USA Network

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USA Network
USA
Launched September 27, 1977
Owned by General Electric Co. (through NBC Universal division)
Formerly called Madison Square Garden Network (until 1980)
Website USA Network web site
Availability
Satellite
DirecTV Channel 242
Dish Network Channel 105
Cable
Verizon FiOS Channel 50
Comcast Channels Vary
Time Warner Cable Channels Vary
Charter Channels Vary
Cox Channels Vary
Cablevision Channels Vary
Bright House Networks Channels Vary

USA Network (currently America's #1 cable TV network) is a popular American cable TV network with about 89 million household subscribers as of 2005. The network shows a variety of original and second-run programming, from syndicated TV series to edited movies. USA also shows some sports coverage, such as select golf tournaments, the U.S. Open (tennis), and annual Westminster Kennel Club dog show. Since 2004, they have broadcast portions of the Olympic Games, along with many other NBC Universal basic cable channels. Previously, it had a weekly boxing show named USA Tuesday Night Fights, which ran for 17 years. USA was also the home of World Wrestling Entertainment (then called the World Wrestling Federation or WWF)'s flagship cable TV shows from the channel's launch until September 2000, and currently since October 2005.

Once a minor player in basic cable, the network has steadily been gaining popularity recently, thanks in part to breakout hits like the detective series Monk, the return of WWE RAW, and the sci-fi mini-series turned regular series The 4400. Reruns of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and Law & Order: Criminal Intent are also frequently shown and are popular on the network, as is another NBC Universal property, House.

Alan Kalter was the network's main promotional voice throughout the 1980s and much of the 1990s.

Contents

[edit] USA Network timeline

  • September 27, 1977: Originally organized as the Madison Square Garden Network (not to be confused with the New York City regional sports network of that name), the channel became one of the first national television channels when it chose to use satellite delivery as opposed to traditional television broadcasting.
  • April 1980: The channel changed its name to USA Network after the ownership structure was reorganized under a joint operating agreement by the UA-Columbia Cablevision cable system (now known as Cablevision Systems Corporation ) and MCA Inc. (whose assets are currently owned largely by NBC Universal and Vivendi SA).
  • 1981: Time Inc. (who eventually merged with Warner Communications to form Time Warner) and Paramount Pictures Corp. (then a division of Gulf+Western; now a part of Viacom with its television division, now named CBS Paramount Television, part of CBS Corporation) took minority ownership stakes in USA.
  • 1987: Ownership consolidates under Paramount and MCA, each with 50 percent ownership.
  • 1991: Japanese electronic giant Matsushita buys MCA.
  • September 24, 1992: USA launches a sister network, the Sci Fi Channel
  • 1994: Viacom buys Paramount.
  • 1995: The Seagram Company buys MCA Inc.
  • 1997: Seagram buys out Viacom's 50% interest and gains complete ownership of USA and Sci Fi and sells both channels to Barry Diller's Home Shopping Network, which renames itself USA Networks, Inc.
  • 1999: From Universal Studios and bankrupt Polygram, respectively, USA buys October Films and Gramercy Pictures, renaming them USA Films, and PolyGram Video, renaming it USA Home Video.
  • 2000: USA Networks buys Canada's North American Television, Inc. (a joint partnership between the CBC and Power Corporation), owner of cable TV channels Trio and Newsworld International. (The CBC continued to program NWI)
  • 2001: USA Networks sells its non-shopping TV and film assets (including the USA Network, the Sci Fi Channel, the Trio channel, USA Films (which is rechristened as Focus Features) and Studios USA) to Vivendi Universal. USA and the other channels are folded into Vivendi's Universal Television Group.
  • 2003: General Electric's NBC agrees to buy 80% of Vivendi Universal's North American-based filmed entertainment assets, including Universal Pictures and Universal Television Group in a multibillion dollar purchase, renaming the merged company NBC Universal.
  • 2004: NBC Universal officially takes over as owner of USA and its sibling cable channels except for Newsworld International, which is bought by an investment group led by Al Gore and Joel Hyatt who rebrand the network with a new title, "Current TV", in fall 2005.

[edit] USA programming

Children and teen programming

[edit] Special programming

On October 20, 2006, the network aired the show To Catch a Predator, a show depicting how the police catch online child molesters. Among those caught were some US Marines, computer experts and a doctor. As they exit from the interview area, sheriffs' deputies await those targeted and arrest them.

[edit] USA late night series

[edit] USA Sunday afternoon series

  • Kung Fu Theatre

[edit] USA original series

[edit] World Wrestling Entertainment programming

[edit] Programming staples

[edit] Historical programming notes

[edit] USA Network slogans

  • 1980s: It's a Great Place to Stay
  • 1990-1994: America's Favorite Cable Network
  • 1994-1997: The Remote Stops Here
  • 1997-1999: The Cure for the Common Show
  • 1999-2001: You Are Here
  • 2005-present: Characters Welcome
    • The slogan incorporates the use of television spots featuring USA original characters interacting with each other or the world (with humorous effect)

[edit] Logos

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

In other languages