Television Programs On The Cable Channel A&E Featuring, And Catering Towards Low-Class People

What I write in this post goes along with what I wrote in this earlier post: Pictorial Examples Of How I’ve Just About Had It With Modern Society.

I can not believe the amount of Television Programs featuring, and catering towards low-class people that the Cable Channel A&E is airing these days.

Television Programs such as “60 Days In”, “Booked: First Day In”, “Neighborhood Wars”, “Customer Wars”, “Road Wars”, and “Christmas Wars”.

The Cable Channel A&E, which was formed in 1984 as a joint venture between ABC and NBC, as a merger of Heart and the pre-Capital Cities Communications and Disney ABC’s Alpha Repertory Television Service (ARTS) Cable Channel, and RCA and NBC’s Entertainment Cable Channel. NBC (by this time, under the ownership of General Electric) had sold their stake in the Cable Channel A&E in 1993.

General Electric had acquired NBC largely for NBC’s parent company RCA, which itself; was founded as a Patent Trust subsidiary of General Electric, General Electric had originally spun off RCA in 1932; before, of course, reacquiring it and NBC in 1986.

Capital Cities Communications, and later the Walt Disney Company had inherited ownership of the A&E Cable Channel, along with the ESPN Cable Channel, and ABC and Capital Cities’ owned and operated Radio and Television Stations during their acquisitions of ABC in 1986, and in 1996.


2 responses to “Television Programs On The Cable Channel A&E Featuring, And Catering Towards Low-Class People”

  1. […] this earlier post about Television Programs On The Cable Channel A&E Featuring, And Catering Towards Low-Class Peop… for the type of programming, and the demographics the Cable Channel A&E currently has as of the […]

    Like

  2. […] this earlier post about Television Programs On The Cable Channel A&E Featuring, And Catering Towards Low-Class Peop… for the type of programming, and the demographics the Cable Channel A&E currently has as of the […]

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.