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| Formerly | Peter M. Robeck & Co. (1958–1969)[1] |
|---|---|
| Company type | Broadcast Syndication |
| Industry | Entertainment |
| Founded | 1958; 68 years ago (1958)[2] |
| Founder | Peter M. Robeck |
| Defunct | 1981; 45 years ago (1981) |
| Successors | HBO Films Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution |
| Headquarters | , U.S. |
Area served | International |
| Products |
|
| Owner | Time Inc. (1969–1981) |
| Parent | Time Life Films (Time Life, Inc.) |
| Divisions | Home Box Office, Inc. |
Time Life Television was a division ofTime Life Films and was the television production and distribution arm ofTime Inc. WithCBS, they led a partnership to export their shows overseas.
Time Life also owned several radio and TV stations in the United States beginning in the 1950s through to 1983.
By 1970, Time decided to sell its broadcasting operations and to concentrate in cable development.
Time-Life's television stations were sold toMcGraw-Hill in early 1972 followingFCC approval.[3] Those stations included the following:
Except for KERO-TV, each of these television stations also had AM and FM radio operations; when most of its television stations were sold to McGraw-Hill in 1972, FCC regulations at the time required Time-Life to sell its radio stations to different parties. KERO's then-owners sold off its radio station in 1955, years before Time-Life acquired KERO-TV.
Time Life joined Sterling Manhattan Cable, owned byCharles Dolan and launchedHome Box Office in November 1972, which eventually became the largest premium television service in the United States. But due to an early financial loss, Dolan eventually sold his stake of HBO to Time Inc. Time merged withWarner Communications, Inc. in 1989 to formTime Warner, but the Time-Life Television assets were sold toColumbia Pictures Television in 1981,[7] while HBO currently holds of its library.
Time Life was also a financial backer for commercial TV broadcasting outside the United States, mostly in Middle and South America. With a joint venture between CBS andGoar Mestre they backedProartel [es] in Argentina, PROVENTEL in Venezuela (nowVTV) andPanamericana Televisión in Peru. In Brazil, they backedRede Globo, owned by theMarinho family.
Time Life's investments in the United States, Middle and South America in the 1950s and 1960s were largely unsuccessful, due to the stations' owners unhappy with their agreements. The only exception wasTV Globo in Brazil, owned by the Marinho family, which was financially backed by Time Life until 1970.
Time Life Television was most notable as the U.S. distributor of television programming produced by theBBC, includingDoctor Who andMonty Python's Flying Circus, taken from Peter M. Robeck & Company. Time-Life's deal with the BBC expired on April 30, 1981. The U.S. rights toMonty Python's Flying Circus would be transferred toDevillier Donegan Enterprises (in a deal that followed theMonty Python troupe gaining ownership of the series months before), while the rest of BBC's output would be spun off to Lionheart Television, a distributor that would later be absorbed byBBC Worldwide.
Non-BBC-related programming distributed or produced by Time Life Television, including most of theTalent Associates library, would later be transferred to HBO; these programs today would be owned by HBO Entertainment andWarner Bros. Pictures Distribution, both units of Warner Bros. Discovery.
In 1973, Time-Life Television co-producedThe Ascent of Man with theBBC. In 1980, this collaboration was repeated withThe Shock of the New. Later in the 1980s, the two co-produced theBBC Television Shakespeare series.
In 1978, the company produced an adapted and expanded version of the popularPeople magazine onCBS for a few months.[8][9][10] Later that year, it partnered withTelepictures Corporation to distribute its programming to the Middle East.[11]