Premium television
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Premium television (sometimes pay television in North America) generally refers to a class of commercial-free television services which are available for subscription through cable and satellite television for fees much higher than traditional, packaged cable networks or specialty services.
Historically, premium services consisted of single feeds distributed on encrypted analog channels. Modern premium services, such as HBO and Showtime in the United States, The Movie Network, Movie Central and Super Écran in Canada, Sky Movies in the United Kingdom, Movie Network and Showtime Australia in Australia, Globo's Telecine in Brazil, Premiere, Kabel Digital and Arena in Germany, TV Cabo's Lusomundo's 6 movie channels and SportTV in Portugal, and Televisa's Cinecanal in Mexico have grown to include several "multiplex" channels, and in some cases a video-on-demand service, and are distributed via digital means. In most cases they show movies throughout the day, with occasional original series, sports events, and other specials.
Unlike other cable networks, premium services are almost always subscribed to individually, meaning that one can subscribe to HBO without subscribing to Showtime. (In Canada, there are slight modifications, as most providers include U.S. superstations with their main premium package by default.) However, subscribing to an "individual" service automatically includes access to all of that service's available multiplex channels and, in some cases, access to content via video-on-demand.
Due to their high subscription fees, premium television services are generally the most profitable services in their respective territories.