
Another Toldja! moment for Nikki – BBC Worldwide just announced officially Herb Scannell’s appointment as president of BBC Worldwide America.
PREVIOUS: Scannell To Top BBC Worldwide America?
Wednesday, June 2 2010, New York – BBC Worldwide today appointed Herb Scannell as President, BBC Worldwide America, responsible for the company’s U.S. operations. His appointment is effective immediately. Formerly President of Nickelodeon Networks and Vice Chairman of MTV Networks, Scannell was most recently CEO of Next New Networks, a digital media company he co-founded in 2006.
In his new role Scannell is responsible for growing the BBC brand and the business across all divisions in the U.S., the BBC’s largest market outside the UK. He will sit on BBC Worldwide’s Executive Board. His responsibilities in the U.S. include flagship cable channel BBC AMERICA and BBC AMERICA HD, BBC Worldwide Productions, BBC.com, Sales and Distribution including Digital Syndication and Motion Gallery, Home Entertainment including Audiobooks, and Licensed Consumer Products. He will also oversee the exploitation of BBC Worldwide’s Global Brands in America.
BBC AMERICA, now in 67 million homes, recently recorded its highest ever ratings for the sci-fi series Doctor Who, and its highest ever profit for the financial year 2009/10. BBC Worldwide Productions produces ratings juggernaut Dancing With The Stars which just concluded its tenth season on ABC. The Home Entertainment division yesterday released Life – the follow-up to Planet Earth.
John Smith, CEO BBC Worldwide said: “Herb has a tremendous track record of success in developing and extending innovative brands across multiple platforms, which is precisely the experience needed to help build the next phase for BBC Worldwide in the U.S..”
Herb Scannell added: “I’ve been associated with innovative brands and businesses throughout my career, and there’s none more innovative in television than the BBC.”
Scannell spent much of his career at Viacom. As Vice Chairman of MTV Networks and President of Nickelodeon Networks he oversaw all creative and business operations for a portfolio of brands including Nickelodeon, TV Land and Spike TV. In addition he was responsible for a suite of digital networks including pre-school channel Noggin, as well as online offerings, a feature film division and Viacom’s Consumer Products division. Scannell began his career at MTV Networks as Director of Programming, Nickelodeon in 1988. In this role he was instrumental in turning Nickelodeon into a production powerhouse with the birth of Nicktoons (Rugrats, Ren & Stimpy, Doug) and live action shows such as Clarissa Explains It All and The Secret World of Alex Mack. After becoming President of Nickelodeon in 1996, he successfully expanded Nickelodeon’s brand into feature films, consumer products, magazines, online, live theatrical shows and built the first new animation studio in Los Angeles in 40 years, creating hits including Spongebob Squarepants, Hey Arnold and Fairly Odd Parents. Other hits included pre-school favorites Blue’s Clues and Dora the Explorer. Scannell went on to position Nick as the kids online and digital media leader with the 2005 acquisition of Neopets. Prior to joining Nickelodeon and MTV Networks, he held various marketing and promotional positions in pay TV at The Movie Channel and Showtime. In 2006, he left Viacom to launch Next New Networks, a company set up to produce and distribute micro-television networks targeting niche communities on the internet. Scannell served as CEO until late 2008 and was most recently Chairman of the Board.
Scannell replaces Garth Ancier who left the role of President, BBC Worldwide America on March 31 2010. Ancier continues as a BBC Worldwide America Non-executive Board member.
TV Editor Nellie Andreeva - tip her here.
Wednesday, June 2 2010, New York – BBC Worldwide today appointed Herb Scannell as President, BBC Worldwide America, responsible for the company’s U.S. operations. His appointment is effective immediately. Formerly President of Nickelodeon Networks and Vice Chairman of MTV Networks, Scannell was most recently CEO of Next New Networks, a digital media company he co-founded in 2006.
