Man, that's a load of stuff to run off one conditioner.
What are your goals?
If it's sound quality, run it straight from your new dedicated lines. Dedicated lines are IMO one of the best things you could ever do for your audio system! I prefer to run 3 dedicated lines, all with a 4-outlet box on each. Ideally you'd run analog hifi equipment on one line, my digital hifi equipment on the other (you want to separate the two if possible), and home theatre stuff/TV off the other.
I do exactly that, although I have the HT gear plugged into a regular outlet (the hifi is on separate lines) as I'm not a big HT/videophile but I do take hifi seriously.
Power conditioners seem to constrain dynamics and compress the sound, as well as adding grunge IMO. In all honesty, I have only tried one power "conditioner" I ever thought didn't detract from the sound of my rig--and that was a PS Audio Powerplant. Damn expensive, tho, and I don't think they even make one that would power your whole getup (especially the TV).
My local boutique shop is pushing Shunyata now--they like it better than PS Audio (not as active of a filter, I had a PS Audio blow up my CDP once when it went whacky!) and the other non-active devices they sold (Monster, Audio Power).
I have also heard good things about Richard Gray's Power Company devices.
Good luck... I should add that in the end I decided to run WITHOUT any filtering of any sort. The two dedicated lines made a massive improvement, and the fact I don't have HT gear plugged into the audio circuits anymore took me to the same level I got from a big honkin' PS Audio.
One extra hint that I found--disconnect your cable line or build a balun device. There's all sorts of garbage that infiltrates your power through the cable TV ground.