The Hallmark Channel traces its history to the launch of two separate religious cable channels, the
American Christian Television System (ACTS) and the
Vision Interfaith Satellite Network (VISN). The two networks began alternating time on a shared transponder slot on the Galaxy III satellite in 1992. Under the original timeshare agreement, the network was branded as VISN/ACTS. Each network was provided time for its programming blocks, and would use their own logos. VISN launched on July 1, 1988, and was founded by the National Interfaith Cable Coalition (NICC), in cooperation with several cable providers. The coalition's membership consisted of 65 different religious groups. VISN aired during the morning and evening hours. ACTS commenced operations in 1984, and was owned by the
Southern Baptist Convention. It aired programming from
evangelical and
fundamentalist non-
charismatic Christian groups such as the SBC, the
Christian Reformed Church, and the
Association of Regular Baptist Churches, as well as well-known evangelists such as
Jerry Falwell,
Charles Stanley and
D. James Kennedy. Both channels aired several hours a week of religious children's programs, some of which overlapped, including
Sunshine Factory,
Joy Junction,
Davey and Goliath, and
Jot. In 1993, VISN-ACTS was relaunched as the Faith & Values Channel; it began adding a few secular programs during this time, including news, information, and lifestyle programming
Odyssey Network In 1995, cable conglomerate
Tele-Communications Inc.'s
Liberty Media acquired a 49% ownership stake in the Faith & Values Channel, and took over operational control of the network. It added more secular programming to the network and reduced religious programming to about 10 hours a day. In 1996, the network was rebranded as the Odyssey Network (although on-air
promotions often referred to the network simply as "Odyssey"), and launched a website, Odysseyfamily.com.
Hallmark Entertainment and
The Jim Henson Company bought significant stakes, paid partly through programming commitments, in Odyssey in late 1998; by this time, Odyssey carried a mix of religious programming and family-friendly secular shows, with a limited amount of original productions. Liberty had convinced Hallmark not to launch its own domestic channel, citing difficulty in getting carriage for a new network on existing cable systems. The NICC and Hallmark-Henson would hold equal shares while Liberty increased their stake, and the three groups shared control of the board. Hallmark and Henson would have say over chief executive selection. While adding Henson's and Hallmark's libraries, the channel could not make major programming format changes, so cable systems could not drop them. Hallmark hired former
Fox Kids Network worldwide vice-chairman
Margaret Loesch that year to overhaul Odyssey into a family channel (Loesch had quit Fox in late 1997, ironically after acquiring Odyssey's rival,
The Family Channel, with plans to revamp that network; however, she had to wait out a non-compete clause in her contract before officially joining Odyssey). Under the new ownership structure, Odyssey underwent a major programming revamp on April 4, 1999; the revamp decreased the amount of religious programs on the network down to an average of four hours a day, although more hours were religious on the weekend. The channel began to focus more on family-targeted entertainment programming, including classic
sitcoms and variety series (such as
ALF and
The Muppet Show), children's programs (such as
The Archie Show,
Fraggle Rock, and
Zoobilee Zoo), and family-oriented films and miniseries (such as the cable broadcast premiere of Hallmark and Henson's 1996 adaptation of ''
Gulliver's Travels). The afternoon block Leonard Maltin Presents
featured films from the RHI Entertainment-owned Hal Roach Studios library, while Wednesday nights featured classic Hallmark Hall of Fame'' productions. Loesch explained that the three owners shared a commitment to "quality programming" and "raising the bar on television", and that the channel was being programmed in a direction reminiscent of television in the 1950s and 1960s, where broadcasters "really had quite broad fare, but you never had to ask anyone to leave the room, like your children".
