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Under Gemstar, the magazine discontinued the local broadcast station listings in 2005, with all program information was [[MagazineDecay cut down to a singular national edition]] in 2005 which is filled with fluff pieces and lists, along with TV listings which make those in the ''Great Falls Argus'' look comprehensive, focusing mostly on national cable networks thereafter (the major broadcast networks remained included, however, a generic "local programming" placeholder title was used in the now fully grid-based listings[[note]]From its inception until the 2005 reformat, ''TV Guide'' displayed its listings in log form; i.e., a text-based list of programs organized in order of airtime and ''then'' by channel, The grids, which listed programs by channel first in accordance to the program's airtime, was not added until the late 1980s for prime time listings, and eventually replaced the logs in all non-prime time dayparts beginning in 2004[[/note]] instead of showing the actual titles of programs scheduled by their local stations). Afterward, ''TV Guide'''s original local listings format basically existed as a cable/satellite channel carrying on-screen listings (and not even those in some markets) with [[NetworkDecay some fluff shows on Hollywood and infomercials]]; that channel, then known as TV Guide Channel, originated in 1981 as the Electronic Program Guide before becoming known as Prevue Guide in 1988, and was united with ''TV Guide'' magazine when Gemstar purchased the channel (by then, known as Prevue Channel) from Prevue Networks in 1998.

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Under Gemstar, the magazine discontinued the local broadcast station listings in 2005, with all program the programming information was being [[MagazineDecay cut down to a singular two national edition]] editions]][[note]]One for the Eastern Time Zone, and another for the Pacific Time Zone[[/note]] in 2005 which 2005. The new edition is filled with fluff pieces and lists, along with TV listings which make those in the ''Great Falls Argus'' look comprehensive, focusing mostly on national cable networks thereafter (the major broadcast networks remained included, however, a generic "local programming" placeholder title was used in the now fully grid-based listings[[note]]From its inception until the 2005 reformat, ''TV Guide'' displayed its listings in log form; i.e., a text-based list of programs organized in order of airtime and ''then'' by channel, The grids, which listed programs by channel first in accordance to the program's airtime, was not were originally added until the late 1980s in 1980 for prime time listings, and eventually replaced the logs in all non-prime time dayparts beginning in 2004[[/note]] instead of showing the actual titles of programs scheduled by their local stations). Afterward, ''TV Guide'''s original local listings format basically existed as a cable/satellite channel carrying on-screen listings (and not even those in some markets) with [[NetworkDecay some fluff shows on Hollywood and infomercials]]; that channel, then known as TV Guide Channel, originated in 1981 as the Electronic Program Guide before becoming known as Prevue Guide in 1988, and was united with ''TV Guide'' magazine when Gemstar purchased the channel (by then, known as Prevue Channel) from Prevue Networks in 1998.
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Wiki/ namespace cleaning.


The new ''TV Guide'', a production fairly typical of banal LowestCommonDenominator TV listings magazines around the world (Great Britain also has its fair share), was responsible for the utter destruction of the original ''JumpTheShark'' website. Having bought out the JTS website, TV Guide stripped the guts out of it and removed everything that made it compulsive reading. For one thing, JTS had genuine international appeal not unlike Wiki/ThisVeryWiki: for instance, British shows not screened in America could be debated and deconstructed. TV Guide wrecked this aspect by stripping out the international content and retaining only a fraction of what there had once been, which was exclusively tied to current American shows. (And they wonder why Americans in the main are so parochial and inward looking...) This act of wanton vandalism towards a genuinely great, original, and readable website will always be remembered, even if it can't easily be forgiven.

to:

The new ''TV Guide'', a production fairly typical of banal LowestCommonDenominator TV listings magazines around the world (Great Britain also has its fair share), was responsible for the utter destruction of the original ''JumpTheShark'' website. Having bought out the JTS website, TV Guide stripped the guts out of it and removed everything that made it compulsive reading. For one thing, JTS had genuine international appeal not unlike Wiki/ThisVeryWiki: Website/ThisVeryWiki: for instance, British shows not screened in America could be debated and deconstructed. TV Guide wrecked this aspect by stripping out the international content and retaining only a fraction of what there had once been, which was exclusively tied to current American shows. (And they wonder why Americans in the main are so parochial and inward looking...) This act of wanton vandalism towards a genuinely great, original, and readable website will always be remembered, even if it can't easily be forgiven.
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Flame Bait and red links. I don’t think a satellite TV provider will have a page on this wiki.


