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Wowow

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese satellite TV company and station
For the art collective in London, see!Wowow!
Not to be confused withWowowee,Wowowillie, orWowowin.
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(August 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Wowow Inc.
Logo used since 2011
Headquarters inMinato, Tokyo
Native name
株式会社WOWOW
Kabushiki-gaisha Wauwau
FormerlyJapan Satellite Broadcasting Co., Ltd. (1984-2000)
Company typePublic
TYO:4839
IndustryMedia
FoundedDecember 25, 1984; 41 years ago (1984-12-25)
HeadquartersAkasaka,,
Japan
Subsidiaries
Websitecorporate.wowow.co.jp/en
Television channel
WOWOW Prime
TypePremium television channel
CountryJapan
Broadcast areaJapan
Programming
LanguageJapanese
Picture formatHDTV1080i
Ownership
OwnerWowow, Inc.
History
LaunchedNovember 29, 1990; 35 years ago (1990-11-29) (pre-launch)
April 1, 1991 (1991-04-01) (official)
December 1, 2000 (2000-12-01) (digital)
ClosedJuly 24, 2011 (2011-07-24) (analog)
Former namesWOWOW (1991-2011)
Digital WOWOW1 (2010-2011)
Links
Websitewowow.co.jp(in Japanese)

Wowow (Wauwau;pronounced[waɯwaɯ], stylized in all-uppercase in Japanese) is asatellite broadcasting and premium satellitetelevision station owned and operated byWowow Inc. (株式会社WOWOW). Its headquarters are located on the 21st floor of the Akasaka Park Building inAkasaka, Minato, Tokyo.[1][2] Its broadcasting center is inKoto, Tokyo.[1][3]

Overview

[edit]

Wowow was the first 24/7, 3 channel, full high-definition broadcaster in Japan.[4]

The channel's name is a double "Wow", and the three W's also stand for "World-Wide-Watching".[5]

History

[edit]
Former Wowow headquarters—Toraya Building 2
Former Wowow broadcasting center—Tatsumi Koto

Wowow ran a 24-hour test broadcast titled "A Japan-US Two-Way Call-in Show: Space TV Will Change the World" (日米双方向コール・イン・ショー 宇宙テレビが世界を変える) on November 29, 1990, then initiated 12 to 14 hours per day of pre-launch broadcasts the following day. Scrambled programs started airing in February 1991, and regular analog broadcasting began on April 1. One of the channel's first events was investing US$2 million in the filming ofThe Will Rogers Follies alongside Hollywood producer Pierre Cossette. The goal of the co-production was to bring in more subscribers to the channel, as well as finding a launch hit.[6]

By 1992, Wowow had 800,000 subscribers.[7] At the time, foreign feature films, mainly American, made up 40% of its schedule, and had US actorHarrison Ford as its spokesman.[8] One of its earliest hits was the cult US seriesTwin Peaks, having aired several cycles of all 28 episodes by July 1992, and was responsible for nearly 30% of new subscriptions.[9]

The network entered fiscal 1993 accumulating a debt of 40 million yen, accused on poor management, and causing delays to the launch of four private competitors.[10]

Digital broadcasting began on December 1, 2000. The network began with 207,753 subscribers (31.5 billionyen in sales), growing to 2,667,414 two years later (64.5 billion yen in sales). As of December 2011, Wowow claimed approximately 2.56 million subscribers to its digital service.[11] On July 24, 2011, Wowow shut down its analog signals.

Previously, Wowow's headquarters were in another facility in Akasaka.[12]

On October 1, 2011, Wowow expanded their single channel broadcast satellite service to provide four high-definition TV channels:[13] Wowow Prime (WOWOWプライム), a general entertainment channel, Wowow Live (WOWOWライブ), covering sports, documentaries, movies and live performances, Wowow Cinema (WOWOWシネマ), a 24-hour movie channel and Wowow Plus. This last channel, formerly known as Cinéfil Wowow, broadcasts on channel 250 and adopted its current name on December 1, 2020.[14]

Wowow also operated a 4K channel which launched in March 2021 and closed on February 28, 2025.[15]

Programming

[edit]

Wowow mostly rebroadcasts movies, but is also well known for showing (and even co-producing and/or assisting in the production of) originalanime series such asThe Big O,Brain Powerd,Overman King Gainer,Carried by the Wind: Tsukikage Ran,Trinity Blood,Cowboy Bebop (the complete uncut version),Ghost Hound,Crest of the Stars,Ergo Proxy,X/1999,SHUFFLE!,Paranoia Agent,Now and Then, Here and There,Le Chevalier d'Eon,Shigurui,Berserk, as well as theAnime Complex block. Due to the looser broadcast standards for satellite television in Japan, Wowow has become a primary means of widespread distribution for anime with themes or subject matter that regular broadcast networks cannot show. Several anime studios have partnership deals for distributing their more mature series, with the famed studioMadhouse among them.

