Nickelodeon to digital cable and satellite providers which features either the Pacific/Mountain or Eastern/Central feed of the channel, depending on geographical location and giving viewers a second chance to watch programming three hours after or three hours before the original airing. Previously a Nick TWO logo was used on the channels until 2004 (the channel was also called Nick TOO); the regular Nickelodeon logo has been used since then. Most program listings display the channel as either Nickelodeon Pacific/NICK-P, Nickelodeon Eastern/NICK-E, or NICK 2.

[edit] TV Land

TV Land is a cable channel that was created based on Nick At Nite. It airs classic programming from as far back as the early 1950s.

[edit] Other Nickelodeon projects

[edit] Nick.com

Nick.com is Nickelodeon's main online portal, housing Nicktropolis and TurboNick.

[edit] Nickelodeon Magazine

Nickelodeon Magazine was launched by Nickelodeon in 1993, following a short-lived effort from 1990. It contains informative non-fiction pieces, humor, interviews, pranks, recipes (such as green slime cake), and a comic book section in the center featuring original comics by leading underground cartoonists as well as strips about popular Nicktoons.

June 2009, Nickelodeon in response to a hard hit magazine industry, closed the doors to Nickelodeon magazine after 16 successful years.

[edit] Nickelodeon Movies

Nickelodeon Movie's official logo.

Nickelodeon Movies is the channel's motion picture production arm. It has produced films based on Nickelodeon programs, as well as other adaptations and original projects. Its films are released by Paramount Pictures.

[edit] Destinations

[edit] Nicktoons Studios

A giant Nickelodeon balloon that was located above Nickelodeon's booth at Comic Con 2008 in San Diego, California.

Nicktoons Studios (formerly known as Games Animation) is a facility at Burbank, California. It serves as a production facility for many active Nicktoons. It also has earlier Nicktoons scattered on top of the studio at random places. It also serves as a home to the Nicktoons Network and has been used on the Nicktoons Network site replacing the Nickelodeon foot logo with the Nicktoons Network logo.

[edit] Nickelodeon Universe

The Nickelodeon theme park, "Nickelodeon Universe", a rebranding of The Park at MOA in the Mall of America, opened on March 15, 2008. New attractions include an Avatar: The Last Airbender-themed half-pipe ride, a SpongeBob SquarePants-themed roller coaster, and a new Splat-O-Sphere drop tower ride.

[edit] Theme park areas

[edit] Nickelodeon Studios

Nickelodeon Studios as viewed from the Hard Rock Cafe in March 2004.

Nickelodeon Studios was an attraction at Universal Orlando Resort that opened on June 7, 1990, and housed production for many Nickelodeon programs. It closed on April 30, 2005, after all of Nickelodeon's production had re-located to Burbank, California. The Slime Geyser was removed from the front of the facility in May 2005, the trademark Nickelodeon sign was removed in January 2006, and the Nickelodeon Time Capsule was removed prematurely in August 2006. The building was then converted into the Sharp Aquos Theatre, a venue for the Blue Man Group, which opened on June 7, 2007. The Time Capsule is now located at the Nick Hotel.

[edit] Nickelodeon Central

Nickelodeon Central is an area inside many theme parks around The United States, Canada, and Australia. The area is filled with attractions, shows, and themes featuring the Nickelodeon characters.

[edit] Nickland

Nickland is an area inside of Movie Park Germany featuring Nickelodeon-themed rides, including a Spongebob Squarepants-themed "Splash Battle" ride, and a Jimmy Neutron-themed roller coaster. This area is currently being expanded to fill space formerly occupied with rides based on Warner Bros. characters.

[edit] Nickelodeon Universe

Nickelodeon Universe is an area inside of Kings Island featuring Nickelodeon-themed rides and attractions. The area is one of the largest areas in the park, and has been voted "Best Kid's Area" by Amusement Today magazine since 2001

[edit] Nickelodeon Blast Zone

The Nickelodeon Blast Zone was an area in Universal Studios Hollywood that featured attractions centered around Nickelodeon characters and themes. The four attractions that were present in the area were "Nickelodeon Splash", a waterpark-style area, 'The Wild Thornberrys Adventure Temple', a jungle-themed foam ball play area, and "Nick Jr Backyard", a medium-sized toddler playground. This area closed in winter 2007 and has been rethemed to Curious George. Another attraction, "Rugrats Magic Adventure", was present at the opening of the area in 2001, but closed in 2002 to make way for Shrek 4-D.

