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SciFi channel should just change their name?

Anybody else think they just really suck here lately with all the lame movies, wrestling, ghost hunter, and ultimate gamer?

If you are going to call yourself the scifi channel then that is what you should air. Just for laughs question...if the weather channel programmed their schedule like the SciFi channel, what kind of shows would we see?

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  • 1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    I read somewhere that they *are* planning to change their name. I can take the lame movies because they're mostly made-for-TV by SciFi movies, and I expect them to be lame. They're good for Sunday afternoon when you don't really want to concentrate on anything. But what the heck does wrestling have to do with science fiction. And the utlimate gamer is just stupid. They show ghost hunter 97 times a week, so now a channel that used to be the main one I watched has been replaced by USA & TNT.

  • 1 decade ago

    they ARE changing their name- Kind of

    _______________________________________

    LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - After 16 years, Sci Fi Channel is changing its name ... unless you say it aloud.

    NBC Universal-owned cable network will become SyFy starting in June.

    The phonics-friendly moniker is part of a network-wide rebranding campaign that has been in the works for more than a year. It's an evolution that also includes a new logo and tagline -- "Imagine Greater" -- and will be announced Monday at the network's "upfront" presentation to advertisers for the new programing season.

    The changes attempt to address longtime marketing goals at the network, as well as practical challenges that have stemmed from using a generic term as a brand name.

    "We love being sci-fi, and we're still embracing that," said network president Dave Howe on Friday. "But we're more than just space and aliens and the future -- the three things most people think of when they think of 'sci fi.'"

    Though at first blush more fantastical-looking than the current name, "SyFy" aims to telegraph that the channel is a unique destination without being so different from the current title as to lose the network's core familiarity.

    "What this does is hopefully give us the best of both worlds," Howe said. "You keep the heritage, but also open up to a broader range of content."

    For years the network has sought ways to expand its image beyond its signature male-skewing space operas such as "Stargate" and "Battlestar Galactica." The network will unveil the branding campaign this summer along with the premiere of "Warehouse 13," a series about two FBI agents who hunt down paranormal objects.

    Next year's "Battlestar" prequel "Caprica," which is a terrestrial drama rather than an outer-space adventure, will further support this brand expansion, an effort that began on the programing side a few years ago with the launch of drama "Eureka," about a town of geniuses.

    The pragmatic aspect of the change is that from a business affairs standpoint, the network's genre-as-title has long been cumbersome.

    "We're going to have upwards of 50 Sci Fi Channels in various territories, and yet you cannot trademark 'Sci Fi' anywhere in the world," Howe said. "A new logo design would not solve that particular challenge. We needed a brand name that was own-able, portable and extendable."

    Howe knows some fans will dislike the change and see Syfy as a rejection of the network's core viewership. More than most channels, Sci Fi has an intense relationship with its audience. Clashes are unavoidable to some degree when you combine a network making businesses-minded decisions with a genre that has some of the most passionate and outspoken fans around.

    "Our core audience will use it an opportunity to question our motives -- they always do," Howe said. "But what we're embracing is the total sci-fi landscape -- fantasy, paranormal, action-adventure, mystery ... it's imagination-based entertainment."

    (Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters)

    (please visit our entertainment blog via www.reuters.com or on blogs.reuters.com/fanfare/)

  • 1 decade ago

    Since they canceled Atlantis (and wait for the new Stargate show) I've been calling it the Lame-***-B-Movie-Channel-That-No-One-Watches.

    Seriously, what are they going to hang their proverbial hat on? Caprica? I'm pretty sure that wont last long. The new Stargate show? That'll do worse than Atlantis.

  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    they are doing an stunning job of insulting and denigrating their center visitors, distinctly provided that they are effectively diluting the channel so as that it is going to likely be merely like various of the others.

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  • 1 decade ago

    I think they are changing it actually. To ScyFy

  • ?
    Lv 4
    5 years ago

    very interesting question

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