-By John Consoli
TheWB.com, now in Beta testing, will launch on August 27, offering
classic series that aired on the now defunct WB TV network along
with new web series.
Warner Bros. Television Group is promoting the new site as “the
next great network that won’t be televised.” But cable operator
Comcast, will offer classic WB series via its video-on-demand
service.
The WB.com has signed up Johnson & Johnson as a charter
sponsor.
The online video network will offer classic WB series Buffy, the
Vampire Slayer, Veronica Mars, Smallville, Gilmore Girls, Everwood,
Roswell, The Wayans Bros., Friends and The OC, along with new
series from show creators McG and Josh Schwartz. The McG series
Sorority Fever will premiere on the site on Sept. 8. Schwartz is
producer of the current CW show Gossip Girl.
As part of the rollout, The WB.com will feature an original
application that will launch on Facebook Platform that will allow
integration of Facebook’s social network onto The WB.com, and offer
TheWB.com’s content on Facebook.
TheWB.com’s shows will also be distributed free across the Internet
on Comcast’s Fancast.com and Comcast will make available more than
1,000 TV episodes from Warner Bros. library that will be available
on the cable operator’s video-on-demand service. AOL will also
feature a WB.com branded channel that will stream full episodes of
classic WB series.
In a statement, WBTVG said TheWB.com "affirms its new media
business strategy to build new brands and programming destinations,
create compelling original online content and to distribute that
content on all platforms in ways that best serve consumers and
advertisers.”
There have been undercurrents that WBTVG is starting The WB.com
because executives at the company are not pleased that when The WB
Network and UPN ceased to operate two years ago and merged, the WB
brand, which was built up over more than a decade while the network
was on the air, disappeared from site.
WBTVG president Bruce Rosenblum has denied it, but there are also
rumors that the company is starting the Web site as a trial
balloon, and if successful in drawing in its targeted 18-34 female
audience in significant numbers, that the company might start a WB
cable TV network.
Warner Bros. parent company, Time Warner, also owns Time Warner
Cable, and the new WBTVG partnership with Comcast could mean an
amicable relationship with that cable operator also, giving a WB
network launch on cable a good base with two major cable
operators.
Other original programming planned for TheWB.com includes Chadam, a
3D animation project from artist Alex Pardee and producer Jason
Lee; a reality series from Gary Auerbach (Laguna Beach and Newport
Harbor) about a girl from Orange County, Calif., who swaps lives
with a low-income Los Angeles teen; and High Drama Against All
Odds, an unscripted series from James Percelay which documents the
production of a big-budget high school musical.
Original series include Blue Water High, an Australian surf drama;
Dangerous, about a female government official who infiltrates a
car-theft ring; and iPod, a soap opera set in the world of a video
game design company.
TheWB.com Set to Launch on Aug. 27
Has signed up Johnson & Johnson as a charter sponsor, Comcast, will offer classic WB series via its video-on-demand service
Aug 7, 2008
-By John Consoli
TheWB.com, now in Beta testing, will launch on August 27, offering classic series that aired on the now defunct WB TV network along with new web series.
Warner Bros. Television Group is promoting the new site as “the next great network that won’t be televised.” But cable operator Comcast, will offer classic WB series via its video-on-demand service.
The WB.com has signed up Johnson & Johnson as a charter sponsor.
The online video network will offer classic WB series Buffy, the Vampire Slayer, Veronica Mars, Smallville, Gilmore Girls, Everwood, Roswell, The Wayans Bros., Friends and The OC, along with new series from show creators McG and Josh Schwartz. The McG series Sorority Fever will premiere on the site on Sept. 8. Schwartz is producer of the current CW show Gossip Girl.
As part of the rollout, The WB.com will feature an original application that will launch on Facebook Platform that will allow integration of Facebook’s social network onto The WB.com, and offer TheWB.com’s content on Facebook.
TheWB.com’s shows will also be distributed free across the Internet on Comcast’s Fancast.com and Comcast will make available more than 1,000 TV episodes from Warner Bros. library that will be available on the cable operator’s video-on-demand service. AOL will also feature a WB.com branded channel that will stream full episodes of classic WB series.
In a statement, WBTVG said TheWB.com "affirms its new media business strategy to build new brands and programming destinations, create compelling original online content and to distribute that content on all platforms in ways that best serve consumers and advertisers.”
There have been undercurrents that WBTVG is starting The WB.com because executives at the company are not pleased that when The WB Network and UPN ceased to operate two years ago and merged, the WB brand, which was built up over more than a decade while the network was on the air, disappeared from site.
WBTVG president Bruce Rosenblum has denied it, but there are also rumors that the company is starting the Web site as a trial balloon, and if successful in drawing in its targeted 18-34 female audience in significant numbers, that the company might start a WB cable TV network.
Warner Bros. parent company, Time Warner, also owns Time Warner Cable, and the new WBTVG partnership with Comcast could mean an amicable relationship with that cable operator also, giving a WB network launch on cable a good base with two major cable operators.
Other original programming planned for TheWB.com includes Chadam, a 3D animation project from artist Alex Pardee and producer Jason Lee; a reality series from Gary Auerbach (Laguna Beach and Newport Harbor) about a girl from Orange County, Calif., who swaps lives with a low-income Los Angeles teen; and High Drama Against All Odds, an unscripted series from James Percelay which documents the production of a big-budget high school musical.
Original series include Blue Water High, an Australian surf drama; Dangerous, about a female government official who infiltrates a car-theft ring; and iPod, a soap opera set in the world of a video game design company.