Etc...TV is a private owned cableTV channel of Chile that launched in 1996 and is owned by Telefilms Ltda. Starting with a low budget, the channel was originally focused as a "miscellaneous" channel (the name of the channel, ETC, is based on Etcetera, as "a lot of things" or "other things") on children's programming and some North American Sitcoms in their first year, however, when the channel aired Sailor Moon and Saint Seiya in the middle of 1997, the station experiment a considerable increase of rating and they realized that Japanese Anime were a profitable genre. After the success of the first seasons of Sailor Moon and Saint Seiya, the channel began to obtain new Anime series and starts to be a fully oriented Anime channel and the only cable channel on the country that shows Anime with the local channel Chilevisión until the arrive of Animax. Etc...TV is considered, along Chilevisión, as one of the precursors of Anime in Chile after a long time of absence of programs of the genre in the country since the 80s, like the UCV TV program Pipiripao. Their actual slogan is "Todo pasa por Etc..." (All Happens on Etc...)
Marmalade Boy (knows in Latin America as "La Familia Crece" but in the channel was announced by the original name, however and despite the name, the series were dubbed in Chile itself and get the same name as the Spanish edition)
The following programs are exclusive to the stations. They are mostly oriented towards child and teenage viewers.
Troncal etc...
Sin Uniforme
Pega2 (2006)
Cazador de Sueños (2006)
En Escena (2006)
CDN Cosa de Niños (2006)
Cuenta Regresiva
Criticism
Although Etc...TV is one of the few channels in Chile for Anime series, the channel has suffered a considerable amount of criticism for technical issues, such as low sound and video quality. Said issues became more notorious after Etc...TV was moved from their VTR signal to channel 13, who is shared in signal with the local channel Universidad Católica de Chile Televisión causing a lot of interference between both channels.
In its first years, Etc...TV also took lots of criticism for its policy of censorship. This was very obvious during the early runs of Meitantei Conan, where the more bloody case scenes were heavily cut, to the point that some episodes were very hard to follow for the viewers.