Rural TV Set to Launch on Dish Network in January

At a time when few new cable channels are launching, a
new one is sprouting in farmland.

Rural TV, an offshoot of Rural Media Group's RFD-TV,
plans to launch on Jan. 3, 2012, and has secured carriage in Dish Network,
which helped launch RFD in 2000 and now provides a good helping of RFD's
current 40 million subscribers.

Patrick Gottsch, founder and president of RMG, said the
new channel is being launched because of demand from viewers and distributors
for more country content. RFD features four genres of programming: agricultural
news, equine programming, and country-oriented music and entertainment programming
and livestock auctions.

"We had four different audiences asking us for more but
we were landlocked," Gottsch says. "We wanted to deliver and the only answer
was a different channel."

Asked if he thinks the new channel will start out
profitable, Gottsch said "the economics are there for us." Distributors like
Dish will be paying a small, incremental fee for the new channel, and for the
most part it will be using the infrastructure already in place for RFC. Rural
TV does plan to hire about 30 people to increase the size of its news operation
for the additional news programming.

Dish will be carrying the new network on the AT 250 tier
and also on a new Heartland package of five channels.

Rural TV will start its day with a five-hour block of
agricultural news called the Market Day
Report
.

"What CNBC does for stocks, we will be doing for
commodities," Gottsch says.

Primetime will start at 7:30 p.m. with The Rural Evening News, featuring
reports from bureaus in Washington, D.C., Chicago, Sao Paulo and the U.K. The
broadcast will also get reports from two mobile production trucks that will
visit events like the Onion Festival or the Pork Exposition.

In the evening, the network will feature programming from
Nashville and Branson, Mo.

There will also be an increased number of livestock
auctions, which have mostly featured cattle, and generated more than $2.5
billion in sales last year, according to Gottsch.

Gottsch said the RFD and Rural TV will counter program
one another, to give viewers a better chance that if they want to see equine
programming, they will have a place to go.

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.