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Country | United States |
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Broadcast area | Nationwide |
Headquarters | Stamford, Connecticut |
Programming | |
Language(s) | English |
Picture format | 480i (SDTV) |
Ownership | |
Owner | ABC Video Enterprises Inc. (American Broadcasting Companies, Inc.) / Group W Satellite Communications (Westinghouse Broadcasting Company) |
History | |
Launched | June 21, 1982 |
Closed | October 27, 1983 (1 year, 4 months and 6 days) |
Replaced by | CNN Headline News (assumed SNC's subscriber base on systems that carried the channel) |
Satellite News Channel (SNC) was an American short-lived news-based cable television channel that was operated as a joint venture between the ABC Video Enterprises division of American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. (a.k.a. ABC) and the Group W Satellite Communications subsidiary of Westinghouse Broadcasting Company (a.k.a. Group W). Designed as a satellite-delivered cable network, the channel is best remembered as the first 24-hour news cable competition to the Cable News Network (CNN). SNC's headquarters were based in the New York City suburb of Stamford, Connecticut.[1]
The channel's format consisted of 18-minute-long rotating newscasts with the remaining time in each half-hour block allocated for a regional news summary; this lent credence to SNC's slogan, "Give us 18 minutes, we'll give you the world," which was derived through Group W's experience in all-news radio. Each 18-minute national newscast featured content gathered from both in-house newsgathering and reporting staffs and reports sourced from international television networks that maintained content agreements with ABC/Group W to supply stories for the channel.[2][3] The regional summaries were sectioned by "zones", and often originated from either ABC affiliates (such as KOMO-TV in Seattle) or Group W stations (such as KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh).
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