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TCM Underground was an American weekly late-night cult film showcase airing on Turner Classic Movies. [1] Developed by former TCM marketing director Eric Weber, it was originally hosted by industrial rock / heavy metal musician and independent filmmaker Rob Zombie .
TCM Underground debuted in October 2006 as a Saturday late night block which focused on cult film. The block was originally hosted by rocker/filmmaker Rob Zombie until December 2006; as of 2014, it was the only regular film presentation block on the channel that did not have a host.
In 2007, De Chirico started programming for TCM Underground, a program on TCM started in 2006 by Eric Weber devoted to underground film. [3] In 2022, De Chirico and Quatoyiah Murry published the book TCM Underground: 50 Must-See Films from the World of Classic Cult and Late-Night Cinema. [4] [5] [6] In December 2022, De Chirico was laid off ...
UPDATED with TCM statement. Warner Bros Discovery’s TCM is officially discontinuing its Underground sub-brand, two months after laying off programmer Millie De Chirico. TCM’s official Twitter ...
TCM Underground This page was last edited on 1 February 2020, at 19:52 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Turner Classic Movies (UK and Ireland) Turner Classic Movies Germany, renamed TNT Film in 2009, now WarnerTV Film; Turner Classic Movies (Nordic) Turner Classic Movies (Middle East and Africa) Turner Classic Movies (Asia) TCM Underground, a now-defunct regular programming segment showcasing independent cult films
In 2006, Turner Classic Movies began airing cult films as part of its new late-night series, TCM Underground. [7] In the United Kingdom, the BBC launched a regular late night movie slot on Saturday nights on BBC Two. From Saturday August 20, 1966, BBC Two started to air a "Midnight Movie" every Saturday night on the channel.
TCM Movies (formerly TNT and Turner Classic Movies) was a British pay television channel, focussing mostly on classic movies, mostly from the Turner Entertainment and Warner Bros. film libraries, which included many MGM titles, along with movie-related profiles and some classic American television series.