Colex Enterprises

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Colex Enterprises was a joint venture between Columbia Pictures Television and LBS Communications, Inc., active from January 30, 1984 to December 31, 1987. The name of the joint venture is a portmanteau of the two companies' names (Columbia and Lexington, the latter coming from LBS' original name of Lexington Broadcast Services). [1] It came after Columbia and LBS agreed to distribute the TV show Family , which LBS distributed under license from Columbia Pictures Television. [2] [3] Family was then added to Colex's roster when the company formed, and the first new show added to Colex's roster was the show Gidget . It was designed to handle syndication of barter series on an advertised-supported basis, mostly of obscure TV shows that never made it into syndication before. [4]

Contents

Colex was split into five branches in November 1985, which were Colex First-Run, which distributed new material, such as The New Gidget , The Hollywood Reporter and The New Monkees , Colex Premiere Movies, which distributed several movies and telemovies, The Colex Collection, which handled distribution of newer off-network product, The Colex 3-Pack, which consisted of mini-series and The Colex Classics, which would continue distribution of several shows. [5]

The company was responsible for distributing the Screen Gems television output, with the exception of pre-1967 Hanna-Barbera produced programs, as well as many of the post-1947 Bob Hope theatrical output.

History

Programming distributed by Colex Enterprises

Television programs

Movies

Telemovies

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References

  1. "Sale in the works for 'Eden' mini-series". Broadcasting: 45. 1984-01-30.
  2. "Family" (PDF). Broadcasting . 1982-12-20. Retrieved 2021-11-13.
  3. "Monitor" (PDF). Broadcasting . 1983-02-14. Retrieved 2021-11-14.
  4. "The World of TV Programming: Syndication". Broadcasting. 1984-10-22.
  5. "Syndication Marketplace" (PDF). Broadcasting . 1985-11-11. Retrieved 2021-11-16.