Unlike The Comedy Channel, which focused on stand-up comedy specials and clips of classic comedy feature films, Ha!'s programming centered largely on acquired off-network
situation comedies from the 1950s to the 1970s. Some cable providers, particularly those owned by
Viacom or
Cablevision, carried the channel under a channel-share agreement in which it would be aired on the same channel space as fellow Viacom-owned cable network
VH1; Ha! would air for half of the day, with the channel turning over to VH1 afterward. Programing included ''
Caesar's Hour, in half-hour segments with Sid Caesar intros, The Steve Allen Show, also edited to a half-hour format with 1990 reflections taped by Allen, You Bet Your Life, The Jack Benny Program, the 1960–67 CBS network prime time version of Candid Camera, The Phil Silvers Show, and Car 54, Where Are You?''. The channel name was culled by MTV Networks from a list of 400 possible suggestions by branding agency Fred/Alan, Inc., New York, whose creative team created the logo, branding, advertising, and was the primary consultant on the on-air promotion. As with other channels owned by MTV Networks, the logo was designed in an approach that gave it many variations, each with a different illustrative approach. Towards the end of 1990, with costs on both sides of the competitive equation struggling to meet the limited needs of cable systems' even limited capacity, HBO and Viacom agreed to merge their respective comedy channels. Ha! and Comedy Channel combined to create
CTV: The Comedy Network, which began airing on April 1, 1991; prior to the merger, both channels each had fewer than 10 million subscribers. Because of confusion and possible legal issues with the Canadian-based
CTV network, the name of the network was subsequently changed to
Comedy Central. The name "Comedy Partners, Inc." appears on the end credits of all shows produced by the new channel. In 2003,
Viacom bought out
Time Warner's half of the network, which had belonged to HBO, which operated The Comedy Channel. Despite this, the "Comedy Partners, Inc." byline still appears on shows produced by the channel today, which is owned by Viacom successor
Paramount Skydance.
Original programming Acquired programming == References ==