Brit Hits

Brit Hits was a British television channel that was launched on 20 February 2006. It was broadcast via the Sky Digital satellite platform to the United Kingdom on channel 215.

Brit Hits
CountryUnited Kingdom
Ownership
OwnerTV Legal Limited
History
Launched20 February 2006
Closed13 April 2009
Replaced bySikh Channel
Former namesLegal TV (2006–07)
Red TV (2007–08)
Links
Websitebrithits.tv
Availability
(at time of closure)
Satellite
Sky DigitalChannel 215

The channel was formerly known as Legal TV and Red TV.

History

Logo as Legal TV used from launch until 16 December 2007

When the channel launched as Legal TV, it adopted the motto "the law firm in your living room" and aimed its programmes at a lay audience. Legal advice given by the channel was of a general nature, compared by a senior director to "...advice that might be sourced from the CAB".[1]

In July 2007, Consultant Commercial Lawyer, Jonathan (Jonny) Munro LL.B, became Producer and Presenter of programmes like 'Street Lawyer', 'Jonny & Rob Advise', 'Devil's Advocate'.

Along with the start of the YouTube culture, pressure for audiences and threats of legal action from the BBC, embryo formats of Live Arbitrations and 'Free speech' within live audiences were killed before any investment was put into the Channel. Jonny Munro remains head of LegalTV and operates a Media & Law Firm JONRO Lawyers, deep in the English countryside, on the Buckinghamshire Northamptonshire border. Most of LegalTV was filmed in and around Birmingham, and from studios in Aston, England. Jonny Munro concentrated his work in online broadcasting and the Sky Channel was handed to Sikh TV in 2010.

Legal TV was rebranded as Red TV on Monday 17 December 2007, and sought to expand on Legal TV's line-up of home-grown and USA-imported legal programming by introducing reality TV and lifestyle documentary shows. The channel's slogan was 'Close to Life'.

Red TV was relaunched as Brit Hits TV in December 2008. The channel moved EPG genres from entertainment to music.

Brit Hits targeted an audience between 16 and 45 years old, focusing most of its broadcast on new up-and-coming British acts, as well as older British artists.

In February 2009, Brit Hits started simulcasting Psychic TV, and also contained other non-related music programmes. It no longer showed music.

Brit Hits closed on 13 April 2009 and was replaced by The Sikh Channel.[2][3]

References

  1. The Journal of the Law Society of Scotland "Sky to launch Legal TV"
  2. "EXCLUSIVE: Sikh Channel launches this month". Biz Asia. 2009-04-05. Archived from the original on 2009-04-16. Retrieved 2009-04-13.
  3. "Brit Hits TV makes way for The Sikh Channel". Biz Asia. 2009-04-10. Archived from the original on 2009-04-15. Retrieved 2009-04-13.
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