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Entertainment

26th Jan 2017

Some of Sky’s most popular channels are set to disappear next week

Megan Roantree

Will you be missing out on some of your favourite shows?

Sky has announced that there are some changes being made to their channel listings.

The Discovery Channels collection is set to disappear next week from Sky boxes.

”From 1 February, Discovery Communications’ portfolio of channels are unlikely to be available in Sky TV packages,” Sky announced.

And sadly it’s not just the Discovery Channel that’s leaving your screens as they also own various other popular channels.

It includes Animal Planet, Discovery HD, Discovery History, Discovery Home & Health, Discovery Science, Discovery Shed, Discovery Turbo, DMAX, Eurosport1, Eurosport2, Investigation Discovery, Quest and sadly our beloved guilty pleasure channel TLC.

Sky adds that they still have plenty of interesting and unmissable content available.

”We’ve an incredible line-up of programming scheduled from partners like Nat Geo, History and CI, as well as a fantastic range of Sky Original content,” the statement said.

Discovery Communications released their own statement on the issue:

“We believe Sky is using what we consider to be its dominant market position to further its own commercial interest over those of viewers and independent broadcasters. Discovery is now paid less by Sky than it was 10 years ago, while Sky households are paying so much more than they did in 2007.

This is despite Discovery having increased its share of viewing on the Sky platform by more than 20 percent. Discovery has also increased investment in original content by more than 30 percent since 2010, adding new channels to its portfolio, including Eurosport, TLC and [ID].”

Some of the Discovery branch’s most popular shows include Racing Extinction, Gold Rush, Say Yes to the Dress UK and Cake Boss. A Sky representative added:

“Sky has a strong track record of understanding the value of the content we acquire on behalf of our customers, and as a result we’ve taken the decision not to renew this contract on the terms offered. We have been overpaying Discovery for years and are not going to anymore.

We will now move to redeploy the same amount of money into content we know our customers value. Sky will continue to offer a huge range of content, from award winning documentaries to thrilling entertainment, with thousands of hours available to watch whenever and wherever our customers choose.”