Viewers Choice

For the U.S. pay-per-view service known as "Viewer's Choice" from 1985 to 1999, see In Demand.
Viewers Choice

Viewers Choice logo
Launched September 5, 1991
Closed September 30, 2014
Owned by Viewers Choice Canada Inc.
Bell Media (70.06%, direct & indirect)
Rogers Media (24.95%)
ESPN Inc. (4.99%, indirect)
Picture format 480i (SDTV)
1080i (HDTV)
Slogan See It All
Country Canada
Broadcast area National
Headquarters Toronto, Ontario
Website Viewers Choice

Viewers Choice was a Canadian English language pay-per-view and near video on demand service. It was owned by Viewers Choice Canada Inc., which at the time of its closure was majority owned and managed by Bell Media, with minority partners Rogers Media and ESPN Inc., and had been carried by various cable and IPTV service providers, primarily in eastern Canada.

Viewers Choice was the first pay-per-view service permitted to operate in eastern Canada (the brand name was also used for several years by a counterpart in western Canada), having launched in September 1991, and was the sole English-language PPV provider in that region until 1999. However, it shut down on September 30, 2014, as the service's two main owners at the time of closure, Bell and Rogers, had each gained full ownership of a competing general-interest PPV service, Vu! and Sportsnet PPV respectively. Viewers Choice said it would be working with its remaining partner service providers to transition to other pay-per-view services.[1]

Channels and content

The Viewers Choice pay-per-view service consisted of 45 standard definition channels and two high-definition television channels. Programming on Viewers Choice included movies, concerts, and live sports events such as boxing, mixed martial arts (UFC), and professional wrestling (WWE, WCW and TNA). Pornographic content was also available through the Adam and Eden services. Adam features content for gay men while Eden features content of interest to straight men.

Although Viewers Choice (and pay-per-view services in general) continued to be a main provider of big-ticket live events, much of their movie content had been duplicated by video on demand (VOD) services operated by cable and IPTV companies (and as noted below, Viewers Choice was not available on any Canadian satellite provider, from late 2007 to service end in 2014). As a result, many cable systems had been slowly reducing the number of pay-per-view channels carried.

In an effort to compete with VOD, Viewers Choice launched "All Day Ticket", which allowed the customer to purchase a movie rental for up to a 24-hour time period until 6am (local time) the next day. They were allowed to view it as often as they wished until the time period expired.

History

Launch as monopoly provider

This Viewers Choice logo was in use from May 1993-April 2004, with the text first used in March 1996.

In March 1991, Viewer's Choice Canada, a partnership between Astral Communications with 50.1%, Rogers Pay Per View Inc. (a subsidiary of what is now called Rogers Media) with 24.95%, and TSN Enterprises (part of what is now known as CTV Specialty Television Inc.) with 24.95%, was granted approval by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) for a broadcasting licence for a regional pay-per-view service serving Eastern Canada (Ontario, Quebec, and the Atlantic provinces).[2]

The service launched on September 5, 1991[3] using the "Viewer's Choice" name on-air. In its first year and a half, the graphics and logos were the same as the U.S. Viewer's Choice service (now In Demand). In early 1993, the service introduced their own logo and on-screen fully CGI idents, which was used from that year onward until April 2004. The name was later simplified to "Viewers Choice" without an apostrophe. Originally Viewer's Choice was the monopoly provider of pay-per-view service in Eastern Canada, while Western International Communications was granted similar rights for its Home Theatre service in Western Canada, mirroring the regions held by Astral and WIC for pay TV service (The Movie Network and Superchannel, respectively). However, from 1993 until 2007, Home Theatre operated under the Viewers Choice name and used the same satellite feeds.

Entering competition

Viewers Choice's monopoly on PPV service in eastern Canada ended in 1999 when Bell ExpressVu (now Bell TV) was permitted to launch its own pay-per-view service, known as Vu!, dropping Viewers Choice in the process.[4] Shortly thereafter, Vu! also began offering pay-per-view service to other service providers, meaning that Viewers Choice was now competing with Vu! for the right to supply cable providers, though on any given service provider only one of these services would be made available to customers.

Home Theatre (the service branded as "Viewers Choice" in western Canada) was purchased by Shaw Communications in 2001. By 2006, it was able to switch its licence to a national one; the transition was completed on December 27, 2007, when Shaw Broadcast Services replaced the Viewers Choice-originated feeds with a "PPV"-branded service. This displaced Viewers Choice from Shaw, Star Choice (now Shaw Direct), and any other system that receives its pay-per-view feeds via Shaw Broadcast. As a result of this change, and since the only other satellite distributor (Bell TV) was already offering Vu! instead, carriage of Viewers Choice is now restricted to cable systems and other providers which are able to receive the feeds via terrestrial fibre.

Viewers Choice Canada Inc. was originally the largest shareholder and managing partner (40%) in the French language pay-per-view service, Canal Indigo, which was launched in 1997. However, on March 20, 2008, Groupe TVA announced it would be purchasing the remaining shares in the service from all other shareholders, including Viewers Choice Canada Inc. The sale was approved by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) later that year and Viewers Choice now no longer holds any interest in the service.

On March 6, 2012, the CRTC approved Viewers Choice's request to remove its regional restrictions and allow it to broadcast nationally.[5]

Acquisition by Bell and shutdown

Following Bell Media's 2013 acquisition of Astral, Bell took control of Viewers Choice, owning a net interest of approximately 70% in Viewers Choice (through the 50.1% previously owned by Astral, and through 80% ownership of CTV Specialty which itself owns 24.95% of Viewers Choice), while also maintaining full ownership of competing PPV provider Vu!.

In July 2014, industry news website Cartt.ca reported that Bell Media was notifying cable providers that Viewers Choice would be shutting down on September 30, 2014. The notices were issued just after the CRTC renewed the licences for various PPV services, including Sportsnet PPV, a service wholly owned by Rogers (and carried by both Rogers and Cogeco alongside Viewers Choice) which was previously restricted to sports and special events. Under the renewed licences, all PPV providers will be subject to standard conditions of licence permitting a full range of PPV programming including movies, implying that Rogers could use the Sportsnet PPV licence to take full control of the pay-per-view lineup and corresponding revenues on its cable systems, much as Bell and Shaw have already done.[6][7]

In a later press statement confirming the decision, Bell stated that "[t]he two co-owners of VCC, Bell and Rogers, both have their own pay-per-view services and thus feel there is no need to keep the service operating as a standalone entity", but will work with service providers to ensure a smooth transition to another PPV service.[1]

The Viewers Choice channels left the air between 10:00pm and 12:00 midnight EDT on the evening of September 30, 2014. The final programs scheduled for the various channels included replays of the previous weekend's UFC 178 event; movies including Winter's Tale, 300: Rise of an Empire, The Quiet Ones, The Grand Seduction, and The Other Woman; and various adult programs. The service's barker channel continued to air previews right up until midnight EDT, at which point it began to air a loop of an animated Viewers Choice bumper until eventually shutting down entirely.

References

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