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    Home / News / Entertainment News / All you '90s kids, no Channel V on television anymore
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    All you '90s kids, no Channel V on television anymore

    All you '90s kids, no Channel V on television anymore

    By Sneha Bengani
    Nov 26, 2017
    12:57 pm

    What's the story

    Mostly celebrated for defining Indie-pop culture for an entire generation and being the coolest space on TV in the '90s, Channel V is reportedly shutting shop after a 20-year-long stint in India.

    Launched by Star India, the music channel will most likely be replaced by Star Sports 1 Kannada.

    Here's looking at Channel V's rise, its fall and all the nostalgia in between.

    Nostalgia

    More than just a music channel

    Channel V, for the longest time, was a lot more than just a music channel. In a no-internet age, it served as YouTube's prototype feeding viewers home-grown music by indigenous rockstars and making video-jockeying young India's dream profession.

    It's also known for launching the careers of several celebrities, most notably Ayushmann Khurrana, Aditya Roy Kapur, Purab Kohli, Neeti Mohan and Anushka Manchanda.

    Reaction

    The YouTube of '90s: Twitterati reminisce the good old days

    It feels like the end of an era for us '90s kids. Most things that we loved so much while growing up either don't exist anymore or are fast fading from memory: Barista, Planet M, Archies, Harry Potter, and now Channel V.

    Of course, Twitter had to burst out in nostalgia. Channel V's former employees and once-upon-a-time viewers all mourned the irrevocable loss.

    Twitter Post

    Lola Kutty aka Anuradha Menon on Channel V's exit

    Places I used to frequent don't exist anymore.
    First Barista.
    Now Channel V. pic.twitter.com/T3xKSRKJHN

    — Anu Menon (@ExLolaKutty) November 22, 2017

    Twitter Post

    Celebrating the end of an era

    End of an era
    A farewell party is a must @Purab_Kohli @yuuthistar @gauravkapur https://t.co/nLZQHd60ew

    — Shruti Seth (@SethShruti) November 22, 2017

    Downfall

    Channel V kept changing too much too quickly

    Poor branding, lack of a focused strategy, and low viewership killed Channel V.

    However, to stay relevant, it re-invented itself every three years in the past decade.

    Launched exclusively as a youth-centric music channel, it switched to fiction and reality shows in 2012, and back to music in 2016.

    Channel V kept changing too drastically too soon and hence lost connect with its audience.

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