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LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

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LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby Jennpurr. » Thu May 27, 2004 6:08 pm

Not sure if this is the right place to be posting this. Feel free to move this to the proper place, if need be.

MTV'S Gay Cable Network

MTV to launch gay network in 2005
Experts believe the new network will help advertisers target gay and lesbian consumers.
May 25, 2004: 6:24 PM EDT

NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - MTV Networks said Tuesday it will launch a new cable network that carries programs primarily aimed at gay and lesbian viewers.

MTV, owned by Viacom Inc. (VIA.B: Research, Estimates), said the new cable network, called LOGO, will be advertiser-supported and is scheduled to make its basic cable debut in February.

Content on the new network will be comprised of about 25 percent originally developed shows, with the remainder coming from outside sources, according to Reuters.

Image

Viacom's MTV plans to launch a gay cable network, in a bid to snatch a piece of the action from successful gay-themed shows such as Bravo's "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy."

The plan to launch the gay-themed channel had been on-again, off-again in the past two years at Viacom.

Earlier this year, the Wall Street Journal reported that Sumner Redstone, Viacom's chairman and CEO, made a rare confession, saying that his company made a mistake earlier by scrapping a plan to launch the first U.S. gay-themed network.

Redstone then ordered Tom Freston, chairman and chief executive of Viacom's MTV Networks, to revive the business plan.

Industry watchers said Viacom's renewed interest came amid a surge in the popularity of gay characters and gay-themed shows on television in the past few years, led by NBC's "Will & Grace" and last summer's runaway hit "Queer Eye for the Straight Guy" on Bravo.

Major U.S. networks have been reluctant to create a gay cable network because some executives fear that conservative viewers would be bothered by its programming.

But the high amount of disposable income controlled by gay consumers has long remained an attractive target for advertisers, said Howard Buford, head of Prime Access Inc., a gay and lesbian advertising and marketing agency in New York

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The combined buying power of gay and lesbian consumers averaged nearly $500 billion a year, slightly below the consuming power of blacks but higher than Hispanics, according to Prime Access.

"You could reach gay audiences by going on 'Will & Grace' certainly, but it's a very expensive program, and you are reaching a lot of other consumers as well," Buford told CNN/Money.

MTV's new network will be an "efficient vehicle to reach these audiences with specific selling messages," he added.

MTV executives said they expect to launch the network in about 10 million to 14 million homes on Feb. 17 of next year, and has already received distribution commitments from Time Warner Cable in the New York area and Adelphia Communications Corp. in Los Angeles, according to Reuters.
Jennpurr.
 


Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby dekalog » Fri May 28, 2004 5:01 am

I just hope it's not like the Canadian Pridevision cable network which is so expensive that few people can actually afford it.



It would also be nice if these stations looked at original content made by queer artists instead of rehashing all the same shit.

dekalog
 


Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby Jennpurr » Fri May 28, 2004 9:18 am

Agreed.



I don't want to pay a bundle for this channel.



Jen

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Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby sam7777 » Fri May 28, 2004 11:10 am

Especially as 75% of the programming wont' be new. They are positioning it for the digital tier so you have to pay for digital cable at least and prolly for the tier. I fear censorhip like the hack job that another digital tier network, BBCAmerica did on "Tipping the Velevet".

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Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby dekalog » Fri May 28, 2004 12:51 pm

thanks sam



that means it's the American Pridevision :rolleyes



well except the Canadian channel has 'sexual content'.

dekalog
 


Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby MorgainePriestessOfAvalon » Sun May 30, 2004 8:26 pm

There's this same thread on Girls Who Love Girls but a different article. linkage It says there that it will be on basic cable so maybe you won't have to pay a bundle for it!!

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Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby Big Dummy » Wed Jun 02, 2004 3:56 pm

I'm skeptical. I would be concerned about representation. Gay men have been fairly thrust into the limelight; most of the successful shows that they're thinking of feature gay men. The L Word is the only lesbian-themed show out there. Can we expect MTV to even the odds a little and give everyone a little time? And are we gonna see remakes of MTV-type shows, but with gays and lesbians instead? (Although an "Undressed" featuring lesbians wouldn't make me turn off my tv :eyebrow ).



I hope that it has some quality. Just a smidgeon.

