BET
Type | Cable network |
---|---|
Country | |
Availability | National and parts of Canada |
Owner | Viacom |
Key people | Robert L. Johnson - Founder and former Chairman Debra Lee CEO/Chairman of BET Reginald Hudlin Programming President |
Launch date | January 25, 1980 |
Former names | None |
Official website | BET.COM |
Black Entertainment Television is an American cable network based in Washington, D.C. targeted toward African-American audiences in the United States. The network is commonly referred to as BET and most of its programming comprises hip-hop and R&B music videos as well as religious programming, public affairs programs, and urban-oriented movies and series.
History
BET was founded by Robert L. Johnson, a former cable industry lobbyist, on January 25, 1980 after getting a $500,000 investment from then-TCI president John Malone. The network was initially a weekly, two-hour Friday night block airing on the USA Network from 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. (EST). The programming was mostly older movies and music videos, creating an outlet for an untapped market in the then-young cable industry, African-Americans. In May of that year, BET invested $1 million for the production of Black collegiate sporting events and expanded an hour. In November 1980, BET added two half-hour shows, Black Showcase and The Bobby Jones Gospel Show (the latter is still on the air today). On June 26, 1983, BET premiered Video Soul, a music video series hosted by popular D.C. DJ Donnie Simpson, one of the first marquee series on the network.
On October 1, 1983, after finding additional funding courtesy of Home Box Office, BET launched a 24-hour schedule with a viewership of 7.6 million cable subscribers.
Throughout the decades, BET has grown in viewership and expanded beyond television. In October 1989, BET entered the publishing business by launching their first magazine Emerge, aimed toward African-American news consumers. A little under a year later, BET launched YSB (Young Sisters and Brothers), a lifestyle magazine aimed toward African-American teenagers followed by the purchase of Arabesque Books, a publisher of African-American-oriented romance novels, and Heart and Soul magazine. BET also launched spinoff networks in the 1990s, including BET on Jazz: The Jazz Channel (now named BET J), a pay-per-view network called BET Action, and, along with John Malone's Liberty Media, BET STARZ!, which became Black STARZ! after the Viacom takeover and renamed Starz InBlack in 2005. BET also offers two other music channels, BET Hip-Hop, and BET Gospel, both of which are offered on digital cable platforms across the nation.
BET also airs African-American interest specials and introduced public service campaigns. The Rap It Up campaign is dedicated to preventing the spread of HIV/AIDS in the African-American community. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, BET aired SOS: Saving Our Selves, a hurricane relief telethon concert on September 9, 2005, to raise funds for those affected by Katrina. More than $11 million was raised for Katrina victims.
Programming
Entertainment
On weekdays and Saturdays, BET focuses mainly on urban music programming with shows like 106 & Park and Rap City, while also airing sitcoms such as The Wayans Bros., The Jamie Foxx Show, Girlfriends and The Parkers. The drama like Soul Food airs Sunday nights and the stand-up comedy program called Comic View airs throughout the week. BET has recently introduced reality programs like College Hill, collegiate sporting events, and various movies and specials. BET also created a short-lived animated comedy series called Hey Monie, after partnering up with The Oxygen Network.
On Sundays, BET carries gospel music and other religious programming for the greater part of the day such as The Bobby Jones Gospel Hour, Video Gospel, and Lift Every Voice. Religious programming also airs in the early morning hours every day from 4 a.m. to 9 a.m. EST.
BET also airs the BET Awards Show each year. The show honors African American entertainers, athletes and actors. It is usually BET's Angie is so sexy highest rated show of the year.
News
BET Tonight was relaunched as a daily newscast, BET Nightly News with Jacque Reid, which began in 1999 as an extension of its news coverage. BET's news coverage became a part of the network in October 1986. After the nightly newscast was removed from the lineup in the summer of 2005, it returned in October 2005 delivering news updates on BET throughout the day and, in 2006, as a Sunday afternoon news hour.
Criticism
Many prominent media critics, including Public Enemy rapper Chuck D,[1] journalist George Curry,[2] Howard University,[3] writer Keith Boykin,[4] comic book writer/artist/editor Christopher Priest,[5] filmmaker Spike Lee[6] and writer/cartoonist Aaron McGruder of The Boondocks, have protested BET's programming and actions. One of the most commonly-heard complaints is the fact that BET's programming is mostly music entertainment, particularly Hip-hop and rap music, and does not focus on the public affairs of the black community.
