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・ Black Eyed Man
・ Black Eyed Snakes
・ Black Eyed, Please
・ Black Eyes
・ Black Eyes & Neckties
・ Black Eyes (1936 film)
・ Black Eyes (1939 film)
・ Black Eyes (band)
・ Black Eyes (EP)
・ Black Eyes (Snowden song)
・ Black Face
・ Black Face (band)
・ Black facsimile transmission
・ Black Faith
・ Black falcon
Black Family Channel
・ Black fantail
・ Black Fantasy
・ Black Farm
・ Black Fast
・ Black Fast (band)
・ Black fat–tailed scorpion
・ Black fax
・ Black Feathers
・ Black Feeling!
・ Black Fell
・ Black Fell (Lake District)
・ Black Fell (Pennines)
・ Black feminism
・ Black Feminist Anthropology


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Black Family Channel : ウィキペディア英語版
Black Family Channel

Black Family Channel (founded in 1999 as MBC Network) was a network for African American families and the only wholly black-owned and operated cable television network (BET, as seen below, is owned by Viacom; TV One by Comcast & Radio One; Aspire by Magic Johnson & Intermedia Partners; Bounce TV by Bounce Media LLC; & Revolt by Comcast & Sean "Diddy" Combs). The network's schedule included a variety of programs including religious programs, sports, music, talk shows, and children's programs.
The network was started by noted Florida attorney & philanthropist Willie E. Gary, former all-star baseball player Cecil Fielder, four-time heavyweight boxing champ Evander Holyfield, Marlon Jackson of The Jackson 5, and broadcast television veteran Alvin James through their business venture Major Broadcasting Corporation.
The channel started off as Major Broadcasting Cable (MBC) Network. The name was rebranded Black Family Channel on October 1, 2004 in hopes that it would better identify the channel's content.
BFC would effectively be run by actor/director Robert Townsend, who developed original programming for the network, including its most notable effort—the children's educational game show, ''The Thousand Dollar Bee'', in which children would participate in tournament-style rounds of spelling challenges toward which the champion would receive a $1000 bond for his or her college education.
Unlike its primary rival, the Viacom-owned Black Entertainment Television, Black Family Channel avoided rap and hip hop-based programming (they showed gospel music instead). The network was available in up to 16 million homes in the US.
On April 24, 2007, BFC announced that they would cease as a cable channel, effective April 30, 2007, as part of a deal in which BFC's programming and subscriber base would be sold to the Gospel Music Channel. On May 1, 2007, the deal was closed.
The station was an associate member of the Caribbean Cable Cooperative.
==Over-the-air coverage==
The network was also carried on two low-power television stations, W23BC serving the Jackson, MS media market, and WRCX-LP, which serves the Dayton, Ohio area. W23BC has since affiliated with Colours TV and (more recently) America One. WRCX has since affiliated with Ion Television.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Black Family Channel」の詳細全文を読む



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