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CTV Television Network

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

CTV
Type Broadcast television network
Country Flag of Canada Canada
Availability National (available in parts of northern U.S., via cable or antenna)
Founder Spence Caldwell
Owner CTV Television Inc.
(CTVglobemedia)
Key people Ivan Fecan, CEO
Rick Brace, President
Susanne Boyce, President, CTV Programming
Robert Hurst, President, CTV News
Launch date October 1, 1961
Past names Canadian Television Network (CTN, 1961-62?)
Website www.ctv.ca

CTV is a Canadian English language television network. It is Canada's largest privately owned television network, owned by CTV Television Inc., a division of CTVglobemedia.

There has never been an official explanation of the initials, although most viewers simply take them to mean "Canadian Television". This definition was used in a promotional campaign by the network in the late 1990s.

Contents

[edit] History

See also: History of Baton Broadcasting / Bell Globemedia / CTVglobemedia

[edit] Early years

In 1958, Prime Minister John Diefenbaker's government passed a new Broadcasting Act, establishing the Board of Broadcast Governors (forerunner to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission) as the governing body of Canadian broadcasting, thus ending the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's (CBC) dual role as regulator and broadcaster. The new board's first act was to take applications for "second" television stations in Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver in response to an outcry for another programming choice. Calgary and Edmonton were served by privately owned CBC affiliates; the other six by owned-and-operated CBC stations.

The eight winners, in order of their first sign-on, were:

The first seven stations were privately owned; the Edmonton station was a CBC O&O. One of the unsuccessful applicants for the Toronto licence, Spence Caldwell, immediately tried to form a network to link the seven private "second" stations plus CFRN-TV in Edmonton, which was due to lose its CBC affiliation when CBXT signed on. The seven private stations countered by forming the Independent Television Organization (ITO). In early 1961, John Bassett, owner of CFTO, won the broadcast rights to the Canadian Football League Eastern Conference. He needed a network in order to broadcast the games. After some wrangling with Bassett and the BBG, Caldwell finally had his network. The Canadian Television Network (CTN) launched on October 1, 1961; composed of the seven ITO stations plus CFRN.

The first program that evening was Harry Rasky's promotional documentary on the new network. That was followed by a fall season preview program.[1]

CTV's initial 1961-1962 season began with the following programs, five of which were Canadian productions:[1]

  1. The Andy Griffith Show Flag of United States United States (CBS)
  2. Checkmate Flag of United States United States (CBS)
  3. Cross-Canada Barn Dance Flag of Canada Canada
  4. Maigret Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom (BBC)
  5. The Rifleman Flag of United States United States (ABC)
  6. Showdown Flag of Canada Canada
  7. Sing Along With Mitch Flag of United States United States (NBC)
  8. Take a Chance Flag of Canada Canada (a quiz show by Roy Ward Dixon adapted from radio)
  9. Top Cat Flag of United States United States (ABC, cartoon)
  10. 20 Questions Flag of Canada Canada
  11. Westcoast Flag of Canada Canada
  12. Whiplash Flag of Australia Australia (ATN-7)

At first, flagship CFTO was the only station that carried programming live. During CBC's off-hours, CTV used CBC's microwave system to send programming to the rest of the country on tape delay. Eventually, a second microwave channel opened up, enabling live programming from coast to coast.

The CBC had objected to the network's initial name, apparently claiming it had exclusive rights to the term "Canadian". The private network soon adopted an alternative, "CTV Television Network." Sources differ as to whether this occurred prior to the network launch or in fall 1962. The Globe and Mail referred to the network as CTV upon its 1961 debut.[1]

The Caldwell-led management team immediately ran into financial trouble, and relations between the network and its stations were not smooth at first since CTV had essentially been the product of a forced marriage. For example, most of the rights to American programming rested with the ITO, not CTV. In many cases, CTV found itself competing with its own stations for the rights to programming.

[edit] Becoming a broadcasting powerhouse

Caldwell's departure in 1965 did little to alleviate the situation, and CTV soon found itself of the verge of bankruptcy. In 1966 the network's affiliates (which by this time included CJON-TV in St. John's, CKCO-TV in Kitchener and CHAB/CHRE in Moose Jaw/Regina) sought permission to buy the network and run it as a cooperative. The board readily approved the proposal, and by the start of the 1966-67 season, the stations owned their network.

