Pillocks.
Eh? Why? "Ooh, lets spell it wrong and look really, like, cool..."
Eh? Why? "Ooh, lets spell it wrong and look really, like, cool..."Pillocks.
Yes, phonetically it's right, but that's not how we spell.
In an apparent effort to come up with a hipper image, the Sci Fi channel is changing its name to SyFy, TVWeek reported Sunday, saying that an official announcement of the name change will be made today (Monday). It quoted Dave Howe, president of the network, as saying: "It gives us a unique word and it gives us the opportunities to imbue it with the values and the perception that we want it to have." He told the trade publication that feedback from 18-34-year-olds in focus groups indicated that "SyFy" was the way many would refer to the network in text messages. "It made us feel much cooler, much more cutting-edge, much more hip, which was kind of bang-on what we wanted to achieve communication-wise," he said.
An interesting sidebar to this is that up until a few weeks ago there was a long-running site called SyFy Portal, which suddenly changed it's name to Airlock Alpha. Michael Hinman, who created SyFy World in 1998, responded to a topic in the Airlock forums today when the naming issue came up.raindog: I hope you at least got a little money out of NBCU in exchange for your longstanding trade name.Michael Hinman: A little So what do all of you think? Does the name of the channel matter, or will SyFy still mean science fiction and sometimes horror when you think of it? Share your thoughts below.
Actually, yes it looks ridiculous. Yes, I hate it.... but ...It makes business sense. You usually want to trademark your company name to lock it down to yourself. They probably tried to trademark Sci-fi and got turned down because it's too common, and they came up with SyFy as a trademarkable name, that still sounds and pronounces the same as their previous name. And also, in the same movement, they may attract the "hipster" younger generation because they have a "cool" name.Not that I agree, but I can understand the suits' reasoning.