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Pages in category "Defunct video on demand services" The following 97 pages are in this category, out of 97 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
Aired music videos from various artists from around the world; purchased and shut down by Hubbard Broadcasting in 2008 to expand distribution for Ovation TV. m Channel: Aired syndicated music videos, TV shows, movies and news. Was folded under decision of the owner/creator of the network. MOR Music TV: August 31, 1997: Launched on September 1 ...
Quibi was founded in August 2018 as NewTV by Jeffrey Katzenberg and was led by Meg Whitman as CEO. [10] In October 2018, NewTV was renamed Quibi. [11] [12] The service targeted a younger demographic, with content delivered in 10-minute episodes called "quick bites" (with the name Quibi derived from "QUI-ck BI-tes").
The company rolled out a new logo and name, dropping the ".TV" and becoming "Blip." Along with the redesign came a change in business policy, and instead of acting mainly as a video distributor, Blip then "[embraced] its destiny as a video destination with a redesign that put the most popular blip.tv web series front and center." [4]
Redbox Free Live TV was an ad supported channel based video on demand service. The service was soft launched in early February 2020 with a nationwide launch on February 18. Nearly 30 channels were offered then—three self-branded channels: Redbox Rush (action and adventure), Redbox Comedy and Redbox Spotlight, featured and recommended titles.
On August 28, 2020, a YouTuber that goes by the name of Penguinz0, also known as Moistcr1tikal, had his "Road Rager Learns A Hard Lesson" video taken down for allegedly breaking YouTube's policy on violent or graphic content; The video in question showcased a comically staged dashcam footage of a group of people dressed up as cartoon mascots ...
Super Deluxe was relaunched as a new entity in late 2015. [8] The "new" Super Deluxe was a separate entity from its original incarnation, only connected by name. [9] The network features short form videos including comedic shorts, political satire, animation, and music videos.
MovieBeam was a video on demand service started by The Walt Disney Company, specifically its subsidiary Buena Vista Datacasting, LLC. [1] [2] Movies were sent wirelessly into the subscriber's home by embedding digital data (datacasting) within local Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) [3] stations' analog TV (NTSC) broadcast to deliver the movies to a set-top box.