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Voom HD Networks

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Former type
  
Private company

Defunct
  
January 15, 2009

Owner
  
AMC Networks

Fate
  
Ceased operations

Founded
  
2004

Ceased operations
  
January 15, 2009

Voom HD Networks httpsiytimgcomviSBgioBZVtPYhqdefaultjpg

Industry
  
Media, High-definition television

Products
  
Broadcasting, television production

Voom hd networks


Voom HD Networks was a suite of 21 original high-definition television channels owned by Rainbow Media, a subsidiary of Cablevision. The channels were produced in Crystal Clear Hi-Definition with Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound and were the largest suite of HD channels in the world. As part of a 15-year agreement between Rainbow Media and Dish Network, these channels were available on Dish Network until May 12, 2008, when Dish walked away from the contract just over two years into the deal. Left without a national distribution partner, the channels were removed from Cablevision in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut on January 20, 2009.

Contents

History

The Voom HD Networks were originally part of the Voom DTH satellite platform launched by Cablevision and were operated by its subsidiary, Rainbow DBS Company. The original Voom DTH was primed as a competitor to the established DirecTV and Dish Network systems, with its goal to become the first television provider with a lineup consisting mainly of high-definition TV networks. As part of this endeavor, Voom launched in 2003 twenty-one original channels that were completely in HD.

Service was broadcast via the Rainbow-1 communications satellite, which was built by Lockheed Martin and launched on July 17, 2003. It continues to operate from the 61.5°W orbital location, over the Atlantic Ocean.

In early 2005, Voom's parent company Cablevision announced it would seek "strategic alternatives" for Rainbow Media Enterprises, the business unit that contained its Voom satellite service, leaving the future of Voom in question. Cablevision's board proceeded to shut the Voom satellite service down: The satellite service ceased on April 30, 2005, and Rainbow-1 and VOOM's spectrum allocations were sold to EchoStar.

Work on the Voom HD channels continued. In April 2005, Rainbow Media and Dish Network entered into a 15-year affiliation agreement whereby EchoStar’s Dish Network obtained the right to distribute the Voom channels until 2020 and agreed that it would pay Rainbow Media monthly subscription fees for the life of the agreement. The subscription fees started at $3.25 per subscriber in the first year of the agreement, and were to increase to $6.43 per subscriber by the year 2020. In a separate agreement, EchoStar’s Dish obtained a 20% ownership interest in Rainbow Media (the business unit that contained the Voom HD channels) and Rainbow agreed to invest $100 million into the Voom service each year for the first five years of the agreement. As a result, EchoStar's Dish Network announced that they would be adding ten of Voom's original 21 channels to their lineup starting May 1; the remaining channels were added on February 1, 2006.

Upon launch, the Voom HD channels were very well received and EchoStar’s HD subscriber base expanded from about 20,000 at the end of 2005 to about 1.3 million at the end of 2007.

In addition to being carried by Dish Network, the HD channels were relaunched by Rainbow Media under the name "Voom HD Networks." Due to issues surrounding the formatting of the channels, fifteen of the 21 original channels were initially retained. Voom's HD collection was added to Cablevision's cable-TV HD-lineup in late June 2007.

In January 2008, EchoStar's Dish Network abandoned the affiliation agreement claiming that Voom had failed to invest $100 million in the service during 2006 although Cablevision and Rainbow provided Dish Network with the financial statements documenting their compliance. Dish Network proceeded to remove ten of the channels from their lineup on May 12, 2008, with the remaining five removed the next day, leaving coverage limited to Cablevision's systems in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and parts of Pennsylvania. Cablevision and Rainbow sued Dish Network for breach of contract and sought more than $2.5 billion in damages. Citing this drop in carriage and the ensuing lengthy litigation, Cablevision announced on December 18 that the Voom HD suite would be discontinued as of January 15, 2009, to be replaced by other HD programming. (Ultimately, the channels ceased operations on January 20, and were replaced by multiplexed HD content from premium providers.)

Following the litigation discovery process, the Court granted Voom's motion for discovery sanctions. The New York State Supreme Court found that EchoStar's Dish Network "systematically destroyed evidence" in the case and stated that “it is entirely possible that the documents destroyed by EchoStar demonstrated that EchoStar knew all along that there was no breach...and would prove Voom’s case.” The Judge also stated that he would tell jurors that Dish Network destroyed evidence and that the jury may assume the evidence would have been helpful to Voom’s case.

According to Sanford C. Bernstein analyst Craig Moffett in a recent Wall Street Journal article, "cases involving spoilation of evidence rarely go to trial because the odds are so skewed against the offending party." In this case, the judge won't only tell the jury that EchoStar failed to preserve certain evidence; he is barring Dish from calling its expert witness to testify on damages.

Additionally, the Court stated in its November 3, 2010 ruling: “In conclusion, the court notes EchoStar’s pattern of egregious conduct and questionable – and, at times, blatantly improper – litigation tactics. EchoStar’s spoliation in this action, and the fact that it has been sanctioned for spoliation in previous actions, is precisely the type of offensive conduct that cannot be tolerated by the court. Similarly egregious is EchoStar’s last minute finagling with expert reports, believing that it can play fast and loose with the rules of procedure in order to enhance its litigation posture.”

