Animal Planet co-owned by BBC Worldwide, Discovery has a lot of BBC documentaries and co-productions.
Both channels air plenty of American documentaries. I doubt the BBC is making
Animal Cops: Detroit. And regardless of where they come from, they certainly are profitable or they wouldn't be on the air.
Animal Planet, Discovery and History Channel are all PayTV, the BBC is what keeps those kind of programs avabile to all.
The BBC doesn't do shit for me.

I get those channels because I pay Comcast for the privilege (and my fee in turn helps underwrite the production costs).
But once again, how does it argue that documentaries are unprofitable when people like me are motivated to pay for cable partly to access those documentaries?
^Besides, Discovery mostly show reality TV shows nowadays with the occasional documentary thrown in.
Nope. Here are the shows on Discovery that are documentaries (which they sometimes label 'reality TV' for marketing purposes - anything that's about real life, that would be happening even if the cameras weren't rolling is a documentary):
Gang Wars: Oakland
Extreme Rides
Rampage!
Heroin Nation
Raging Planet
American Loggers
Deadliest Catch
Dirty Jobs
How It's Made
Nature's Most Amazing Events
Prehistoric New York (etc - they do other cities)
Out of Egypt
So we have documentaries about tough jobs, crime, drugs, and wild weather, plus a couple genuinely educational sounding shows. Not real intellectual stuff, but it's all about the real world and not contrived situations. That's a documentary.
And haven't all three channels (History included) basically started going for more sensationalist stuff and drama rather than being straight up documentaries?
Discovery has the most "sensationlist" documentaries but that doesn't mean they aren't documentaries. History has some intelligent stuff like
The Universe and silly nonsense about religious conspiracies and the end of the world. But a documentary can still be called a documentary even if it's not a particularly good or sober one. It just needs to at least purport to be about the real world and not a game or contrived situation.
You don't have to agree with the documentarian's point of view. Plenty of people think Michael Moore is an idiot, but his stuff still counts as documentaries. A show about how weird weather proves that the End Times are upon us is a documentary if the person making it believes that they are accurately presenting reality, even if they are in fact, clinically insane.
The purpose of a government institution should be to provide things that the free market is unwilling or incapable of providing. If the free market has found a way to provide something, an additional government source of that something is superfluous at best and a wasteful use of public money at worst.
Yeah, but then the problem is: who decides what is "worthwhile"? Ballet and opera and other artsy stuff? A lot of people hate that shit. I think a well written written, intelligent space opera series would be far more useful and would serve the public good better than stuff that only a tiny percentage of the public is interested in. Just try using tax dollars for that.