Hallmark Channel In 2000, Odyssey's ownership group was re-organized as Crown Media Holdings, with Hallmark, Chase Equity Associates, Liberty Media, and the NICC transferring their shares in Odyssey to the company. There were plans for the company to
go public; Hallmark received all of Crown Media's
class B shares, which were worth ten votes each, thus giving it control of Crown Media. After The Jim Henson Company was sold to German company EM.TV & Merchandising in February 2000, it sold its remaining stake in Odyssey the following month in exchange for 8% of Crown Media's stock. In March 2001, Crown Media announced that Odyssey would rebrand as Hallmark Channel on August 6, taking advantage of the better-known Hallmark brand to encourage wider carriage. Loesch commented that some viewers had mistaken Odyssey as being a travel or science fiction channel rather than family entertainment, and that Hallmark Channel's main goal would be telling "great stories". Crown Media negotiated with the NICC to reduce the amount of religious programming Hallmark Channel would air to 14 hours per-week (as well as allow for less overtly-religious programs with broader, spiritual themes), and help fund and distribute a digital cable network for the NICC. The channel's launch programming included the miniseries
The Infinite Worlds of H.G. Wells, a new slate of original movies, and acquired programming such as
Tales from the Neverending Story. In 2002, the Hallmark Channel premiered a weekday morning talk show,
New Morning. A Sunday morning version, hosted by
Naomi Judd, titled ''Naomi's New Morning'', debuted in 2005 and lasted two years before being pulled from the schedule in early 2007. In 2004, the network launched a sister channel,
Hallmark Movie Channel.
Hallmark Channels in international markets were sold for about $242 million in 2005 to Sparrowhawk Media, a private equity group backed by
Providence Equity Partners and
3i. The channel in 2005 had its highest-rated year with 34% increase in viewers, being ranked seventh in growth, and the highest-rated movie on a basic cable network (
Meet the Santas). With the expiration of RHI Entertainment's exclusive contract with Hallmark Channel,
Larry Levinson Productions became the channel's sole producer. In 2007, additional producers were added as suppliers as the channel increased the number of original films by 50% from 20 in 2007 to 30 in 2008. In January 2008, the
Hillary Clinton presidential campaign purchased an hour of Hallmark Channel's primetime slots under a
paid programming arrangement to run a town hall special promoting Clinton's campaign for President of the United States on February 4, the day before the multi-state "
Super Tuesday" primaries. The wheel series "Mystery Movie" was discontinued in 2008 as the channel was doing better with lighter romances.
Bill Abbott era, Martha Stewart agreement In May 2009,
William J. "Bill" Abbott—who had previously held an advertising sales role—succeeded Henry Schleiff as president of Hallmark Channel. Abbott planned to retool its programming to appeal to younger viewers without alienating its core audience of
baby boomers, aiming for Hallmark Channel to become "a destination for lighter fare, for comedies and quality programming" that was "true" to the Hallmark brand. Later that year, Hallmark Channel held the inaugural "Countdown to Christmas"—a seasonal programming event featuring four original holiday film premieres, and a
Movie Night with Hoops & Yoyo block on Friday nights—the first cross-promotional campaign between Hallmark Channel and Hallmark Cards. In January 2010, Hallmark Channel announced a multi-year strategic partnership with
Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia (MSLO), under which first-run episodes of
The Martha Stewart Show would move from syndication to Hallmark Channel beginning that September, and MSLO would produce a series of primetime specials for the channel (which would begin with specials focused on
Halloween and Christmas). It was reported that Abbott had sought to reposition Hallmark Channel as a lifestyle-oriented channel to compete with the
Scripps Networks Interactive channels, and shift its television films exclusively to Hallmark Movie Channel to appeal to younger demographics. Crown Media and MSLO were also reportedly exploring the formation of a lifestyle cable network as a joint venture, tentatively named "Hallmark Home". At least 500 hours of new original programming was slated for the 2011–12 season, including 25 original movies, 160 hours of MSLO programming (including new series ''
Emeril's Table
, and additional Martha Presents
specials), and a series in development with poet Maya Angelou. In addition, Hallmark Hall of Fame'' productions would air on Hallmark Channel a week after their television premieres on
ABC. In January 2012,
Martha was cancelled by Hallmark Channel due to its high production costs, with production ending after the conclusion of its then-current season. Hallmark Channel was still in discussions over the fate of its other MSLO-produced programming. During its
upfronts for the 2012–13 season, Hallmark Channel announced the new daytime talk shows
Home & Family and
Marie! with
Marie Osmond, as well as a slate of original movies that would include pilots for adaptations of the novels
Cedar Cove and
When Calls the Heart. In October 2012, ahead of the January 2013 premiere of its pilot movie,
Cedar Cove was given a series order as Hallmark Channel's first original primetime program.