The trial commenced on September 19, 2012 in the New York State Supreme Court. During the summer of 2012, financial analysts who cover Dish Networks urged the company to settle the lawsuit in advance of the trial, as “the odds would…appear to be heavily in Cablevision’s/AMC’s favor.”

On October 21, 2012, Cablevision and AMC Networks announced that they have settled their legal disputes with Dish Networks over Voom HD, an indirect subsidiary of AMC Networks. Dish will pay a settlement of $700 million to Cablevision and AMC Networks, $80 million of which will go for the purchase of Cablevision's multichannel video and distribution licenses in 45 U.S. metropolitan areas.

Legacy

One of its channels, HDNews—managed by veteran news director, William Wright—was responsible for many HDTV firsts, including incorporating Emmy-Award–winning television journalist Bob Tur's transmission codec which allowed the backhaul of news content via the Internet. Today Tur and HDNews's novel use of the Internet for high definition transmission of breaking news is now used by content creators across the globe.

The satellite which broadcast VOOM is currently still in orbit, incorporated into the Dish Network fleet after the demise of VOOM's satellite operations and rebranded as Echostar XII.

Unlike most discontinued direct broadcast satellite systems in the United States such as PrimeStar and AlphaStar, the Voom set-top boxes are still useful even though the service is gone; they can be used to receive ATSC off-air signals. Voom set-top boxes have commanded prices upwards of $100 on websites such as eBay as people seek a less expensive way to receive digital off-air broadcasts.

Channels

  • Animania HD (cartoons & animated programming)
  • Auction HD (televised auctions)
  • Epics ("A cinematic celebration of the silver screen with magnificent stories and music, all about heroes, noble journeys and the triumphant human spirit."; only non-HD channel)
  • Equator HD (exotic & unique locations & international cultures)
  • Gallery HD (physical art & the artistic process)
  • GamePlay HD (programming dedicated to playing video games, such as tips, tricks, cheats, hidden levels & items, Easter eggs, etc.)
  • HDNews (high definition news; formerly Voom News Bytes HD)
  • LAB HD (non-narrative video art & experimental film)
  • Monsters HD (horror programming dedicated to the most well-known movie monsters (Bigfoot, Frankenstein, Leprechaun, Loch Ness Monster, Mummy, Pumpkinhead, Count Dracula, Werewolf, Zombie))
  • MOOV HD (abstract and avant-garde ambient music videos; initially its own channel, then a programming strand on LAB HD)
  • Rave HD (music)
  • Rush HD (extreme sports)
  • Treasure HD (collections, collectors, & collecting)
  • Ultra HD (hottest fashion, coolest styles, & insights into the luxury life)
  • Voom HD Movies (classic & current Hollywood blockbusters)
  • World Sport HD (international sports)
  • It's suite of 10 HD movie channels, HD Cinema 10:

  • Divine HD (LGBT)
  • Family Room HD (family-friendly)
  • Film Fest HD (independent movies & documentaries)
  • Gunslingers HD (westerns)
  • Guy TV HD (male-oriented)
  • Ha Ha HD (comedy)
  • Kung Fu HD (kung-fu, martial arts, & Japanese anime)
  • The Majestic HD (pre-1970s films in black & white & Technicolor)
  • Vice HD (law enforcement)
  • World Cinema HD (global classics, award-winners, and foreign films)
  • Canada

    In 2005, Rainbow Media signed a licensing and programming deal with Canadian company High Fidelity HDTV allowing them to air programming from the Voom HD Networks on their own channels and use of the Voom brand and branding of several of their channels. So far, High Fidelity HDTV has launched 4 channels with three having had the same names as their Voom counterparts, before the brandings were changed:

  • Smithsonian Channel (initially the Canadian version of Equator HD)
  • Love Nature (initially Oasis HD)
  • radX (initially the Canadian version of Rush HD)
  • HIFI (initially the Canadian version of Treasure HD)
  • Europe

    Rainbow Media ran Rush HD in the United Kingdom and Ireland on Sky between 2008 and 2011. When the deal with Sky expired in the spring of 2011 Rush HD was shut down.

    In the Czech Republic and Slovakia, Voom HD International was available through UPC Broadband; it ceased broadcast on August 31, 2009. This channel carried HD content from the different channels in the US. The channel was replaced by Rush HD, which ceased broadcast in the spring of 2011.

    Singapore

    Voom HD International, Equator HD and Worldsport HD were shown in Singapore through SingTel's IPTV network mio TV from July 2007 to January 1, 2010.

    Latin America

    Voom HD was launched in Latin America on April 28, 2009, in Brasil was launched in SKY Brasil and TVA cable service (São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro); it was replaced by Rush HD on August 1, 2009, which ceased broadcast in spring 2011. On the continent the channel is distributed by DLA (Digital Latin America).

    References

    Voom HD Networks Wikipedia