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Timeshift Channel

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Also known as a "Plus One" channel or the "Catch up broadcast", this is a supplementary TV channel in which the programmes shown on that channel are repeated an hour later on a different channel. Essentially a delayed feed with a slightly different network logo. Sometimes called "catch up" channels by viewers, so-called because they give viewers a second chance to catch a program that might have clashed with something else they were watching. For example, You could watch Merlin (2008) first on BBC One, then switch over to Dave ja vu to watch the now hour-displaced Taskmaster.
There are numerous examples on British satellite, Freeview, and cable TV, including +1 versions of terrestrial networks such as Channel 4 and ITV, though the BBC, rather strangely, doesn't use them note The BBC originally announced plans for a Plus One channel in 2013, but this was eventually rejected by the BBC Trust. Apparently it was considered that it would be "unfair to their commercial rivals".
For legal reasons too numerous and too complex to list here, occasionally, if the immediate repeat rights are unavailable for the +1 channel (which applies mostly to films, and even this is extremely rare nowadays), or if the programme on +1 is region-specific (such as news or local weather), the channel may show a "we'll be right back" screen during the programme that would otherwise air. +1 channels can also be slightly confusing when carrying "live" news or sports. Some channels avoid this by intentionally removing the news from their +1 channels.
Needless to say, catching the last two minutes of something you would have been interested in seeing is doubly annoying when it's on Plus One, meaning you've managed to miss it twice within an hour...
With the rise of online catch-up services that started to surface in 2007, such as BBC iPlayer, All 4, and HBO Go to name a few, missing a programme at all has become somewhat irrelevant. We are creatures of habit, however, and the +1 channels still fit a niche of viewers that like to watch a show as close to the live broadcast as possible without moving from their sofa.
Network Decay can occasionally cause this in a formerly-independent channel. This can occasionally be subverted by the network running a spare timeshift channel temporarily in order to retain hold of an EPG position prior to a new channel launching- X League / Pulse did this with three(!) other channels, and Living had a +2 for a while (which replaced Trouble) before it became Living Loves.
If you're wondering why there are so many British references on this page, it's because the +1 channel came from the United Kingdom prior to the likes of iPlayer existing, as +1 channels were used as an incentive to get people to ditch traditional terrestrial television until the digital switch-over. Of course, it's not limited to the UK, but it has the most prominent examples.
Related is cable networks in the United States that make both their East Coast and West Coast feeds available to everyone, or more rarely, re-air a truncated network block of what the network figures are the most watched and anticipated shows, sometimes and even more rarely out of order, usually after the West Coast feed or late night (thus sometimes giving three opportunities to view programming). On cable providers having a +3 or -3 feed has become less popular as they would rather carry more high definition programming than a feed featuring duplicate programming in the age of DVR's and on demand, which a second network feed would limit.
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