Big Dummy
 


Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby Gatito Grande » Sat Jun 05, 2004 12:03 am

Here's a fairly detailed article on the new network:



Quote:
MTV unveils new gay cable TV channel

by Tom Musbach

PlanetOut Network



Saying they are building the television "home" for GLBT viewers, executives from MTV Networks announced Tuesday the creation of Logo, a basic cable channel that will launch next February.



The channel -- which has been in planning stages for at least two years within MTV's parent company, Viacom, and was once said to be called Outlet -- is expected to roll out on Feb. 17, 2005, with a mixture of 75 percent acquired/licensed programming and 25 percent original series and specials.



"What has been missing is a home on TV that this audience can call their own," MTV Networks CEO Tom Freston told reporters during a conference call. "With this new network, we're going to start making that home."



The name of the channel, Logo, encompasses many different ideas about identity, according to the channel's Web site.



Judy McGrath, president of the MTV Networks group, said the vision of Logo is to reflect the diversity of the GLBT community, and the slogan is "different together."



McGrath added that the channel already has 40 original series and specials in development, with 20 in the pilot phase. Many of the offerings will result from partnerships with "sister networks" in Viacom -- MTV, VH1, TV Land and CBS' news division. More than 100 movie titles have also been acquired or licensed.



The network will release more details about the programming at the annual TV Critics Association meeting in July.



Contrary to earlier expectations, the new channel will not be a premium offering. As a basic cable channel, it will be more widely available to cable subscribers but will also be subject to stricter broadcast standards for basic cable. Unedited versions of "Queer As Folk" and "The L-Word" from Viacom's Showtime premium network, for example, will not air on Logo.



Freston said creating the channel as a basic cable offering would mean "bigger business potential by being more widely available." He predicted the channel will break even in two or three years.



The move to basic cable will also position Logo with similar channels that target segments of the viewing audience, such as women or racial minorities.



A related video-on-demand channel is also in the works, the MTV executives said, for "edgier fare." It will compete with here! TV, which is the first U.S. gay video-on-demand service. Here! TV also announced plans last month to augment its programming, with over 20 original series currently in development.



Also on the GLBT television landscape is premium cable channel PrideVision, currently available in Canada. It has struggled to make a profit and was acquired last December.



GLBT groups applauded the announcement from MTV Networks on Tuesday.



"This channel has enormous potential -- and who better to make the investment than the network that has brought us 'The Real World'?" said Joan Garry, executive director of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), who also was part of the management team that launched MTV. "MTV has the two main ingredients necessary for success: a solid programming track record and an unwavering commitment to our stories, our issues and our lives."



"For 25 years we've said we want our MTV. Now we want our Logo too," Cheryl Jacques, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement. "MTV has been an extraordinary leader in educating a new generation of Americans about equality and fairness."




www.gay.com/news/article....04/05/25/1



GG Basic cable = free. I'm sorry it won't be sexier, but po' GG likes the price. :grin Out



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Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby dekalog » Tue Jun 08, 2004 4:32 am

Quote "McGrath added that the channel already has 40 original series and specials in development, with 20 in the pilot phase. Many of the offerings will result from partnerships with "sister networks" in Viacom -- MTV, VH1, TV Land and CBS' news division. More than 100 movie titles have also been acquired or licensed".



Interesting...........



Perhaps there will be some original programming afterall.

dekalog
 


Re: MTV'S Gay Cable Network

Postby Spikeizmine87 » Wed Jun 09, 2004 10:45 am

:bounce :bounce :bounce

gay channel!! woot!! Cant wait!

:pride :p ride:pride :p ride:pride :p ride:pride :p ride:pride :p ride:pride

-Rose

Dude Im fuckin loved! Im loved and I dont care about anything else! And Im cared for! Im fuckin cared for by someone that MATTERS!

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Gay channel

Postby reiforever » Thu Jun 24, 2004 2:03 pm

Yeah, I heard about it on Gay USA, it's supposed to be a free cable station.



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Re: Gay channel

Postby Disastered » Thu Jun 24, 2004 10:42 pm

I actually saw a commercial for this on tv a week or so ago. I never saw another one after that and I couldn't remember if it was real or if I just dreamt it (heh happens alot). They said alot of the things in the article like the 40 original shows and they would be playing alot of movies too, and they said it was going to be a cable channel. I know there was a flash of the birdcage in the commercial but that's all I can remember. I can't wait to see it. I wish we didnt have to wait till february

Disastered
 


Re: Gay channel

Postby xita » Sat Jul 24, 2004 11:05 am

I am not sure I find any of this original programming vaguely interesting. I'd like to see comedies and dramas, not talk shows and newsmagazines.