By the mid-1970s, CTV had expanded its footprint across Canada, mostly by twinstick arrangements in smaller cities and with CBC affiliates switching to CTV once the CBC opened its own stations. In a unique twist, the original Saskatchewan affiliate, CHAB/CHRE, was bought by the CBC in 1968 (and eventually recalled CBKT), allowing Regina's original station, CKCK-TV, to join CTV. In 1994, the CTV cooperative became a corporation.

CTV made a name for itself in news coverage when it convinced star CBC news anchor Lloyd Robertson to switch networks in 1976. Robertson has been the network's main anchorman ever since. The network also has the country's longest-running national morning news show, Canada AM. Its weekly newsmagazine series, W-FIVE has been a fixture on the network since 1966, predating the similar American program 60 Minutes by two years.

[edit] Baton takes over

In the mid-1980s, Baton Broadcasting, owners of flagship CFTO in Toronto, began a drive to take over CTV by buying as many affiliates as possible. It had already bought CFQC-TV in Saskatoon in 1971. Baton purchased the following stations between 1986 and 1990:

One caveat, however, was the "one owner, one vote" provision of the cooperative's bylaws. Any acquisition of one station by an existing station owner triggered an automatic redistribution of the acquired station's shares among the other owners. As a result, even though it owned 11 of CTV's 24 affiliates, Baton only had one vote out of eight. Nor were there any retroactive changes when CTV was restructured in 1994 (although Newfoundland Broadcasting, owner of CJON, decided to effectively relinquish its vote, reducing the number of votes to seven).

In 1996, Baton acquired CFCN from Rogers Communications. Significantly, Baton also acquired Rogers' CTV vote. It also started a joint venture with Electrohome, owner of CFRN and CKCO. Electrohome allowed Baton to control its vote. The following year, Baton acquired both Electrohome's share of the joint venture and CHUM Limited's CTV-affiliated system in the Maritimes, ATV. This gave Baton controlling interest in the network, triggering a put option allowing the remaining affiliates to sell their CTV shares without selling their stations, which they did. Baton was now full owner of the CTV network and immediately began plastering the CTV brand across its stations, even on non-network programming, and dropped its secondary Baton Broadcast System (BBS) brand. The company changed its name to CTV Inc. in 1998, and eventually acquired two of the final three large-market stations, CKY and CFCF. (It replaced the third, CHAN, as discussed below.)

[edit] Recent history

In 2000, typical of the media convergence trend at the time, BCE Inc. acquired CTV, NetStar Communications and The Globe and Mail newspaper, combining them into a media division known as Bell Globemedia. Bell Globemedia also owns a minority share in the French-language network TQS, which broadcasts in Quebec.

CTV has legally been a "television service" in the eyes of the CRTC since 2000, when it allowed its network licence to expire. CBC, Radio-Canada, TVA and Aboriginal Peoples Television Network are the only official television networks in Canada.

CTV lost significant coverage in Vancouver and St. John's at the beginning of the 21st century. In 2000, CanWest Global bought the television stations of Western International Communications, which owned charter CTV affiliate CHAN in Vancouver and CHEK-TV in Victoria. A year later, after its CTV contract ran out, CanWest made CHAN the Global affiliate for all of British Columbia, taking advantage of CHAN's massive network of repeaters that cover 97% of the province. CTV shifted its programming to CIVT-TV, an independent station it already owned. Unlike CHAN, CIVT has only one transmitter covering the metropolitan areas of Vancouver and Victoria and has to rely on cable coverage to reach the rest of the province.

Meanwhile, in 2002, CJON in St. John's dropped its CTV affiliation after CTV attempted to alter its affiliation agreement in a way that Newfoundland Broadcasting found unfair. For 38 years, CJON had aired the base CTV schedule essentially for free since CTV paid it for the airtime. CJON then bought additional CTV programming and sold all advertising. However, CTV tried to make CJON pay for the base schedule as well, with no possibility of airtime payments. It also increased the fees for additional CTV programming beyond what CJON claimed it could pay. Newfoundland Broadcasting also didn't want to continue to carry CTV's national advertising during these programs. At the start of the 2002-03 season, CJON dropped nearly all CTV programming except for CTV's national newscasts; in exchange it provides news coverage of Newfoundland and Labrador events to CTV. In recent years, all of CTV's non-news programming has disappeared from the station.