Wowow also broadcastsJapanese-dubbedAmericantelevision series such asFriends,CSI: Crime Scene Investigation,Sex and the City,The Sopranos,Cold Case,Grey's Anatomy,Medium,The 4400,Animaniacs,South Park, andThe Simpsons, among others. Wowow has also screenedUltimate Fighting Championship events for Japanese audiences, the British comedy sketch showLittle Britain, as well as the British drama/action showUltimate Force under the nameSAS: British Special Forces.

Wowow began producing original live-action TV series in 2003. The series called "Drama W" includes works such asPenance,xxxHolic,The Grand Family,Futagashira andGolden Kamuy: The Hunt of Prisoners in Hokkaido.[16]

Sports

[edit]

Wowow has broadcast all four tennis Grand Slam Championships since 2008. They are the Australian Open, the French Open, Wimbledon and the US Open.

Current broadcast lineup[17]

President

[edit]

The representative director, president & CEO of Wowow is, as of April 2024, Hitoshi Yamamoto.[18]

International carriage

[edit]

Under Japanese regulations, Wowow is not legally available outside of Japan.[19] It did have a shadow audience in South Korea and China, where the station's analog beam was accessible.[20] Wowow was one of the 18 channels that as of early 2000 has its coverage inChina restricted mostly to foreign compounds.[21]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Company Information." Wowow. Retrieved on March 1, 2025. "The Head Office 21F, Akasaka Park Building, 5-2-20, Akasaka, Minato-ku Tokyo 107-6121 Tel. 81-3-4330-8111 Wowow Inc. Map." and "2-1-58, Tatsumi, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-0053"Addresses in Japanese: "東京都港区赤坂5-2-20 赤坂パークビル21F" and "東京都江東区辰巳2-1-58"
  2. ^"Head office." (Direct image link) Wowow. Retrieved on November 20, 2010.Map in Japanese (Direct link)
  3. ^"Broadcasting Center." (Direct image link) Wowow. Retrieved on November 20, 2010.Map in Japanese (Direct link)
  4. ^"History | Company Information | WOWOW Inc".
  5. ^"WOWOWとはどういう意味?".support.wowow.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved2025-06-18.
  6. ^Epstein, R. (April 27, 1991). "Japan Lassos Broadway's `Will' for TV".Los Angeles Times.
  7. ^"More specialist shows in store for Japan TV viewers".The Straits Times. 22 April 1992. Retrieved23 December 2023.
  8. ^Schlesinger, Jacob M.; Ono, Yumiko (June 18, 1992). "Japan's Satellite Channels Buy American --- Need for Programming Gives U.S. Suppliers a Chance at Export Success".Asian Wall Street Journal.
  9. ^Pollack, Andrew (July 19, 1992). "'Twin Peaks' Revisited: Japanese Exhume Laura Palmer".St. Louis Post-Dispatch.The New York Times.
  10. ^do Rosario, L. "Poor reception: Japan's Wowow TV struggles under weak management".Far Eastern Economic Review. Vol. 19, no. 156. p. 71.
  11. ^Wowow Inc. (2011).Business Summary: Subscription. Accessed on January 31, 2012.
  12. ^"Corporate Information." Wowow. April 13, 2008. Retrieved on November 20, 2010. "1-5-8, Moto Akasaka, Minato-ku, Tokyo 107-8080"Japanese address: "東京都港区元赤坂1-5-8"
  13. ^Wowow Inc. (2011).Business | Company Information | WOWOW Inc. Accessed on January 31, 2012.
  14. ^"2020年12月「シネフィルWOWOW」は「WOWOWプラス」に チャンネル名を変更します | ニュース | 株式会社WOWOW".WOWOW (in Japanese). Retrieved2023-09-07.
  15. ^"「WOWOW 4K」きょう放送終了 BS左旋は4月から「NHK BS8K」のみに".Yahoo News Japan (in Japanese). ITmedia news. February 28, 2025.
  16. ^"連続ドラマWとは?".Wowow. RetrievedMay 1, 2024.
  17. ^"スポーツ".Wowow. RetrievedJune 1, 2023.
  18. ^"Top Message | Company Information | WOWOW Inc".
  19. ^Ono, T. (August 1994). "Networks in ASEAN expand".The Japan Times.
  20. ^Williams, M. (October 30, 1995). "Satellite Fault Deprives Asia of Japan TV".Newsbytes News Network.
  21. ^O'Clery, Conor (2000-02-04)."China's cultural commissars see Bugs Bunny as undesirable alien".The Irish Times. Retrieved2021-07-25.

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