Discovery Kids (Canada)
Discovery Kids | |
---|---|
Discovery Kids logo | |
Launched | September 3, 2001 |
Closed | November 1, 2009 |
Owned by |
Corus Entertainment (80% & managing partner) Discovery (20%) |
Country | Canada |
Broadcast area | National |
Headquarters | Toronto, Ontario |
Replaced by | Nickelodeon |
Sister channel(s) |
YTV Treehouse TV |
Discovery Kids was a Canadian English language category 2 digital cable specialty channel owned by Corus Entertainment and Discovery Communications.
It was a Canadian version of the U.S. cable channel of the same name (now known as Discovery Family), which aired children's programming oriented towards nature, science, and technology subjects.
History
In December 2000, Corus Entertainment, on behalf of an organization to be incorporated, was granted approval by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to launch Discovery Kids, described as "a national English-language Category 2 specialty television service that offers children of all ages a fun, entertaining way to satisfy their natural curiosity with stimulating, imaginative programming that asks the questions of how? and why? and awakens the power of the mind."[1]
The channel was launched on September 3, 2001,[2] with the Earth Science for Children episode "All About Fossils" as the first program to air on the channel. Discovery Communications purchased a minority stake in the service either prior to or shortly after the channel's launch.
In September 2009, Corus confirmed it would shut down Discovery Kids.[3] The channel was replaced on most service providers on November 2 with Nickelodeon Canada, which however, operates under a licence originally intended for a "YTV OneWorld" network. Because it operates under a separate licence, cable and satellite companies that carried Discovery Kids would not automatically receive the new channel unless they negotiated for carriage.[4] Discovery had announced that it would also relaunch the U.S. version of the network in a joint venture with Hasbro.[5][6]
Programming
Former
- A20 (2001-05)
- Adventure Camp (2003-09)
- Adventure Quest (2001-02)
- The Adventures of A.R.K. (2001-05)
- Animal Atlas (2005-09)
- Animal Magnetism (2004-05)
- Aquateam (2009)
- Are We There Yet?: World Adventure (2007-09)
- Bindi the Jungle Girl (2007-09)
- Bonehead Detectives (2001-08)
- Buck Staghorn's Animal Bites (2001-05)
- Canadian Geography For Kids (2005-09)
- Cyberchase (2006-09)
- Earth Science for Children (2001-03)
- Earth Science In Action (2001-05)
- Endurance (2003-09)
- The Extreme Edge (2002-04)
- The Future Is Wild (2009)
- Get Outta Town (2007-09)
- Ghost Trackers (2005-09)
- Girlz TV (2005-08)
- Grossology (2006-09)
- Henry's Amazing Animals (2005-09)
- Home On Their Own (2007-09)
- How 2 (2001-05)
- Incredible Story Studio (2004-05)
- Jacques Cousteau's Ocean Tales (2002-07)
- Jaws & Claws (2001-08)
- Jep! (2001-05)
- Jungle Run (2001-09)
- Kids@Discovery (2001-08)
- Kratts' Creatures (2007-09)
- The Magic School Bus (2005-09)
- Martin Mystery (2005-09)
- Monster Warriors (2006-09)
- My Brand New Life (2004-08)
- Mystery Hunters (2002-09)
- The Next Wave (TV series) (2001-05)
- Operation Junkyard (2003-07)
- Outward Bound USA (2001-07)
- PE-TV (2004-08)
- Popular Mechanics For Kids (2004-09)
- Prank Patrol (2005-09)
- Prehistoric Planet (2003-05)
- Real Kids, Real Adventures (2001-05)
- Road Scholars (2003-07)
- Sail Away (2001-05)
- The Save-Ums! (moved to Family Jr.)
- Sci-Q (2008-09)
- Skunked TV (2005-08)
- Spy Academy (2004-09)
- Surprise! It's Edible Incredible! (2007-09)
- Suzuki's Nature Quest (2001-08)
- Time Masters (2001-05)
- Timeblazers (2003-09)
- Totally Wild (2001-05)
- Trading Spaces: Boys vs. Girls (2003-09)
- Truth or Scare (2002–09)
- Uh Oh! (2002-09)
- Ultimate Guide to the Awesome (2001-08)
- Very Odd Jobs (2004-08)
- A Walk In Your Shoes (2002-05)
- Wheel 2000 (2002-03)
- Willa's Wild Life (2008-09)
- Wild Kat (2001-04)
- Wild Lives (2002-09)
- Wild Thing (2001-05)
- Y? (2001-05)
- YAA! to the M@x (2001-05)
- The Zack Files (2004-06)
- Zoom (2001-08)
- The Zula Patrol (2007-09)
References
- ↑ Decision CRTC 2000-525 CRTC 2000-12-14
- ↑ DISCOVERY KIDS LAUNCHES WITH A UNIQUE BLEND OF “EDU-TAINMENT” Corus Entertainment press release 2001-08-08
- ↑ Corus optimistic for fiscal 2010; The Hollywood Reporter; 2009-09-28
- ↑ Corus is shuttering Discovery Kids, they will re-brand the Sex TV and Drive-In Classics channels; Cartt.ca; 2009-09-30
- ↑ Flint, Joe (January 14, 2010). "Discovery and Hasbro Name New Kids Channel "The Hub"". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved September 23, 2014.
- ↑ Schneider, Michael (April 30, 2009). "Hasbro Nabs Discovery Kids Stake". Variety. Archived from the original on June 30, 2012. Retrieved July 12, 2017.
See also
- Discovery Kids (U.S.)
- Discovery Kids (UK)