From yahoo

       



Community - Planet Out

Planet Out

GLBT channel reveals program details



Fri Jul 23, 8:25 PM ET

       

        Add Community - Planet Out to My Yahoo!



Tom Musbach, PlanetOut Network



SUMMARY: Cher and her lesbian daughter, Chastity Bono, are two of the celebrities with television projects in development for Logo, the forthcoming GLBT-targeted cable channel from MTV Networks.



       



Cher and her lesbian daughter, Chastity Bono, are two of the celebrities with television projects in development for Logo, the forthcoming GLBT-targeted cable channel from MTV Networks.



Details of the new channel's programming were announced Friday in Los Angeles, on the last day of the semi-annual Television Critics Association press tour.



Brian Graden, president of MTV/VH1 Entertainment, and Matt Farber, executive consultant for MTV Networks who is spearheading the channel's launch, revealed that Logo has acquired more than 150 movies and documentaries, and 20 projects are currently in development.



One of the projects is a show that focuses on the coming-out stories of famous people, with Cher and Chastity Bono as executive producers. The working title is "Family Outing."



Openly gay comedian Scott Thompson, formerly of "Kids in the Hall," is working on a reality series that focuses on same-sex couples who are planning their weddings. Other celebrities attached to developing Logo shows are Alan Cumming, Margaret Cho and Kathy Griffin.



The basic cable channel is scheduled to launch on Feb. 17, 2005.



First-person documentaries, talk shows and a newsmagazine show are among the original programs in development. Logo is also partnering with the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) to televise the annual GLAAD Media Awards, starting next spring.



The film titles acquired by Logo include "Philadelphia," "The Birdcage," "Priscilla, Queen of the Desert" and "Go Fish."



"The programming we're developing will speak in an authentic voice to this audience," said Farber. "We're building this brand to reflect their diversity and tastes through an array of genres, all informed by a gay point of view."



While Logo, backed by entertainment giant Viacom, has received much attention, other television projects are racing to attract GLBT viewers. In fact, two potential competitors made announcements this week.



Trio, a digital cable and satellite channel from NBC Universal, said that it will add a weekly gay programming block to its schedule. Q Television, a new premium channel, announced a distribution deal with RCN Corp. to make the channel available to RCN subscribers in six major cities in September.



In addition, here!TV, a growing pay-per-view service, plans to launch a 24-hour cable channel in the fall and is developing original GLBT-themed programming.

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Re: Gay Channel

Postby Big Dummy » Mon Jul 26, 2004 12:19 pm

Quote:
I'd like to see comedies and dramas, not talk shows and newsmagazines.






I agree completely. While it'll be good if they can get rights to a lot of gay movies, cause those are always fun, I'd like to see some original sitcoms and series. Y'know, make a Kate&Ally type of thing, with K&A the way some of us would have liked to have seen them. I don't need the entire cast to be gay; I'd just like at least one of the main characters to be gay, and have their life (romantic included) fleshed out and dealt with just like any other character on a mainstream tv show.



This would be a good time to give some of the many talented gay and lesbian writers out there a shot.

Big Dummy
 


Re: Gay channel

Postby Gatito Grande » Sat Jul 31, 2004 12:40 pm

Quote:
Trio, a digital cable and satellite channel from NBC Universal, said that it will add a weekly gay programming block to its schedule. Q Television, a new premium channel, announced a distribution deal with RCN Corp. to make the channel available to RCN subscribers in six major cities in September.




This is great. I already think that Trio is an outstanding network; now it will be even better (i.e. queerer! :pride ). If you're not already getting it, I really recommend it.*



GG In some ways, what's on a LGBT channel is less important than that it's on at all (thinking particularly of isolated/closeted people, and/or youth). But agree that original drama/comedy (if it's good) would be better than yet more Reality TV. :hmm Out



*You must see The Truth about Gay Animals on Trio! :jaw and :lmao



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Re: Gay channel

Postby Warduke » Sat Jan 15, 2005 2:12 am

From TV Guide...



Quote:
GAY DELAY: MTV has pushed back the launch date of its gay and lesbian-themed cable network LOGO from Feb. 17 to June 30. The delay gives LOGO execs more time to develop original programming and shop at the new West Elm store in Chelsea.