However, though, Spongebob, Dora and the Rugrats still hang out near the shop that is still open.

[edit] Nickelodeon Splat City

Nickelodeon Splat City was an area inside of California's Great America (1995-2002), Kings Island (1995-2000), and Kings Dominion (1995-1999), that featured attraction involving getting messy or wet. The slime refinery theme was carried out in the attractions such as the "Green Slime Zone Refinery", the "Crystal Slime Mining Maze", and the "Green Slime Transfer Truck". All of these areas have been transformed into Nickelodeon Central or Nickelodeon Universe.

[edit] Hotels and Travel

Nickelodeon Family Suites is a Nickelodeon-themed hotel in Orlando, Florida, located near Universal Studios Resort and one mile (1.6 km) from Walt Disney World Resort. The property includes one, two, and three-bedroom Nick-themed kid suites and various forms of Nick-themed entertainment. Nickelodeon Family Suites also contains a Nick at Nite suite for adults.

Hertz also offers a media option in their family rental cars and minivans at American locations called Nick on the Go, which features Nickelodeon programming pre-loaded onto car entertainment centers.

Nickelodeon Resorts by Marriott is an upcoming hotel chain similar to the above Family Suites, featuring a 110,000-square-foot (10,000 m2) waterpark area and 650 hotel rooms. The first of the 20 planned hotels will open in San Diego, California in 2010. [7]

[edit] Royal Caribbean Cruise Line

Nickelodeon Family Cruises is a series of Nickelodeon-themed cruise packages in partnership with Royal Caribbean International. These cruises will feature special amenities and entertainment themed to various Nickelodeon Properties.[8]

[edit] International

An attempt at the Guinness record for the world's largest picnic, sponsored by Nickelodeon in Petah Tikva, Israel.

It also operates language- or culture-specific Nickelodeon channels for various markets in different parts of the world, and has licensed some of its cartoons and other content, in English and local languages, to TV and cable stations such as KI.KA and Super RTL in Germany, RTÉ Two (English speaking) and TG4 (Irish speaking) in Ireland, YTV (English) and VRAK.TV (French) in Canada, Canal J in France, Alpha Kids in Greece and CNBC-e in Turkey.

As of August 2007, the channel also broadcasts in South East Asia, Japan, Australia, New Zealand, UK, Scandinavia, Republic of Ireland, Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Germany, Cyprus, India, Italy, Israel, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Turkey, Hungary, France, Russia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Africa, and Latin America.

On October 11, 2006, Viacom's subsidiary MTV Networks Asia Pacific set up a new unit to manage Nickelodeon South East Asia TV based in Singapore.[9] Nickelodeon was launched in Singapore and expanded its services in Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Polynesia. In the present, Nickelodeon Philippines and Nickelodeon India started working independently. They started their new website, Nicksplat.com in 2003.

In India, Nickelodeon is available on the One Alliance bouquet, through the Dish TV and Tata Sky DTH services. In the Philippines, it is available on SkyCable Gold, Silver and Platinum channel 45, Sun Cable channel 34 and Global Destiny Cable channel 21. In Hong Kong, it is available on now TV, while in Malaysia, it is available over Astro via Channel 612. In Singapore, it is available over StarHub TV and in Indonesia, Nickelodeon is available on Astro Nusantara channel 14, Global TV, a free-to-air television channel, and is also broadcast on Indovision channel 33.

A pan-Arabia version of Nickelodeon has been relaunched in 2008 (now relaunched), in countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Lebanon. From the late-1990s until the mid-2000s, It used to be on the Showtime Arabia and Orbit satellite services, until they were removed. [10]

Also in 2007, Canadian cable television giant Shaw Cable had applied to the country's television regulator, the CRTC, for permission to carry several popular American cable channels, including Turner Network Television, USA Network, HBO, Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. While the CRTC denied permission to carry USA Network and the others, it did say it would review the situation and reconsider. A few weeks later, Shaw Cable had requested the CRTC remove the remaining barriers to American cable channels, and automatically approve and allow any "English language General interest networks" from the United States, including Nickelodeon and USA Network. Competitor and second-largest cable company, Rogers Cable has also expressed its agreement with Shaw Cable's proposal and supports them. The Canadian specialty channel YTV, owned by Corus Entertainment, serves as a de facto outlet for Nickelodeon's programming in Canada, the network has aired many of Nickelodeon's original programs, and also brands a Sunday morning block of these shows under the name Nickelodeon Sundays.

The Polish version of Nickelodeon has launched on July 10, 2008.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

[edit] Official sites

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