Animax was a Latin American cable television channel, serving as the regional variant of the Japanese network of the same name. It was launched on 31 July 2005, replacing Locomotion,[2] which was acquired by Sony on 18 January of the same year. Animax was divided into four feeds: three in Spanish (each centred on Venezuela, Mexico and Argentina) and one in Portuguese (Brazil).

Animax
CountryBrazil (Independent Feed)[1]
Venezuela
Broadcast areaLatin America
NetworkAnimax
Programming
Language(s)Spanish, Portuguese
Picture format4:3 480i/576i SDTV
Ownership
OwnerSony Pictures Entertainment
Sister channelsSony Entertainment Television
AXN
History
LaunchedJuly 31, 2005; 19 years ago (2005-07-31)
ReplacedLocomotion
ClosedMay 1, 2011; 13 years ago (2011-05-01)
Replaced bySony Spin
Links
Websiteanimaxtv.com

The channel was replaced by Sony Spin on May 1, 2011,[3] which continued airing anime until March 5, 2012.

History

Being Sony's first attempt to offer a 24-hour anime channel in Latin America, it planned to broadcast series in two formats. The majority of the series containing 25 episodes or more, would be aired on weekdays, whereas series with fewer than 25 episodes would be shown on certain days of the week, much like it's done in Japan. It is usual to find in one day a premiere episode of a series as well as a minimal of two encores. Also, at the end of every series, the channel airs a section called Animedia, which shows video clips of Japanese artists' songs, extra information about anime and other themes, summaries of events dedicated to anime and presentations about future series for the channel. In January 2007, it began to air a segment called Animax Nius (Nius = News), a teaser featuring news related to anime and other topics.

In 2011, anime was moved to late nights, as Western programming took over most of Animax's airtime. On May 1, 2011, the channel was renamed Sony Spin, and changed almost the entirety of its programming.

Programming

Second Iteration

Anime TV Series

Trigun Stampede

Inherited Shows

Original

Anime TV series

TV series

Translation and dubbing teams

Several dubbing studios have participated in the translation of the aforementioned series for their premiere on Animax, and are located in key countries like Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Colombia and Venezuela. After Animax's arrival in 2005, numerous series were translated and dubbed into Spanish and Portuguese languages, including Blood+, The Twelve Kingdoms, Steel Angel Kurumi, Noir, Wolf's Rain, Martian Successor Nadesico, Galaxy Angel and others.

References

  1. ^ ANMTV - Animax: Sony anuncia regionalização de seus canais no Brasil.
  2. ^ "terra | entretenimiento". 2015-07-08. Archived from the original on 2015-07-08. Retrieved 2017-05-20.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ "Animax Latinoamérica cambia de nombre - Anime, Manga y TV". www.anmtvla.com. Retrieved 2017-05-20.