Firefox: One Browser To Rule Them All.

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Re: Gay channel

Postby Gatito Grande » Sun Jan 16, 2005 3:13 pm

Quote:
The delay gives LOGO execs more time to . . . shop at the new West Elm store in Chelsea.




Is this supposed to be a joke? (i.e. a bordering on 'phobic one? :happy ) Or is it just confusingly worded? :confused



Well, that sucks. What's just as bad (or maybe worse, to me), is that the TRIO network---which I was so enthused about just above---was yanked off DirecTV at the end of the year. :mad



GG I wrote to DirecTV in protest about it, and they 1) stonewalled me (as it were), merely repeating their cancellation announcement, and when I wrote them again 2) said "we'll report your comments." But then they completely removed TRIO's spot from the channel guide, and that's that. :( Out

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Re: Gay channel

Postby tkheaven » Wed Jan 19, 2005 10:35 am

In Other News:...



Don't know if this had been brought up but Cablevision (iO Digital) added a gay themmed cable channel titled here! On Demand. I haven't checked it out as I recently brought down the cost of cable. Current price is $6.95/mo. I was wondering if anyone has bothered to check it out and see if it's worth it...

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Re: Gay channel

Postby Gatito Grande » Thu Jan 20, 2005 5:34 pm

Depends, tk: how much do you like gay (i.e. m/m) porn? ;)



GG That may not be ALL they have. Just, y'know, like 99% of it. Out

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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby Repost Moderator » Sun Jun 26, 2005 12:18 pm

Originally posted by mariacomet

TV Network for Gays, Lesbians to Debut By DAVID BAUDER, AP Television Writer
1 hour, 23 minutes ago

Link

The man who's molding Logo, the new network for gays and lesbians, grew up in rural Illinois, attended Oral Roberts University and counted that cheesy keyboard solo on "Freeze Frame" as his big moment during gigs with his college band the Ozones. At first glance, Brian Graden hardly seems too hip for the room.

But the 42-year-old Graden is one of television's busiest and most imaginative executives, already responsible for the programming on MTV, VH1 and CMT — and now Logo, which debuts Thursday.

Long in the works, Logo will initially be seen in about 10 million homes with digital cable. Unlike Here and Q, two pay-per-view, gay-oriented networks already operating, Logo will be available in homes that do not specifically order it.

Films such as "Kissing Jessica Stein" and "Philadelphia" and documentaries will fill many of Logo's first hours. The network also has a scripted series, "Noah's Arc," about a homosexual black man and his friends in Los Angeles, a reality series about opening a gay bar and the stand-up comedy series "Wisecrack."

A gay man himself, Graden had hoped to help out with Logo even before he was appointed its president.

Graden's job requires a comfort with Wall Street and Hollywood, two sides of his personality presaged by his educational choices. He went to Oral Roberts with fellow band members in an ill-fated attempt to keep the Ozones alive, then later earned an MBA from Harvard University.

Seeking an internship one summer, he wore his best suit to an interview with colorful TV executive Stephen Chao. Chao said he'd hire Graden as long as he never wore a tie again, and spent the interview quizzing the young man on what he watched on TV, the music he listened to, the movies he saw.

"I came to understand that that's the essence of what you're hiring, the essence of what matters," he said.

Graden now appoints teams at MTV Networks that are immersed in the lifestyles of the audiences they are trying to reach.

The launchpad for his career came when he befriended writers Trey Parker and Matt Stone, helping them to develop "South Park."

He moved to MTV in 1997, and was the executive behind a dizzying array of hits, including "The Osbournes," "Pimp My Ride," "Jackass," and "The Newlyweds." Graden has managed not only to stay on top of MTV's here-today, gone-tomorrow ethos but expand his authority to where he's put between 200 and 300 programs on the air.

"It's one of those things that's increasingly gratifying, to see an executive who truly approaches television from a creative point of view without ignoring the business of all of it," said television producer Michael Davies, whose credits include "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire."

A gently prodding phone call from Graden when he heard Davies was pitching an interesting show to another network recently resulted in VH1 getting the project — a late-night talk show still under development — when the other network backed off.

Every holiday season Graden sends to friends not only a card, but an exquisitely curated CD mix of songs. "He lives a creative life," Davies said.

It would be unusual to get country music fans, rappers and fans of Britney Spears or old Jackson Browne videos to agree on much of anything, yet Graden is the man overseeing the mix of networks that appeal to each one.

