CatholicTV broadcasts programming relevant to Catholic viewers, including live
religious services,
talk shows, devotional programs, educational series, entertainment, and children's programs. The network regularly presents coverage of liturgies and special events at the
Vatican and during
papal journeys.
As of 2016, the president of the CatholicTV Network is Bishop
Robert P. Reed.
History
The first program of the Catholic Television Center of the
Archdiocese of Boston was produced on the morning of January 1, 1955, when Archbishop
Richard J. Cushing celebrated a Pontifical
Low Mass in studios at 25 Granby Street near
Kenmore Square in Boston. From that studio, equipped with three RCA TK31 cameras, the Center produced live and tape-recorded programs, and it purchased time from local commercial television stations to air the Sunday Mass each week. Live programs were transmitted to the broadcasting stations through a leased-line telephone connection. In 1961 the Catholic Television Center's studios became the temporary home of educational broadcaster
WGBH-TV when that station's studios were destroyed in a fire.[2][3]
In 1957 the Catholic Television Center acquired a license to operate its own broadcasting station in Boston on channel 38 in the new
UHF range of television channels. The Center's station, WIHS-TV, went into service on October 12, 1964, with transmitting facilities on the
Prudential Tower in Boston. It was the first full-time Catholic television station in the world employing a general entertainment format along with the daily and Sunday Mass. On July 27, 1966,
Storer Broadcasting acquired WIHS for $2,276,513.16 and renamed it as
WSBK-TV.[4]
With funds from the station sale, the Catholic Television Center built an
Instructional Television Fixed Service (ITFS) system for distributing programs to Catholic schools, and it continued to produce live broadcasts of the Sunday Mass under the name Boston Catholic Television (BCTV). In 1970 BCTV moved into leased studios at 55 Chapel Street in
Newton, Massachusetts.[5]
In April 1983 BCTV began offering programs to home viewers several hours a day through its own channel carried by
cable television providers, at first in Massachusetts, then elsewhere in New England, and also as far away as
Montreal, Quebec. In addition to the Sunday Mass broadcast on conventional (over-the-air) television, weekday Masses were also presented Monday to Friday, originating from a chapel in the Archbishop's residence in
Brighton.
In 2006 the channel adopted the brand name CatholicTV and the slogan America's Catholic Television Network. By 2007 it had entered into a programming exchange agreement with the Canadian channel
Salt + Light Television.[6] The channel converted its video format to
HDTV on October 13, 2010.[7]
CatholicTV programming is seen on cable systems in Massachusetts, California, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. It is broadcast in Fresno, California on
KNXT, channel 50 and in Hawaii on
KUPU, channel 15. CatholicTV is available to
satellite television viewers via the digital
C band satellite
AMC-11. Internet users can view the channel through the web site catholictv.com, or with applications for
iOS or
Android mobile devices. Internet video is also available through the streaming media devices
Roku,
Google TV, and
Apple TV. Select programs are available for download at
iTunes. Video-on-demand service is available on Roku and Apple TV (nationally) and
Verizon FiOS in most markets.
Programming
The network features a variety of Catholic educational and inspirational programming produced in the United States, Canada, Ireland and Vatican City. These include talk shows such as
"This is the Day", devotional programs such as the Holy
Rosary, the
Chaplet of the Divine Mercy and
Benediction, catechetical programs, musical shows, entertainment and variety shows, and youth programs such as the quiz show
WOW. The network presents Sunday Masses from the
National Shrine in
Washington, the
Basilica at Notre Dame,
the cathedral in
San Antonio, and the network's own chapel. In addition, CatholicTV presents
weekday and Saturday Masses from the chapel.
CatholicTV often broadcasts live coverage of the ordinations and installations of newly appointed
diocesan bishops, and presents programming from the
Vatican Television Center, including coverage of the journeys of
Pope Francis.
The network also presents short television features on general Christian themes and
public service announcements from the
Ad Council and other providers related to
Catholic social teaching and issues such as family life, health, education, community, and the well-being of children.