In the late 1980s, ''TV Guide'' was sold to UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch's News Corporation, which proceeded to turn the magazine into more of a general publicity rag, similar to ''People'' or a half-dozen other magazines already out. ''TV Guide'' was then sold in 1998 to Gemstar Corporation, inventor of the VCR Plus device (for which ''TV Guide'' had the codes in its magazines for years) that allowed people who couldn't figure out how to program a VCR to set up a recording of a show of interest by inputting a special code specific to each program. However, it was pretty much bought only so Gemstar could put a known brand behind their ubiquitous software seen on every cable and satellite guide, and control patents for basic guide interfaces (such as the grid). This forced other guide providers to use other forms of presentation which are incredibly inconvenient or, like [=TiVo=] and Creator/DishNetwork did, pay Gemstar and paste a ''TV Guide'' logo on the screen for the right to use the grid interface. Through a long series of patent trades and mergers, [=TiVo=] was eventually purchased by Rovi Corporation, and now the rights to those patents are held by the [=TiVo=] Corporation as of 2021, itself a decay victim which puts more effort into enforcing patents than selling [=DVRs=].

to:

In the late 1980s, ''TV Guide'' was sold to UsefulNotes/RupertMurdoch's News Corporation, which proceeded to turn the magazine into more of a general publicity rag, similar to ''People'' or a half-dozen other magazines already out. ''TV Guide'' was then sold in 1998 to Gemstar Corporation, inventor of the VCR Plus device (for which ''TV Guide'' had the codes in its magazines for years) that allowed people who couldn't figure out how to program a VCR to set up a recording of a show of interest by inputting a special code specific to each program. However, it was pretty much bought only so Gemstar could put a known brand behind their ubiquitous software seen on every cable and satellite guide, and control patents for basic guide interfaces (such as the grid). This forced other guide providers to use other forms of presentation which are incredibly inconvenient or, like [=TiVo=] and Creator/DishNetwork Dish Network did, pay Gemstar and paste a ''TV Guide'' logo on the screen for the right to use the grid interface. Through a long series of patent trades and mergers, [=TiVo=] was eventually purchased by Rovi Corporation, and now the rights to those patents are held by the [=TiVo=] Corporation as of 2021, itself a decay victim which puts more effort into enforcing patents than selling [=DVRs=].



Meanwhile, the end of 2008 saw a disastrous divorce of the magazine/cable network's website and the magazine itself; TV Guide Channel and [=TVGuide.com=] were sold to Lionsgate, while ''TV Guide'' was sold to private equity group [=OpenGate=] Capital for $1, forcing the two entities apart onto two separate websites in a true WhatAnIdiot move. After basically nobody visited the magazine's website (mainly because there were no TV listings on it to speak of), Lionsgate eventually let the magazine put their site back on [=TVGuide.com=] in June 2010 as a conciliatory move.

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Meanwhile, the end of 2008 saw a disastrous divorce of the magazine/cable network's website and the magazine itself; TV Guide Channel and [=TVGuide.com=] were sold to Lionsgate, while ''TV Guide'' was sold to private equity group [=OpenGate=] Capital for $1, forcing the two entities apart onto two separate websites in a true WhatAnIdiot idiot move. After basically nobody visited the magazine's website (mainly because there were no TV listings on it to speak of), Lionsgate eventually let the magazine put their site back on [=TVGuide.com=] in June 2010 as a conciliatory move.



In 2013, Creator/{{CBS}} acquired a half-interest in the TV Guide Channel, rebranding it as TVGN; [[NetworkDeath it later took on a true rebranding in January 2015 as "Pop"]] (the TVGN name was confusing as TVG, a horse racing network oddly started by ''TV Guide'' during the News Corp. era, shares the same initials). A half-interest was also acquired in the digital properties, making it very likely that it will become a non-neutral source of television news, much in the way that ''Series/EntertainmentTonight'' barely acknowledges that NBC and Fox exist. The magazine, meanwhile, after undergoing significant cost-cutting under OpenGate that made it profitable again, was sold in October 2015 to an actual publisher, NTVB Media, placing it under the ownership of lesser-known competing listings/TV news magazines such as ''Channel Guide'' and ''TV Weekly'', and opening the possibility of it eventually adding local listings again, since the two aforementioned magazines are distributed to newspapers throughout the United States with local listings inserts incorporated.

to:

In 2013, Creator/{{CBS}} acquired a half-interest in the TV Guide Channel, rebranding it as TVGN; [[NetworkDeath it later took on a true rebranding in January 2015 as "Pop"]] (the TVGN name was confusing as TVG, a horse racing network oddly started by ''TV Guide'' during the News Corp. era, shares the same initials). A half-interest was also acquired in the digital properties, making it very likely that it will become a non-neutral source of television news, much in the way that ''Series/EntertainmentTonight'' barely acknowledges that NBC and Fox exist. The magazine, meanwhile, after undergoing significant cost-cutting under OpenGate [=OpenGate=] that made it profitable again, was sold in October 2015 to an actual publisher, NTVB Media, placing it under the ownership of lesser-known competing listings/TV news magazines such as ''Channel Guide'' and ''TV Weekly'', and opening the possibility of it eventually adding local listings again, since the two aforementioned magazines are distributed to newspapers throughout the United States with local listings inserts incorporated.

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