In his new role Scannell is responsible for growing the BBC brand and the business across all divisions in the U.S., the BBC’s largest market outside the UK. He will sit on BBC Worldwide’s Executive Board. His responsibilities in the U.S. include flagship cable channel BBC AMERICA and BBC AMERICA HD, BBC Worldwide Productions, BBC.com, Sales and Distribution including Digital Syndication and Motion Gallery, Home Entertainment including Audiobooks, and Licensed Consumer Products. He will also oversee the exploitation of BBC Worldwide’s Global Brands in America.





Well, here’s hoping he can bring the same innovative brands and business to BBC America that he claims for the BBC. I’d be embarassed to think of a station that programs reruns of old Star Trek: Next Generation, and endless reality repeats, as any sort of “flagship” channel.
This is great news – Herb is an excellent and motivating boss!
I hope this will be good news for the viewers of BBCA. As of now the channel consists of reruns of shows that have been on channel for 4 years or more. And cockeyed times for their excellent newsprogramming. I hope he returns to programming the best of the bbc, give us quailty programms that is shown around the world and you will have content viewers. Good luck
Herb, repeat after me: Day and Date. Every US geek who knows how to do it downloads “Who” an hour after it’s on in the UK. They’re up anyway; just show the damn thing. The punters can DVR it, or just re-run it endlessly as you do anyway.
And noted about “Trek” – there’s like a million hours of great BBC stuff that we never get over here. Just throw any old thing on and it’s gonna be better than “Trek.” BTDT!!!!
Herb is an outstanding guy.
FYI: Spoke with an executive for the BBC in London— where I had lived and worked for several years— to complain about the lunatic notion that BBC America should be foisting re-re-re-re-re-re–reruns of Star Trek dreck on viewers who can easily view this American TV show on any of numerous cable channels, and the generally insulting, inane programming for us in the states who pay for their channel.
Instead of an apology and an admission that the Star Trek debacle was a mistake, received a heated defense of this “great work of science fiction which fits with our programming goals of bringing more such entertainment.”. It sadly sounds to me that BBC execs seek to basically create a sci-fi type brand along with endless years old shows like Gordon Ramsey. Very disappointing considering the BBC vault and the classic shows they could be importing for our ENTERTAINMENT rather than the easy, cheap way out.
FIRST the BBC hires GARTH ANCIER to program BBC America.( I know stunningly stupid, but so what else is new? )
NEXT, the BBC hires ANOTHER AMERICAN, ANOTHER NON BRIT Scannell to program the BBC in America. Sense the trend AND the programming. More dumbed down crap instead of true BBC programming. Another example of a specific broadcasting niche, a specific cable network being homogenized out of existence until it looks like all the other non entities programmed out of individuality!!! REMEMBER BRAVO; REMEMBER A&E! Another non Brit working for the BBC who has NO sense of BBC product, but instead will billboard primetime every night with the inanity of Star Trek reruns. Why not reruns of the Leno show?? Why bother to call it BBC America, more importantly, why bother to pay for shit that we can see on almost every other channel!!!
Herb is a brain-dead professional empty suit with no vision of any sort. The man who greenlit 100 episodes of “Cat-Dog” on the same day he greenlight only 6 episodes of “SpongeBob SquarePants” because the latter was “too weird.” I worked at Nickelodeon for two years before he took over and watched in dismay as he dumbed down the entire network, forcing everything to bend to his moronic worldview that children must be protected from anything scary or controversial. Like his decision that no character on any show could appear in drag, because it was “confusing for children.” Really? When I was a kid, Bugs Bunny dressed up like a sexy lady a lot, but most everyone I know turned out okay. Just a hump, this guy. Goodbye, BBC America, it was great while it lasted… THIS is the guy who invented SPIKE TV, after all, folks. Really high quality work.
this does sound like more bad news for the American viewer who would like to see great British dramas, comedies and classics, which was what BBC America used to be about. Now it is obvious it is all about how can we make the most money, what crap will appeal to the biggest consumer demographic. I agree with the other poster….apparently sci-fi sells. Wasn’t the whole idea of cable tv and the thousand channels offered that there would be choice..and small channels that cater to specific interests, instead of it all being profit driven. Why of all the offerings in the US is there not one that will offer quality British TV…..I guess it’s back to PBS for the occasional offering, such a shame.