CTV has attracted some controversy in the past because of cutbacks to its small-market stations. The four Maritime stations, known collectively as CTV Atlantic (then known as ATV), and the four Northern Ontario stations, known collectively as CTV Northern Ontario (then known as MCTV), each had their local news production cut back to one centrally-produced single newscast for each region, with only brief inserts for news of strictly local interest. This was a controversial move in all of the affected communities, especially in Northern Ontario where MCTV's newscasts were the only locally-oriented news programs in those markets. In the late 1990s, cuts were made to the news staff and productions at CTV's two small-market Saskatchewan stations, CICC-TV in Yorkton and CIPA-TV in Prince Albert. Today, the stations now simulcast supper-hour and late-night news from CKCK and CFQC respectively, placing local inserts into the newscasts.

In September, 2005, CTV announced an alliance with MTV Networks which saw the relaunch of MTV Canada.

In July 2006, CTV parent Bell Globemedia announced plans to acquire CHUM Limited, itself a former partner in CTV (via ATV), and presently one of Canada's largest broadcasters. While Bell Globemedia/CTV will likely be able to keep all of CHUM's radio stations, a number of CHUM-owned television stations will have to be sold off in order for the CRTC to approve the acquisition.

Bell Globemedia changed its name to CTVglobemedia effective January 1, 2007.

[edit] Programming

The network's programming consists mainly of hit American series (such as ER, Ghost Whisperer, Law & Order, Grey's Anatomy, CSI and Lost), but they have also had success with Canadian-made shows such as Due South, Power Play, Degrassi: The Next Generation, Corner Gas, Instant Star, The Eleventh Hour and Canadian Idol. CTV also regularly produces and airs Canadian-made television movies, often based on stories from Canadian news or Canadian history, under the banner CTV Signature Series.

News programming consists of the early, evening and nightly CTV News, and morning Canada AM, their national news programs, W-Five, their investigative news program, and Question Period, which interviews politicians and recaps political events during the week.

As well, in recent years, CTV has purchased Canadian broadcast rights to a number of American cable series, such as The Sopranos, Nip/Tuck, Punk'd, The Daily Show and The Osbournes. In many cases, CTV has been one of the few conventional broadcast networks in the world to air these series in prime time, which has attracted some controversy from Canadian media watchdogs and parents groups who object to the profanity, violence and sexual content of Nip/Tuck, The Sopranos and The Osbournes (which, unlike originating broadcaster MTV, CTV aired uncensored). It is also the first broadcast network to broadcast MTV programming live[citation needed], starting with the MTV's New Year of Music special during New Year's 2005/2006.

In late 2003, CTV started broadcasting select American programmes in 16:9 (widescreen) HDTV. It later began airing Canadian programmes in this format, such as Degrassi. Currently only CFTO and CIVT have dedicated HDTV feeds (sometimes marketed as CTV HD East and West respectively), but both are available nationally via cable and satellite, and do not differ otherwise from their analog counterparts.

In early 2005, CTV was part of the consortium that won the Canadian broadcast rights to the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics, as well as the 2012 Summer Olympics. This was considered a serious coup, as the rival CBC had consistently won Olympic broadcast rights from the 1996 Summer Olympics through to the 2008 Summer Olympics. CTV and TQS will be the primary broadcasters; TSN, RDS and Rogers Sportsnet will provide supplementary coverage. The broadcast headquarters for CTV's coverage of the 2010 Winter Olympics is likely to be CTV Vancouver Bureau, with CTV alone promising 22 hours per day during the 2010 Olympics. It is currently uncertain what CTV will do with its American programming during Olympic periods.

In June 2006, CTV and sister network TSN outbid the CBC for coverage of Canadian Curling Association events, although CTV is only expected to carry some championship-round action with TSN broadcasting most of the action.

There is much speculation that CTV may also make aggressive bids to win both the broadcast-television package for the Canadian Football League, including the Grey Cup (CBC's contract ends after the 2007 season). There was also similar speculation for the NHL Hockey Night in Canada package, with CBC's contract ending after the 2007-2008 season; however, the NHL is in the process of granting the CBC a new 5-year deal (though TSN would get more Canadian games and a playoff round).

