Disney Channel (European, Middle Eastern, and African TV channel)

Disney Channel is a European-managed pay television kids channel originally owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company Limited. It is available through the Middle East (except Iran, Israel, Syria, and Turkey), North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Greece, Cyprus, Scandinavia, the Baltics, and most of the Balkans[1] (excluding Albania, Bulgaria, Romania and Moldova).

Disney Channel (EMEA)
CountryUnited Kingdom
Broadcast area
  • Africa
  • Balkans
  • Baltics
  • Scandinavia
  • Cyprus
  • Middle East
  • Faroe Islands
  • Iceland
Headquarters3 Queen Caroline Street, Hammersmith, London W6 9PE
Programming
Language(s)
  • English
  • Arabic (dubbing/subtitles)
  • Greek (dubbing/subtitles)
  • Danish (dubbing/subtitles)
  • Norwegian (dubbing/subtitles)
  • Swedish (dubbing/subtitles)
  • Finnish (dubbing/subtitles)
  • Albanian (subtitles)
  • Serbian (subtitles)
  • Croatian (subtitles)
  • Slovene (subtitles)
Picture format
    • HDTV 1080i
    • SDTV 576i
Ownership
Owner
Sister channels
History
Launched
    • 2 April 1997 (1997-04-02) (MENA Feed)
    • 25 September 2006 (2006-09-25) (Africa)
    • 8 November 2009 (2009-11-08) (Greece and Cyprus)
    • 2009-2012 (distribution in the Balkans)
    • 28 February 2023 (2023-02-28) (distribution in the Baltics)
    • 5 June 2023 (2023-06-05) (distribution in the Nordics)
Links
Website

It was originally launched on 2 April 1997 as a channel in the Middle East & North Africa; exclusively for Orbit TV subscribers (now OSN).[2][3] And in 2006, it began expanding to markets in Sub-Saharan Africa[4] and the Balkans. The channel previously used to cover Poland[5] and Turkey,[6] with respective audio tracks for the two markets, until 2010[7] and 2012[8] respectively when two fully-localized feeds were launched for the two countries. In Albania, the EMEA feed was previously available from 2012 to 2018, with Albanian subtitles available for programs.[9]

Many Disney Channel programs are currently available on Disney+, which was launched in South Africa on 18 May 2022,[10] the Arab countries on 8 June 2022;[11] and Eastern Europe on 14 June 2022,[12][13] concluding Europe's launch.

History

The Disney Channel began broadcasting on 2 April 1997 on satellite provider Orbit in the Middle East & North Africa region.[2][3][14] At first, the channel was only available in English, but on 1 April 1998, a separate Arabic sub-feed was added. Animated films and series were dubbed in Arabic,[15] while live-action films and series were subtitled. Disney Channel Middle East was then picked up by satellite provider Showtime in fall 2001. The channel featured the logos (resembling Mickey Mouse head) in two versions (the one with the channel's name written in English and the other in Arabic for each feed), until June 2003 when it adopted the 2002 US Disney Channel logo.

Somewhere at that time, both the Arabic and English feeds of the channel were merged. In consequence, on 3 January 2005 Disney Channel Middle East started to simulcast Disney Channel Scandinavia, including its schedule and the prints of the series and movies for this feed (which were modified to also include Arabic dubbing credits). Then somewhere between November and December 2005, Disney Channel Scandinavia and Middle East started to add dubbing credits to its programming through subtitles.

Disney Channel Scandinavia and Middle East started gradually becoming individual feeds in 2006, starting with a different rotation of films (that gradually got more different), though this did not stop Arab satellite provider Orbit from adding a Swedish audio track to the Middle Eastern feed on 16 April 2007 (which was subsequently removed years later).

The Middle Eastern feed became a pan-regional network, as the channel was launched in Sub-Saharan Africa on 25 September 2006,[16][4][17] Poland on 2 December 2006,[5][4] Turkey on 29 April 2007;[6][18] and Greece along with Cyprus on 8 November 2009.

