Farmers' Almanac TV

Farmers Almanac TV was a magazine show broadcast throughout the USA on public television. The magazine-style show covered interesting personalities, unique events and admirable endeavors from both the familiar and remote corners of the North American landscape. Peppered throughout are hints and tips that span a dozen varied lifestyle categories—gardening, cooking, natural cures, weather and others—taken straight from years of actual Almanac pages. The show was hosted by Jim Wann, the Tony-nominated writer of "Pump Boys and Dinettes".

Farmers Almanac TV filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in May 2009. The filing was in Chatham County, Georgia, with documents revealing that the company made no revenue in any of their years of operation. Over 50 investors have been cut out of any profits as the judge has allowed the dissolving company's officers to value the assets at under $150,000, which will go to Turner Investments, an insider who loaned the company money one year ago.[1]

Background

Farmers’ Almanac TV had the exclusive license to use the Farmers' Almanac trademarks and copyrights for video and electronic media production. Founded in 2003 by Savannah, GA-based Buy The Farm, LLC, Farmers' Almanac TV currently produces:

"Farmers' Almanac TV". The flagship series debuted on public television in 2006, and once aired in almost 90% of the nation. The weekly 30-minute magazine-format series covered fascinating personalities, unique events and admirable endeavors from both the familiar and remote corners of the North American landscape. Peppered throughout are hints and tips that span a dozen varied lifestyle categories—gardening, cooking, natural cures, weather and others—taken straight from years of actual Almanac pages.

There are plans for Farmers Almanac TV to relaunch on RFD, according to Ogden Media which sells advertising for Farmers' Almanac and their TV offering.

Video from "Farmers’ Almanac TV" can be seen on the web at Google video and Brightcove.com. Availability on other new media is coming soon.

See also

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External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.