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・ Spotlight (2008 TV series)
・ Spotlight (Antoine Clamaran album)
・ Spotlight (BBC News)
・ Spotlight (BBC Northern Ireland TV programme)
・ Spotlight (Casting Services Company)
・ Spotlight (CBC TV series)
・ Spotlight (Djumbo album)
・ Spotlight (Fayray song)
・ Spotlight (film)
・ Spotlight (Gucci Mane song)
・ Spotlight (Jennifer Hudson song)
・ Spotlight (Madonna song)
・ Spotlight (Mutemath song)
・ Spotlight (software)
・ Spotlight (theatre lighting)
Spotlight (TV channel)
・ Spotlight (TV series)
・ Spotlight (Tír na nÓg album)
・ Spotlight 29 Casino
・ Spotlight Awards
・ Spotlight Comics
・ Spotlight effect
・ Spotlight F.C.
・ Spotlight Innovation
・ Spotlight Kid (band)
・ Spotlight Newspapers
・ Spotlight on Film
・ Spotlight on Jo Stafford
・ Spotlight on Nilsson
・ Spotlight on The Shadows


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Spotlight (TV channel) : ウィキペディア英語版
Spotlight (TV channel)

Spotlight was an American premium cable television network that was owned by Times Mirror Cable Television. The channel focused mainly on theatrically released motion pictures, with the only non-movie programming being monthly previews of films airing on the channel.
==History==
Spotlight launched on May 28, 1981, as a competitor to premium movie channels Cinemax, The Movie Channel and Home Theater Network. The channel was owned by Times-Mirror's Dimension Cable Television unit, and was available primarily on the company's own cable systems; it originally operated on a 12-hour-a-day schedule.
In 1982, Spotlight began broadcasting 24 hours a day (Cinemax broadcast on a 24-hour schedule from its August 1980 sign-on, while Showtime and The Movie Channel went to a 24-hour schedule earlier and HBO went to a 24-hour schedule on weekends in September 1981, which was then expanded to weekdays three months later in December 1981).〔 Tele-Communications, Inc., Cox Broadcasting and Storer Broadcasting served as investors in the channel.〔(Mitchell, Kim. "Encore debuts in four TCI systems" ), ''Multichannel News'', April 8, 1991. HighBeam Research. (February 23, 2011).〕
Spotlight's initial spokesperson was singer Robert Goulet, who hosted the rollout of the channel. Spotlight initially featured a flip-flop movie schedule. The channel would broadcast a movie at 7 p.m. and another around 9 p.m. and then the next night, the channel would show the same two films in a "flip-flop" schedule, with the late movie from the other night shown first. As with most premium channels at the time, the channel maintained little exclusivity for many of the same movies, experiencing a sizeable amount of same-month duplication with its film inventory with Showtime and HBO.
Spotlight's network identifications and feature presentation bumpers utilized a big band-type theme, with a sequence featuring an animation that zoomed into the "O" of the Spotlight logo, accompanied by a whistling sound. The channel's initial slogan was "Spotlight, shining bright, day and night, we light up the stars for you!" Spotlight suffered from insufficient cable carriage (outside of Dimension Cable Television systems) throughout its existence, and ultimately shut down on February 1, 1984. After Spotlight shut down, Times Mirror replaced the channel on most of its systems with Showtime, which was largely unavailable on Dimension Cable Television's service areas prior to Spotlight's demise, and its subscriber base was turned over to Showtime and The Movie Channel.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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