When Calls the Heart was also picked up as a series in 2013, while
Marie! was canceled after one season. On March 15, 2013, the channel introduced a new family-oriented Friday night movie block,
Walden Family Theater, in partnership with
Walden Media and others. In April 2014, the channel launched a
TV Everywhere video on-demand service, "Hallmark Channel Everywhere", which offers a streaming selection of Hallmark Channel films and series for subscribers on participating television providers. At some point before July 2021, the name of the app was changed to "Hallmark TV".
Focus on seasonal programming In the 2014–15 season,
Hallmark Hall of Fame premieres moved exclusively to Hallmark Channel, with up to four new films scheduled per-year. Two new series,
Good Witch and
Signed, Sealed, Delivered, were picked up for the 2014–15 season. In February 2015, Hallmark Channel held an inaugural "Countdown to
Valentine's" event to build off the success of Countdown to Christmas, featuring four movie premieres. The channel's first "Winterfest" seasonal programming was in January 2016. At its March 2016
upfronts, Hallmark Channel executives revealed that they planned to divide their programming into themed seasons year-round, to build upon the success of Countdown to Christmas and other franchises. On October 20, 2016, Hallmark Channel and the Hallmark Movies & Mysteries channel were added to the Sling TV service. On November 15, 2017, PlayStation Vue added Hallmark Channel, Hallmark Movies & Mysteries, and Hallmark Drama to its lineup. In October 2017, Hallmark Channel launched a new,
over-the-top subscription service known as
Hallmark Movies Now, which features new and existing original content from the network. In November 2017, the channel beat all four major broadcast networks in the ratings one night with its
Hallmark Hall of Fame movie,
The Christmas Train. In March 2019, Hallmark announced it had dropped
Lori Loughlin from future company projects due to her role in the
2019 college admissions bribery scandal. In December 2019, the channel stopped airing advertisements for the online wedding registry
Zola.com that included two brides kissing each other, because of complaints that it was lesbians kissing and promoted
same-sex marriages. A main complainant was
One Million Moms, a division of the socially conservative
American Family Association, which has been described as an
anti-LGBTQ hate group by the
Southern Poverty Law Center. Similar advertisements with heterosexual couples kissing were not pulled. As a result, social media users called for a boycott of the channel, while competitors like
Netflix and the
Disney-owned
Freeform cable channel responded by touting their
LGBTQ inclusivity. On December 15, Hallmark reversed its decision and said it would reinstate the advertisements and work with
GLAAD, an LGBTQ media monitoring organization, to create more inclusive programming. The series finale of
Good Witch, which aired in July 2021, featured the first lesbian kiss in a Hallmark production. Abbott quietly and abruptly stepped down as president of Hallmark Channel in February 2020; the following year, a group led by Abbott acquired the
Southern lifestyle channel
Great American Country (GAC) from
Discovery, Inc. to relaunch it as a direct competitor to Hallmark,
Great American Family. The channel has emulated the programming strategies that were mounted by Hallmark Channel under Abbott, and has also leveraged talent who had been associated with the channel's original productions. On October 31, 2022, Hallmark announced a distribution agreement with
NBCUniversal, under which live and on-demand programming from its networks would be available to
Peacock subscribers. The agreement lapsed in April 2025, with the network now prioritizing its in-house OTT subscription service
Hallmark+ (a 2024 relaunch of Hallmark Movies Now). ==Programming==