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Controversial TV

Controversial TV
Launched 9 June 2008
Closed 30 August 2013
Owned by Edge Media TV Ltd
Picture format SDTV
Audience share 0.0% (March 2009, BARB)
Slogan Opening Your Eyes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Broadcast area United Kingdom
Ireland
Formerly called EMTV
Website emtvonline.co.uk
Availability at time of closure
Satellite
Sky Channel 200
Eutelsat 28A 11222 H 27500 2/3

Controversial TV was a television channel broadcast in the UK and Ireland, owned by independent production company Edge Media Television.

The channel launched in June 2008 after the founder, Keith Goodyer, acquired EMTV Ltd. The acquisition of EMTV Ltd included their Ofcom broadcast licence, which had previously been used to air the now defunct East Midlands Television. As the licence, and the Sky channel, were known as EMTV, the name "Edge Media Television" was created as a backronym.

In an attempt to encourage more viewers to stop at the channel when browsing on their television, the name that appears on the Ofcom licence, and therefore on the Sky EPG, was changed from EMTV to Controversial TV on 25 March 2009, however the production company and channel continued to be referred to on-screen as Edge Media. At around the same time, a reshuffle of the Sky EPG saw the channel move from channel 211 to channel 200.

On 6 June 2013, Edge Media withdrew their own original programming from the channel, which began solely broadcasting Loaded TV, a spin-off of the men’s magazine Loaded, that had been airing on Controversial TV since 26 November 2012.

The channel ceased broadcasting on 30 August 2013.

A number of legal disputes over the ownership of the channel and the holding company saw broadcasts interrupted on 8 September 2010. Although programming resumed on 1 November 2010, this consisted of looping repeats. Ownership issues were resolved in February 2011, after which point the channel resumed making new programmes, including new episodes of the flagship live chat show "On The Edge", which returned on 3 March 2011.

During the dispute, a concerted effort was made by Ian R Crane to keep the channel in the public eye. This included founding the "Edge Media Rescue Plan" to solicit donations from viewers to aid in the continued development of new programmes. Funds from the rescue plan were used to support new programming on the channel when it returned to air, along with development and maintenance of the website.

Edge Media Television aimed to "air programming that is educational, thought provoking and enlightening, and to show programmes that encourage intelligent discussion" and noted that it provided "a platform for people to share alternative and suppressed viewpoints".

Regular topics included perceived political wrongdoing ignored by the mainstream media, alternative medicine, climate change and the natural world, false flag terror, financial and corporation malpractice, religion and spirituality, vaccines and the pharmaceutical industry, secret societies and other issues that fit generally under the heading of the "unexplained".


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