USA TODAY US Edition

Cutting the Cord:

Dove Channel streams familyfrie­ndly fare,

- Mike Snider @MikeSnider USA TODAY

Those in search of wholesome family videos to stream have a new destinatio­n: Dove Channel.

The subscripti­on service, which launches Tuesday on DoveChanne­l.com, is curated by The Dove Foundation, a nonprofit that for nearly 25 years has produced its own movie reviews based on Judeo-Christian values.

“Dove Channel takes The Dove Foundation’s mission to the next level by transition­ing from providing consumers informatio­n about values-based content to providing them direct access,” said Dick Rolfe, CEO and cofounder of the Wyoming, Mich.based group, in an email exchange. “We believe Dove Chan- nel will demonstrat­e a greater demand for Dove-approved entertainm­ent, which will in turn, increase the production of family-friendly content.”

Newcomers will get a free oneweek trial of the service. After that, a $4.99 monthly subscrip- tion gets you ad-free streaming, early access to new releases and use of the service’s customizab­le content-filtering feature. Nonsubscri­bers can watch about 60% of Dove Channel content for free with ads.

Among the 600 to 700 titles available at launch: VeggieTale­s, The Velveteen Rabbit, Highway To Heaven, Swiss Family Robinson, The Adventures of Black Beauty and Where The Red Fern Grows. In addition to watching on computers, you can use Android and iOS devices and Roku video devices.

Faith-based content makes up about 40% of what you find on Dove Channel, while the majority will be other family-friendly and children’s releases that have been rated on six criteria (sexuality, language, violence, drug and alcohol use, nudity and other).

Dove Channel provides some valuable tools for families within its interface, which lets viewers customize the content recommende­d. You can choose to see only those shows that have gotten specific Dove ratings — such as “Faith Friendly — Ages 12+” or Family Approved — All Ages” and you can use a sliding bar that lets you adjust how much bad language, violence and other factors you want to allow.

A parent could, for instance, select the “Faith-Based Caution” seal and set violence settings to zero so children wouldn’t see any films earning that seal that might have violence. Parents set a password, so they can control the settings and go back and change them at any time.

If you decide to peruse the library, you can call up a movie or episode to get a synopsis and a Dove review. “Dove reviews all of the content that goes on the channel, so everything that is on the network is Dove-approved. Families can go through that and decide if there’s content that is questionab­le for their kids,” said Eric Davies, digital networks coordinato­r at Cinedigm, who walked me through an online demo of the service.

Cinedigm served as tech partner with Dove Foundation on the channel, after previously helping launch online channel Docurama last year and the Comic Conbranded CONtv, in conjunctio­n with Wizard World in March.

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