Gilad Neumann wants to be clear: He does not want to turn your    dog into a couch potato. But if youre going out for a few    hours, he hopes that soon youll leave your television on and    tuned to his new cable channel, Dog TV, the first channel    directly targeting canine viewers.  
    Veterinary associations like the Humane Society and the ASPCA    have been recommending for dog owners to leave the TV or radio    on when they leave their dog home alone for many hours, says    Neumann, Dog TVs founder and chief executive officer. However,    not every video that you leave your dog with is appropriate,    he says. [Anything that contains] fireworks or gunfire could    scare your dog and create more stress than no TV. Dog TVs    programming, on the other hand, is meant to soothe your dogs    abandonment anxietyand spare your furniturewhile he or she is    alone.  
    Dog TV went live on Feb. 12 after four years of dog-market    research and several hundred thousand dollars of pre-seed money    (Neumann wont give a specific amount). For now, its available    only to Time Warner Cable (TWC) and Cox Media    customers in the dog-loving city of San Diego, a test market of    about 1 million cable subscribers. Jasmine Group, the Israeli    production company behind Dog TV, hopes to expand across the    U.S. by the end of the year, and start charging a premium of    $4.99 per month. The company believes this is a small price for    absentee dog owners to pay to assuage their guiltespecially    compared with doggy day-care rates, which can range from $40 to    $50.  
    Watch a few minutes of Dog TVa beagle and a    Pekingese cavorting in a field set to cheery Muzak, sayand    youd be forgiven for confusing it with the Puppy Channel, the    terminally cute, all-puppies-all-the-time experiment that hit    its peak in the late 90s before becoming a casualty of the    dot-com bubble and setting a daunting precedent for other    dog-centric programming. But a lot has changed in the last    decade, both in entertainment and in man-pet relations: There    are an increasing number of pampering products and services    that extend human comforts to dogs, from gourmet food to therapy.    And Dog TV, after all, isnt for humans. For one thing, the    colors will seem off, since theyve been calibrated to suit    dogs limited vision. (Essentially color-blind, dogs can only    see shades of blue and yellow.) Were constantly doing  you    can call them focus groups for groups for dogs, says Neumann.    Weve noticed, for example, that dogs are not thrilled about    barking on the channel, so weve removed almost all barking.  
    The content is relatively cheap to produce: Videos are shot    largely in San Diego and Israel, canine actors dont need to be    paid, there are no elaborate sets, and the    veterinarian-approved music is written and performed in-house.    Short segments play throughout the day and are designed to    alternately soothe and stimulate the viewer.  
    There are, as yet, no plans to air dog sitcoms, dog    procedurals, or any form of narrative content. Were not    creating CSI for dogs, says Neumann. The reason, he    says, is not so much that dogs wouldnt be able to follow a    narrative show. On the contrary: Hes worried they would get    hooked. Were not creating a TV channel for dogs so they sit    there for eight hours a day. Dog TVs goal, he says, is simply    to create a good environment for the dogs.  
    In a video on Dog TVs website, Nick Dodman, a Tufts University    veterinarian who acts as an adviser to the channel, says, One    thing that people shouldnt expect is for their dog to sit, as    we do, in front of the TV and stare at the screen for hours and    hours. Its more of a backdrop. If dogs are not expected to    react to the screen, and owners arent around to see how the    dogs behave in their absence, how can subscribers be sure    theyre not just paying $4.99 a month for glorifiedand    discoloredYouTube videos? A hundred percent of the time,    [owners] get research-based content in which both music and    video are completely appropriate for their dog, says Neumann.    Theres nothing to irritate, stress, or scare your dog.  
    The channels creators are planning to attract advertising, but    arent yet sure how to integrate it into the programming. The    advertising is mostly going to be on our digital [platforms],    because we know its difficult to advertise on the channel for    the dogs because its not really effective.  
    If Dog TV is a success domestically, Jasmine Group hopes to    expand internationally. Its an advantage of the channel that    we can move the content to any country because the language is    not significant, says Yossi Uzrad, president of Jasmine Group    and a producer of films such as The Bands Visit,    Israels official entry to the 2008 Oscars. Because Jasmine    owns all the rights to the content, Uzrad foresees other growth    opportunities. People can buy Dog TV music and put it in the    car while theyre driving, for example, he says.  
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