Premiere 12 On 26 August 1994, ahead of the bill that suggested the planned privatisation of the Singapore Broadcasting Corporation, the Minister for Information and the Arts (Brigadier General) George Yeo announced the plan for the creation of a fourth free-to-air television channel in Singapore, offering a predominantly cultural lineup. Under this plan, arts and cultural programming would be spun off from Channel 12 into a new channel, broadcasting on the
UHF band due to the lack of
VHF slots available. Tamil programmes would be moved from
Channel 8 to
Channel 12, so that 8 would shift exclusively to Chinese-language programming, and 12 would focus on Malay and Tamil language programmes. On 27 July 1995,
Television Twelve (later renamed Singapore Television Twelve)—who became responsible for Channel 12 after privatization—received the greenlight from the
Singapore Broadcasting Authority to broadcast a UHF channel. Test transmissions began on 1 August 1995, with trial programming running nightly from 7 to 9 pm and the test pattern filling the rest. The new channel would launch on 1 September 1995 as Premiere 12, with the existing Channel 12 concurrently rebranded as Prime 12. At launch, Premiere 12 planned to broadcast 72 hours of programmes weekly, 15 1/2 hours of which would be devoted to sports coverage such as
S. League and
Serie A football, basketball, and golf among others. Unlike Prime 12, much of Premiere 12's programmes were in English. The channel also planned to air a weekly slot for "baby boomers" featuring comedy series from the 1970s and classic films, and acquired the American
late-night talk show Late Show with David Letterman. The channel, alongside Prime 12, would fall under PSB credentials; Singapore Television Twelve hoped to become the first profitable public service television company in the world, a distinction that broadcasters like PBS and the BBC don't have. In September 1998,
Japan Hour moved from Prime 12 to Premiere 12, as the viewing audience matched Premiere 12's profile: 69% of the average viewer base consisted of professionals, managers and executives. Dramas were also moving to the channel. This enabled a boost in Japanese programming on weekends. By then, the newsmagazine produced by
NNN (
NTV) moved to the slot before the drama; up until then it aired before the Japan Hour documentaries.
Central In September 1999, Singapore Television Twelve announced that Premiere 12 would be relaunched as Central as part of a company-wide restructuring of MediaCorp's television output, with the launch set for 30 January 2000.
Woon Tai Ho took over Lim Hup Seng in the post of president of STV12 the previous month. His views were that the formula of the two extant channels were separate, and lacked consistent stripping between days. Under the new format, Central would provide a more coherent schedule in order to attract more viewers to fixed slots. Children's programming was to be increased from 19 hours a week to 38 (double the figure) in order to distance the idea that children's programming was associated with Saturday mornings and cartoons, as well as increased local productions due to competition from Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. Tamil programming would increase from 24 hours on Prime 12 to 27 hours on Vasantham Central. Arts Central, running from 9:30pm, would begin with a nightly studio programme (tentative title
Art Studio). Premiere 12's current affairs and celebrity talk-show output moved to Channel 5 and Channel NewsAsia. Central's programming schedule was divided into three strands; •
Kids Central, focusing on
children's programmes targeting viewers 12 and younger; many of these programmes moved from Channel 5, which elected to focus more on teen-oriented programmes. The block was positioned as a competitor to pan-Asian cable channels such as
Cartoon Network, featuring programmes acquired from international markets (such as
Dragon Tales and
Tweenies), alongside original domestic productions such as
Hip-O & Friends,
The Big Q, and
Kids United. As per licence conditions, at least twelve hours of programmes per-week were expected to have educational components. •
Vasantham Central, which would focus on Tamil-language programmes, including news, cultural, and entertainment programmes. On 28 February 2000, Singapore Television Twelve increased Central's on-air hours from 91½ to 110½ hours per week. In June 2001, Arts Central dedicated its weekly movie slot to anime films. In 2002, TV12 launched the Take the First Step campaign, aiming at people getting interested in the arts. In 2006, Arts Central organised the Front Awards, aimed at young local arts practitioners. It is named after its weekly arts magazine series of the same name, Front. In March 2008, MediaCorp announced that Central would be split into two standalone channels; the changes took effect on 19 October 2008, with
Vasantham being spun off as a dedicated channel for Tamil programmes, and
Okto inheriting the children's and arts programming. == Timeshared channels ==