In September 2009, when the feed separation from Disney Channel Scandinavia was complete, the Middle East feed (now broadcasting in most of the EMEA region) started to share promotions and events with the CEE feed.

On 1 August 2010, the EMEA feed in Poland was separated and replaced with a fully localized Polish feed.

On 12 January 2012, Disney Channel EMEA in Turkey was replaced by an independent Turkish feed,[8] and became a free-to-air network.[19]

Between 2009 and 2012, Disney Channel EMEA began broadcasting in the former Yugoslavia (Serbia, Croatia,[20] Montenegro, North Macedonia,[21] Bosnia, Slovenia) and Albania.[9]

The channel adopted a new logo and underwent a rebrand on 21 July 2014.[22] In 2015, Disney Channel EMEA switched its aspect ratio from 4:3 to 16:9.

In 2017, a high-definition feed of the channel was launched. It includes Arabic subtitles for live-action films and TV series. Also in that year, Disney Channel EMEA rebranded using the 2017 European branding package. And on August 2018, the Albanian transmission ceased.[23]

On 24 June 2022, Disney Channel EMEA, Israel, Spain and Portugal rebranded with a new graphics,[24] with the customized wordmark logo; designed by Flopicco from Rome, Italy.[25]

Availability

Middle East and North Africa

The Middle East sub-feed is the oldest sub-feed, and began broadcasting in the Middle East and North Africa on 2 April 1997.[2][3][14] The feed is currently available in both English and Arabic. The vast majority of all animated series can be watched with Arabic dubbing, but live-action programs are almost always aired in English only with Arabic subtitles instead. It also has its own website, which is offered with English and Arabic versions.

Sub-Saharan Africa

Launched on 25 September 2006 on Multichoice's DStv,[16] it later went 24 hours since 2007.[17] Broadcasting in most of Sub-Saharan Africa. This feed airs programs in English only, without foreign-language subtitles.

Greece & Cyprus

Launched in Greece and Cyprus on 8 November 2009 on NOVA. The feed is currently available in both English and Greek. Most programs, whether animated or live-action, are generally dubbed into Greek on this sub-feed, although some programs are aired with Greek subtitles instead. It also has a Greek-language website.

Other countries

Expanded between 2009 and 2012 with multiple distributors through Bosnia & Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia (including the disputed Kosovo) and Slovenia. All programs are exclusively aired with English audio, with Serbian, Croatian and Slovene subtitles. On February 28, 2023, the feed launched in the Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania), replacing the Scandinavian feed (when the signal was from Allente), later itself replaced in June 5, 2023, after when it left the advertising market.

Sister channels

Disney Junior

Disney Junior is a pan-regional and sister channel; focused on toddlers and preschoolers, aged 2–6 years old. It launched on September 1, 2010, in MENA, Sub-Saharan Africa, Greece & Cyprus as Playhouse Disney. On June 1, 2011, Disney Junior was launched, replacing Playhouse Disney.[26]

On 31 May 2016, Disney Junior was launch in a full Arabic language counterpart; exclusively on OSN.[27]

Disney XD (closed)

Disney XD was a pan-regional and sister channel; focused on older kids and teenagers (mostly boys). It was launch in the MENA, Greece, Serbia, Bosnia, Montenegro, Croatia, North Macedonia and Slovenia[28] in 2009;[29] and in Sub-Saharan Africa in May 2011.[30]

In South Africa in June 2014, Multichoice fined R5000 (around $300) after failing to provide a warning before airing an advertisement for the fantasy drama series WolfBlood, containing horror scenes on the morning of 31 December 2013.[31]

In 2018, an Arabic language counterpart launched.[32]

The channel was later closed in Sub-Saharan Africa on 1 October 2020;[33] the MENA region and in the Balkans, on 31 December 2020;[34][35] and Greece on 31 January 2021.[36]

Programming

Current programming

Note: Some programs are available on Disney+.

Former programming

Disney Channel Original Movie premieres

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

References

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