Roseview

Roseview is a Urcean commercial broadcast television network that is the flagship property of Roseview Productions Company.

Roseview was established as an independent by actor and singer Michael Geigh in July of 1959. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the studio produced many popular and successful television programs, leading to name-brand recognition and significant financial success for the studio. Following years of preparation, Geigh used the Roseview name and programming to launch a new network competitor, then only the sixth major network, on 1 July 1977. Employing original programming, a television news program associated with the prestiguous Levantine Times Union, and an aggressive early rerun scheme for newer movies, Roseview successfully established itself as a major network. Upon Geigh's passage in 1981, the company passed to his family, which still operates Roseview Productions Company to today.

Programming
From the debut of Roseview in 1977 through 31 December 1996, Roseview's nightly news program was Levantia Tonight, aired through an agreement with the Levantia Times Union Corporation. At the end of the agreement, the Levantia Tonight studio - completely owned and operated by the LTUC - was spun off to establish a new cable news station called Levantine Times Network.

Roseview Red
Roseview Red, marketed and stylised as RED is a Urcean subscription video on-demand over-the-top owned by Roseview Productions Company.

The debut of the Final Great War series on RED was an important point in the history of the app, gaining tens of millions of subscribers over the course of the show's run.

In 2031, it was the third most popular streaming service in Urcea by subscribers.

RosaryView
RosaryView is a Urcean website and podcast focused on Catholic. RosaryView is comparable to most other in-house apologetics outlets maintained by major Urcean media companies; it has a large depository of question-and-answer style articles on its website, invites viewer participation, and it covers listener questions on its podcast while interviewing major figures within the Catholic Church. RosaryView has had a corresponding television program on Roseview for various parts of its existence, including an after-midnight program that ran from 1991-2008 and an afternoon version of the program which aired between 2014-2020.