On July 2, 2005, CTV broadcast 20 hours of the Live 8 concerts, which was watched by over 10.5 million people - nearly one-third the country's population - at some point during the day; the average audience, however, was much lower. According to at least one source, it was the most-watched program by this standard in Canadian history.

CTV also boasts itself to be "Canada's #1 Network", a claim that is bolstered by the strong performances in its programming and newscast in ratings; however this claim could be disputed since the Canadian broadcast rights to Canada's consistent #1 program in ratings, the Survivor series, belongs to Global. This claim was reinforced in 2004 when a press release by CTV claims that the second season finale of Canadian Idol outdrew the premiere of Survivor: Vanuatu despite the fact that the finale was two hours long, and Survivor was only one hour in length, overlapping only in the second half of the finale.

On September 21, 2006, CTV achieved notoriety for airing the second episode of the third season of Grey's Anatomy one week early, in place of the season premiere. The season premiere was aired in its entirety on September 28.

[edit] CTV stations

[edit] CTV-owned

As of mid-October 2005, all CTV-owned and operated stations have adopted a single on-air brand of CTV, rather than use their official callsigns or channel numbers on-air (although some stations, most notably CIVT, promote their cable channel number). When further differentiation is needed, for example, regional programming, the city or region they serve (eg. CTV Ottawa, CTV British Columbia) may be used as well. Under CRTC regulations, however, the callsign is still the station's legal name. This change is very similar to the British ITV's adoption of a single on-air network brand of ITV1 (region name).

[edit] Regional affiliates

[edit] Special cases

[edit] Alternate names

Although this is no longer the case, for many years some CTV stations were better known by colloquial names than by their official call letters (a situation that generally did not apply to Canadian Broadcasting Corporation stations). For example, CFQC Saskatoon was known as "QC8", CKCK Regina as CKTV, and former CTV affiliate CHAN in Vancouver was called BCTV. Today, most CTV affiliates are simply referred to as CTV.

[edit] Slogans and branding

  • 1966: "The Colour Network"
  • 1967-1974: "It's Happening on CTV"
  • 1974-1987: "For Those Who Want It All"
  • 1987: "CTV Entertains You"
  • 1988: "The Choice of Canadians"
  • 1990-1997: "Tuned In To You"
  • 1997-2003: "Canadian Television"
  • 2003-2005: "Canada's Watching"
  • 2005-present: "Canada's #1 Network"

The network's original logo was an oval-shaped letter "C", the inside shaped like a television tube. Contained within the C were the initials "CTV". In 1966, colour programming was ushered in with a new logo, depicting a red circle containing the initial "C", a blue square with "T", and a green inverted triangle with "V". This logo has been used, albeit with minor variations, ever since.

In the years of 1998-2001, CTV used the three colours of the logo to represent its different divisions. Red represented entertainment, blue represented news, and green represented sports. After CTV's purchase of TSN, "CTV Sports" was discontinued as a distinct brand and sports programs on CTV began to use TSN's red-coloured branding. TSN's shade of red is slightly darker than CTV's red. Blue remains the news division's primary colour.

[edit] Trivia

In 1979, after noticing the success of affiliate CJOH's local program You Can't Do That on Television, CTV produced a network version of the program titled Whatever Turns You On. The format and sets of the show were mostly unchanged from the local version, though some cast changes were done, including the addition of Ruth Buzzi, formerly of NBC's Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In. This version of the show lasted only one season, though the parent version would later gain worldwide fame on American network Nickelodeon.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Braithwaite, Dennis. "Filmed Accolades Put Private TV Network on the Air", Globe and Mail, 2 October 1961, p. 4.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Broadcast television networks and systems in Canada

English networks/systems: CBC | CTV | Global | CH | Citytv | A-Channel

French networks: Radio-Canada | TQS | TVA

Multi-language networks/systems: OMNI | APTN

Provincial educational networks: TVO · TFO · ACCESS · SCN · Knowledge Network · Télé-Québec

Regional sub-systems: NTV/GWTV | CTV Northern Ont. | CTV Atlantic
See Also: Local Canadian TV Stations | Local American TV Stations (K) | Local American TV Stations (W) | North American TV | Canadian networks | American networks | Mexican networks | Superstations | List of local television stations in North America | Local Mexican TV Stations | List of American Over-The-Air Networks | Template:Insular Areas TV | List of Canadian Over-The-Air Networks
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