The channel has been scrutinized by members of the black and African-American communities who feel that the channel perpetuates harmful Black stereotypes by primarily airing hip-hop videos that often have misogynistic, materialistic, and/or violent themes. As a result, BET heavily censors suggestive content from the videos that it airs, often with entire verses removed from certain rap videos. Detractors are also quick to point out the irony they see in the network's choice to also show strong religious programming once a week, although they fail to realize that religious programming also airs Monday through Saturday on the network from 4 a.m. to 9 a.m. (EST) in addition to the Sunday programming. Some educational programming like Season of the Tiger and College Hill that display black people in an intelligent, positive point of view have also aired on the channel. Not long ago people began referring to acronym BET standing for "Black Exploitation Television".
Outside of the black community, the Parents Television Council has also criticized BET for indecent content and racial stereotypes in general. [1] [2] Following radio talk-show host Don Imus's racist comments about black women leading to his firing, PTC founder L. Brent Bozell in his column questioned why Imus's remarks led to massive protest among the black community yet music videos on BET "running raunchy rap videos full of N-words and 'ho' references" received less protest. [3]
BET has been criticized by some Christian evangelicals not primarily for music videos, but for its morning religious lineup. Each morning, BET broadcasts evangelical TV shows, and hosts include Robert Tilton, Don Stewart, and Peter Popoff, who have been criticized for their money-brings-miracles theology and who have had spats with the law (Popoff's ministry's tax-exempt status was recently revoked in Canada).
Competitors
BET's success, and the controversy over its content, has spawned a few smaller competitors aiming toward the African-American market. Although some like NUE TV (New Urban Entertainment Television) had little success, others like TV One and Black Family Channel (formerly MBC) have thrived and succeeded, mostly by eschewing BET's music-based programming for more family-oriented fare. However these networks are mostly watched by older African-Americans ans BET continues to be mostly watched by the youth.
BET's direct/most obvious competitor is MTV. Since they are competitors, BET does not advertise for MTV and MTV did not advertise for BET. BET blocks references to MTV and MTV blocks references to BET. For example, in Twista's song Overnight Celebrity, the last verse says
- "...Im'a get you to the MTV awards...
- ...I can make you a celebrity overnight,
- ...I can even get you to the Soul Train Awards...". BET bleeps the MTV lyric and MTV bleeps the Soul Train lyric.
Viacom Owns BET & MTV
In 1999 BET was sold to Viacom for $3 billion dollars. Viacom also owns MTV Networks. In 2007 BET began airing reruns of MTV show Run's House, so whether the two channels are still competitors is unknown.
Popular original BET shows
- Video Soul
- Bobby Jones Gospel
- Lift Every Voice
- 106 & Park
- Rap City
- Video Vibrations
- Caribbean Rhythms
- Video LP
- Lead Story
- Teen Summit
- College Hill
- Lil Kim: Countdown to Lockdown
- Keyshia Cole: The Way It Is
- DMX: Soul Of A Man
- The Basement
- BET's Top 25
- BET's BlackBuster Movies
- BET's Comic View
- Coming To The Stage
- BET Live
- BET: Uncut
- BET.com Countdown
- BET Style
- Hits From The Street
- Cita's World
- BET Tonight with Tavis Smiley
- BET Tonight with Ed Gordon
- Midnight Love
- Season of the Tiger
- The Black Carpet
- How I'm Livin
- Planet Groove
- American Gangster
- Beef: The Series
- Top 25 Countdown
- Freestyle Friday
- Spring Bling
- Wild Out Wednesday
- NOTE: The Sunday lineup was changed in 2005, instead of all day gospel, it now features gospel in the morning until 11 am, then features reruns of The Jamie Foxx Show, and Wayans Bros., and possible, music videos.
Notes
- ^ http://www.publicenemy.com/index.php?page=page3&item=31
- ^ http://georgecurry.com/columns/index1.shtml?id=1059847337
- ^ http://www.blackcollegewire.org/culture/040209_bet-uncut/
- ^ http://www.keithboykin.com/arch/000539.html
- ^ http://phonogram.us/viewpoint/ostracized.htm
- ^ http://tv.zap2it.com/tveditorial/tve_main/1,1002,271%7C79963%7C1%7C,00.html
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