Travel Channel International (stylized as Trvl Channel in Asia and Australia since 2021) is a commercial television channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery and broadcasting travel-themed programmes in the EMEA regions and Asia Pacific, spanning 21 on-air languages.
Country | United Kingdom |
---|---|
Broadcast area | United Kingdom Ireland Middle East (excluding Israel), North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Germany, Greece, Poland, Albania, Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Serbia, Balkans, Czech Republic, Slovakia |
Network | Warner Bros. Discovery |
Programming | |
Picture format | 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed) |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
Sister channels | |
History | |
Launched | February 1994 |
Closed | 31 October 2015 31 January 2019 (Netherlands and Flanders) 27 August 2020 (United Kingdom and Ireland) | (New Zealand)
Links | |
Website | www |
Availability | |
Terrestrial | |
Zuku TV (Kenya) | Channel 712 |
The channel was formally operated by Travel Channel International Limited (TCI) and, despite the name, it had no relation with the American television channel of the same name. TCI was acquired by Scripps Networks Interactive, owners of the American channel, in May 2012.[1] In March 2018, Discovery, Inc. acquired Scripps Networks Interactive.[2] Beginning in October 2018, the International service has again diverged from the American network in its programming as the latter network was relaunched as a destination for paranormal and supernatural programming.
History
editTravel Channel was launched by Landmark Communications in Europe in February 1994. In the UK it was seen as a cable-exclusive channel due to it not being carried on the Astra satellite. In 2004, it was sold to the station's chief executive Richard Wolfe and placed under the wings of Travel Channel International Limited (TCI).[3]
A second, sister channel, Travel Channel 2, launched on Sky Digital in the UK and Ireland on 11 February 2008, but closed on 2 March 2009 when the EPG slot was sold to TCM UK. Travel Channel International began to offer their high definition channel, Travel Channel HD, throughout Europe on 15 November 2010 and consequently Asia.
TCI was acquired by Scripps Networks Interactive in May 2012.[4] On 25 March 2013, Travel Channel received refreshed branding, with an overhaul of its scheduling and programming.[5]
On 2 April 2013, the channel was launched on Freesat, a free-to-air satellite television platform in the United Kingdom.[6]
On 31 October 2015, Travel Channel was replaced by Discovery Turbo in New Zealand.
In March 2018, Discovery, Inc. acquired Scripps Networks Interactive.[7]
On 16 January 2019, Travel Channel was removed from Freesat and Freeview in favour of sister channel DMAX in the United Kingdom.[8]
Travel Channel closed in the Netherlands and Flanders on 31 January 2019. Content from former Scripps television channels this channel (Travel Channel), Fine Living and Food Network has been integrated into the programming of Discovery, TLC and Investigation Discovery in the Benelux.[9]
Travel Channel was removed from the Sky EPG on 30 June 2020. It continued to be available on Virgin Media and the Astra 28.2e satellite in the UK and Ireland until 27 August 2020. The channel is still available on some IPTV providers in Ireland and the UK.
On 1 September 2021, Travel Channel in Asia Pacific markets has received a newly refreshed logo stylized as Trvl Channel. On 9 Of March 2022 Travel Channel has ceased broadcasting on Russia with Eurosport, TLC (during a HGTV block), DTX, Discovery Science, Investigation Discovery, Discovery Channel, Animal Planet, Cartoon Network and Boomerang.
Logos
edit-
Logo from 2000 to 25 March 2013
-
Logo from 25 March 2013 to 2017
-
HD logo from 25 March 2013 to 2017
-
Logo used in Poland since 1 January 2017
-
Logo used from April 2016 to August 2020 (UK & Ireland), since 2017 (international)
-
Logo used in Asia & Australia since 1 September 2021
Channels
editProgramming
editTravel Channel's lineup consists of programming involving travel, such as guides to holiday planning, and traditional documentary programming about destinations, cuisine, culture, nature and shopping, along with other types of travel such as backpacking, culinary tourism, ecotourism and luxury tourism.
References
edit- ^ "Scripps buys Travel Channel Int'l". C21Media. 22 March 2012.
- ^ Chris Dziadul (6 March 2018). "Discovery completes Scripps acquisition". BroadbandTVNews.com.
- ^ Chalaby, Jean K. (2009). Transnational Television in Europe: Reconfiguring Global Communications Networks. I.B.Tauris. p. 140. ISBN 9780857717474.
- ^ "Scripps buys Travel Channel Int'l". C21Media. 22 March 2012.
- ^ "Travel Channel unveils new look". imediamonkey. 25 March 2013.
- ^ "Travel Channel launches on Freesat". imediamonkey. 2 April 2013.
- ^ Chris Dziadul (6 March 2018). "Discovery completes Scripps acquisition". BroadbandTVNews.com.
- ^ Patrick Munn (7 January 2019). "DMAX Goes Free-To-Air Later This Month, Acquires FX Animated Comedy 'Archer'". TVWise.co.uk.
- ^ Jarco Kriek (28 November 2018). "Travel Channel, Fine Living en Food Network stoppen in Benelux" (in Dutch). TotaalTV.nl.