What's he doing running a country music channel, anyway?

"If you go home (to Hillsboro, Ill.) and visit my parents — not that I'd wish that on anyone — you would find CMT on 24 hours a day," he said. "My parents are finally proud of what I do because they watch CMT. Before, I don't think they understood what I do every day."

Logo may be his biggest challenge yet.

"I don't envy his position," said Paul Colichman, founder of Here, which offers primarily edgy material oriented to gays and lesbians in about 45 million homes.

"He's got competing constituencies," he said. "He's got advertisers who are fearful of offending anyone because they're going after mass groups of people. At the same time, he's got to create a service that is compelling to the gay and lesbian audience who wants to watch it. It kind of depends on their appetite for gay lite."

The decision to remake a Canadian series about planning a commitment ceremony, called "My Fabulous Gay Wedding," illustrates the fine line being walked. The Logo series is instead called "First Comes Love." The title wasn't changed to sidestep controversy, but rather to better reflect a show about relationships, a Logo spokesman said.

Graden said his job is to serve the target gay and lesbian audience and not worry about cultural critics who may look over his shoulder.

"That said, we've also said from early on that the standards for Logo will be that of a general entertainment network," he said. "The assumption that I would have to push certain standards to tell my story instead of yours I don't get, because they're all human stories."

Potential viewers have told Logo that it's important to reflect their community's diversity, he said. So there will be documentaries telling what it's like, for instance, to be a 22-year-old Latino homosexual or a lesbian couple that has been together for decades.

That's different from the other, sharply focused MTV networks; watch MTV and you know it's made for 21-year-olds. Even corporate cousin BET is more interested in young black viewers than the black audience as a whole.

"We're talking to an audience that has already felt that it has been excluded from the media tapestry for many years," Graden said. "It didn't feel right to create a channel where some people would feel further excluded."

Having a gay or lesbian in charge of Logo was essential, Colichman said. Quietly proud of the moment, Graden said it has symbolic and practical advantages.

"It is important and powerful that you have both gay and lesbian voices directly in the conversation for the product you're trying to create because you're trying to serve an audience," he said. "We don't want any of our channels to look like a corporate man was handing down what he thinks an audience would like."

___

On the Net:
http://www.logoonline.com

******************************************************

When I saw that a Gay/Lesbian network is going live, I became excited by all the possible movies, series, etc that would come with it. However as I thought more about it, I started thinking of what it could mean on a larger scale.

There's a large segment of the population that believe that no one will watch shows featuring lesbian and/or gay characters who have real concerns, and love lives. Too contraversial!

There's a large part of the population who believe discrimination is okay because Gays and Lebians are a minority and therefore our business doesn't count that much.

I'd love to see all those people be blown away by how sucessful this network becomes. I'd like to see all the major cable companies be 'pressured' into carrying this network due to demand. I encourage everyone, even if you decide not to subscribe to this network, to go to the logo website and ask that they contact your local cable company about carrying it.
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby Melee » Tue Jun 28, 2005 10:26 pm

Oh SCORE. At the University I'm going to next year, we get our own cable hookups in our rooms... and it's in New York City, so I'm going to bet the cable company's going to pick it up... *ohpleasohpleaseohplease*
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby FineyMcFine » Wed Jun 29, 2005 9:35 am

Some cable providers are not planning on carrying LOGO immediately (including my cable provider in the Washington, DC area) - and appear to be undecided about whether there is demand for the channel in their area (or perhaps they are worried about controversy, in my opinion). This article is from the Cincinnati Post:

Cincinnati Post, June 29, 2005
Gay network debuts, but not here
The first non-premium cable network for gays launches Thursday when Logo, several years in the making, debuts in some 10 million homes on the digital cable tier. You won't see it here. For now, Logo will not be carried in the Greater Cincinnati cable market.

Officials at the tri-state's two major cable providers - Time Warner, with 350,000 Cincinnati area subscribers, and Insight Communications, with nearly 100,000 Northern Kentucky households - say they are not immediately picking up the gay channel.

Officials say there's nothing political about the decision. They note that decisions about what channels they carry - or don't - are made at the national corporate level as part of systemwide negotiations between cable companies and programmers. Spokespeople for both local companies say they would not be surprised if Logo was picked up in the near future.


