TV Tome

For the later version of this website after June 13, 2005, see TV.com.
TV Tome
Web address http://www.tvtome.com/ (defunct)
Commercial? Yes
Type of site
Entertainment
Registration Optional
Owner CNET Networks, Inc. (now part of CBS Interactive)
Created by John Nestoriak III
Launched June 2000
Current status Defunct

TV Tome was a U.S. based website devoted to informational guides for English-language television shows and the people involved in their production. It was run mainly by volunteer editors, with the assistance of user contributions. The site was founded by John Nestoriak III, who gave the founders of epguides meta editor status at TV Tome, they were; George Fergus, Dennis Kytasaari and John Lavalie.

The site had over 2,500 complete television series guides, over 3,500 developing television series guides and filmographies for 250,000 actors and crewmembers moderated by a five member crew. TV Tome also appointed forum moderators on TV Tome who moderated four of six TV Tome General Forums and the television show forums. In addition to the television series guides, TV Tome had a forum for each television series with information regarding episode interpretation and discussion.

A spin off site, Movie Tome, was established in August 2003. Originally, a video game tome and a music tome were planned as well, but with the purchase of TV Tome and Movie Tome, and seeing as how GameSpot and MP3.com equate to those sites, neither came into existence.

On April 22, 2005, TV Tome officially announced its absorption by CNET, much to the dissent of many members. CNET announced plans to relocate the site to its TV.com domain, which was acquired in 1996 for use in conjunction with the short-lived syndicated television series of the same name. A preliminary version of the new site launched on June 1, 2005 and on June 13, 2005, the site was permanently redirected to TV.com with an entirely new layout. CNET bought TV Tome for US $5 million in January 2005.

Pages

TV Tome was made up of three main types of pages, which can be comparable to TV.com's pages.

Main show page (summary)

Contained overall information about a television series, divided into six sections:

Episode page

Contained information about one installment of a series, divided into seven sections:

Subsequently added was the recap subsection, which provided a full synopsis of the episode, including the ending. (Users had to click on the "recap" link to access this information, as it usually contained spoilers that fans wouldn't want to read until after viewing the episode.)

Additionally, each episode could be voted upon by users, thereby creating an aggregate rating on a scale of 1 ("awful") to 10 ("awesome"). All episodes' ratings were displayed on their respective pages, as well as on a separate page that featured the entire series, listed episode-by-episode (in order of highest to lowest TV Tome rating).

Person page

Contained information on a person associated with television, divided into five sections:

This section often featured a link to a separate biography page, containing in-depth information on the person's career and/or personal life.

Also linked to, was a message board (a forum dedicated to discussion of the person and his/her projects), moderated by the person's TV Tome editor[s].

Other pages

The summary page and the individual episode pages featured links to other sections, including:

Spinoff / related sites

epguides

Main article: epguides

epguides was created July 11, 1999, by George Fergus, Dennis Kytasaari and John Lavalie. The three creators were given meta editor status at TV Tome and Movie Tome. epguides gradually moved most of its guide data to TV Tome, continuing to maintain its episode list pages primarily as an alternative portal into the TV Tome database. It is in many ways a "no frills" site, giving basic episode titles and airdates, and very basic notes for some shows, leaving more extensive coverage to other websites. Following the sale, it maintained the same relationship with TV.com for a time, operating as a simplified ad-free front end into their episode guide database.

The TV IV

Several people on the Something Awful forums, who were unhappy about TV Tome after its acquisition decided to rebuild the content and created The TV IV in July 2005. The TV IV runs MediaWiki software, but has disabled anonymous editing and has licensed the content under the Creative Commons license (cc-by-2.5).

TV Friends

Independently from TV IV another community effort has begun to rebuild what was lost through the TVTome acquisition. Since, August 2005 the TVFriends project is hosted by Wikia (which also runs on MediaWiki). Unlike The TV IV, it is open to anyone without registration. Wikia mandates the use of the GNU Free Documentation License. It is now part of Wikia Entertainment.

EPisodeWorld

EPisodeWorld (short EPW) was created after TV Tome's acquisition in 2005 and went public on September 25, 2005. The founders were equally unhappy with the loss of TV Tome and what it had to offer and independently started this project to rebuild what was lost and more and offer information beyond informational guides for English-language television shows by also listing guides for the same and more shows in other languages (including German, French, Italian, Japanese, Finnish, etc.). The goal is to offer information to the often international fanbase and not to limit it to English speaking fans and officials.

EPW is open to anyone after a free registration to discuss episodes (in all languages the episodes are available in), adding episodes and their information in all languages (episode names, plots, cast, writer, director, air dates, news about the show, notes, music) and to keep track of "bookmarked" (favourite) shows (upcoming seasons and new shows) and actors' and artists' appearances (including their songs listed by episode and in music guides). As of April 24, 2010 EPisodeWorld lists more than 6000 international shows with 35,2079 episodes (of which 62814 are non-English (17.84%)).[1]

References

  1. "EPW Statistics". Episode World. Retrieved July 30, 2012.

External links