NuvoTV Raises $40M for New Programming

NuvoTV, a cable network targeting Latino viewers with
English-language programming, says it has raised $40 million in new financing
that it will use to develop new original content.

The added funding comes from Columbia Capital and Rho
Capital Partners, which were investors when the channel started up in 2004,
plus Veronis Suhler Stevenson and Tennenbaum Capital Partners. Time Warner and
Dish Network are also small investors in the channel, which is independent,
with no single entity holding a controlling stake.

"The money is dedicated to really doubling down on
programming," says Michael Schwimmer, CEO of NuvoTV. While the channel's
financials are private, Schwimmer said, "We don't need the cash to pay our
bills. It's growth capital and that capital is simply to create better
programming and more programming."

Schwimmer says the Hispanic market is hot and getting more
competitive. News Corp. jumped into the market with the launch of MundoFox
earlier this month, but that network is likely targeting Univision and
Telemundo, which air Spanish-language programming.

NuvoTV sees a growing number of Latino viewers who want
programming in English. "When the 2010 Census came out, everybody realized that
the real growth in this critical demographic in our country is the U.S.-born
Latino," he said. "We operate in the sphere of the Latinos who spend the
majority of their time watching television in English. And when you look at the
data what you find is that English-dominant Latinos that represent something
like 40% of all Latinos in America and watch something like 90% of their
programming in English."

He says that bilingual Latinos also watch a majority of
their programming in English. Even Spanish-dominant viewers watch 30% to 40% of
their programming in English, Schwimmer says. "They live here in America and
it's relevant to their lives."

But Schwimmer notes that "no one has yet really cracked the
code to how to deliver compelling programming to Latinos in English, but we've
certainly been at it the longest and have made the most progress."  Those viewers have a hunger for a "more
contemporary depiction of Latinos in a non-stereotypical way."

 NuvoTV won't be alone
in targeting Latinos in English. Schwimmer notes that ABC and Univision are
teaming up on English-language news and lifestyle channels for Latinos. "That
says a lot when Univision, the dominant player in Hispanic programming in
America today, decides it's going to dedicate meaningful resources to an
English-language channel.  And ABC
obviously isn't going to invest in something like this lightly."

NuvoTV's distribution recently passed 30 million homes, according
to Schwimmer. "Distributors, like advertisers, and everybody else, are really
just getting comfortable with the concept that if they want to growth their
relationship with Latino consumers in their footprint, the only way is by
having a strong relationship with the second and third generation Latinos that
represent the bulk of consumer spending," he said. And NuvoTV reaches those
viewers with programming in English.

NuvoTV has already begun ramping up new programming. This
summer, it launched Fight Factory, a
reality series looking at some of the top Latino mixed martial arts fighters.
In the fall, the network is premiering three more new shows: Mario Lopez One-on-One, The 7 of Clubs and Curvy Girls.

"Media for Hispanics is a growth area, in particular English
language content for Hispanics is a growth area, and so that's what investors
are looking for and that's what we offer," Schwimmer says.

Have other media companies expressed interest in acquiring
an early mover in such a hot category? "Let's just say that people are watching
us very closely and we're focused on growing the business and delivering a
great product and there are no ongoing discussions in that regard," Schwimmer
said.

Jon Lafayette

Jon has been business editor of Broadcasting+Cable since 2010. He focuses on revenue-generating activities, including advertising and distribution, as well as executive intrigue and merger and acquisition activity. Just about any story is fair game, if a dollar sign can make its way into the article. Before B+C, Jon covered the industry for TVWeek, Cable World, Electronic Media, Advertising Age and The New York Post. A native New Yorker, Jon is hiding in plain sight in the suburbs of Chicago.