One thing that LOGO is doing to help move along cable providers who are undecided is collecting e-mail addresses to show cable providers that there is demand in their area. If you want to sign on, you can do so at http://www.logoonline.com

(So, FYI, know that your e-mail address will be shared if you sign on.)

You can also phone your local cable provider and ask if they are planning to offer LOGO and if they say no, you can urge them to carry it and tell them you would be interested. (If you are indeed interested.)

Anyway, in case folks are wondering what they can do to help!
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby xita » Thu Jun 30, 2005 10:14 am

the website tells me my cable company is offering it, but I can't find it in our channel lineup... hmm.
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby maudmac » Thu Jun 30, 2005 12:31 pm

Heh, and the website tells me my cable provider isn't offering it, but it does show up in the lineup on my cable. I guess I'll know for sure tonight. Looks like next Wednesday is Erasure Day. I also noticed they're running some Margaret Cho and Suzanne Westenhoefer. Yay for that. And they're playing that old Making Love movie with Kate Jackson and Harry Hamlin. And Priscilla and lots of Graham Norton. I like him. I looooved him when he had Dolly on his show. Hilarious. Oh, and I noticed a thing where lesbians are talking about the whole butch/femme thing. That should be interesting.

I'm really looking forward to this (assuming I'll be able to see it) and I hope it does well. Looks like a decent mix of women and men, old stuff and new stuff, funny stuff and serious stuff.
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby emma peel » Thu Jun 30, 2005 7:09 pm

I just got home from work to find my gf watching Logo on channel 263. We have DIRECTV.
Woo Hoo!!!!
This is a indeed a very nice surprise. Gf said she wouldn't have known about Logo, but they announced it's debut on one of the mainstream news channels tonight. :bounce :applause
Edited to add that I'm going out to by some Miller beer tomorrow because they're the opening night sponsor. Yay, Miller!!!
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby Gatito Grande » Thu Jun 30, 2005 10:29 pm

Dammit! :mad

I thought LOGO was going to be a basic channel on DIRECTV. Instead, I find out I'd have to pay $4 more/month (money Unemployed Me doesn't have) just to get it!

GG Planning on complaining to D-TV: we'll see where that gets me Out
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby emma peel » Thu Jun 30, 2005 10:51 pm

Jeez, GG. I'm sorry you can't get it. I'm not sure what kind of package we have. The only interesting channel we get is IFC. No Showtime, HBO, Encore, whatever. We could get Here, for an extra $9 a month. I was able to tape Julie Johnson, but that's gonna cost me over $20 because the "buy it now" feature wasn't too easy for me figure out until I'd accidently "bought" two other wrong programs on a different "pay per view" channel.
I'm hoping that Logo isn't just a temporary free "teaser," and that we'll continue ot get it as part of whatever package we have
Edited to mention that I watched and taped "Tickled Pink" tonight on Logo. Saw Renee (very pretty) talk about Xena, many comments from Liz Friedman (thank god they didn't say "Elizabeth"), and there was a very brief mention of Willow and Tara.
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby maudmac » Fri Jul 01, 2005 3:59 pm

Oooh, nice! After calling the cable company yesterday and being told LOGO was "coming soon," I figured "soon" meant "in three months" or "next year" or "never." But noooo, when they said "soon," they meant "in a few hours." Awesome. I've been watching it all day. I'm so happy! I don't even want to watch anything else.

I saw that Evolution thing and the Tickled Pink. Wow. TV for us. I'm really moved. It's beautiful. It's a sort of March On Washington feeling, in a way, just basking in the total queerness, being surrounded by queerness.

That Scott Thompson show looks good, about the weddings. And I'm really looking forward to some queer comedy.

I'm going to propose marriage to my cable company. :-D
a queer girl always leads to more
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby emma peel » Fri Jul 01, 2005 4:47 pm

maudmac, didn't you love the many queer commercials?? It felt so normal to see them.
Damn, I forgot to buy Miller today, prolly 'cause I'm on some prescription meds, dammit, and shouldn't drink anything alcoholic.
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Re: LOGO - Lesbian and Gay Network

Postby Nixel » Thu Jul 21, 2005 2:47 pm

I'm so late. I spend so much time with the tv tuned to Cartoon Network by default that it took my gf coming home and demanding to change the channel from The Winks and *gasp* surfing to find that we have LOGO too! And Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit was on. Wow. Took me right back to high school.

Guess I know what I'l be watching this weekend.
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