Ctv

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CTV is an English-language Canadian commercial television network owned by media company Bell Media. It airs a mix of American TV shows and movies, along with some Canadian shows.

CTV began broadcasting on October 1, 1961. Its creation was the result of a decision made in 1958 by Canada's Progressive Conservative government at the time, led by Prime Minister John Diefenbaker, to form a new Canadian broadcasting regulator, the Board of Broadcast Governors, to take over those duties from the state-owned Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, which had been both Canada's public broadcaster and broadcast regulator until then. The BBG was formed to answer demands by private broadcasters to allow alternate choices to CBC Television and Télévision de Radio-Canada, the CBC's respective English and French-language television units. When CTV first went on air, it originally consisted of eight affiliated stations in Vancouver (CHAN-TV), Calgary (CFCN-TV), Edmonton (CFRN-TV), Winnipeg (CJAY-TV, now CKY-TV), Toronto (CFTO-TV), Ottawa (CJOH-TV), Montreal (CFCF-TV) and Halifax (CJCH-TV).[1] Of those eight stations, CFRN was originally a CBC affiliate while the others all began as independent stations before joining CTV.

Since CTV first went on the air, the number of its affiliated stations has grown to its current level of 22 stations, making it Canada's largest privately owned television network, as well as the largest and most-watched Canadian network based on size and audience reach. While all of those stations began under independent owners, most of those stations, except for two, are now owned by the network itself due to CFTO's then-parent company, Baton Broadcasting, buying up most of the CTV affiliates between the mid-1980s and 2001. Baton itself changed its corporate name to CTV Inc. in January 1998, giving it control of both the network and its owned-and-operated stations.

In addition to CTV itself, parent Bell Media also operates several CTV-branded media outlets, including the secondary TV system CTV 2 (consisting of stations in smaller cities adjacent to and targeting the major markets), themed cable channels CTV Drama Channel (formerly the Canadian version of American channel Bravo), CTV Sci-Fi Channel (formerly Space), CTV Comedy Channel (formerly the Comedy Network) and CTV Life Channel (formerly Gusto) and online video on demand services CTV Movies (devoted to feature films) and CTV Throwback (focused on classic TV shows).

Controversies[edit]

Once a bastion for fair reporting in its newscasts, CTV, like the rest of the mainstream media, has recently taken a turn toward the Left akin to the CBC and most of the American networks in its news reporting and has shown blatant liberal bias and dishonesty in certain reports it has filed. Rebel News head Ezra Levant has even said that like the rest of the liberal media the network has since joined, CTV reporters can no longer be trusted, and are now even hated by much of the public,[2] because it cannot be determined if they are simply asking questions for their news reports or if they are willingly gathering intel to pass along to police forces.[3]

CTV has also come under criticism as one of numerous Canadian media outlets, large and small, that took bribe money from Justin Trudeau (totaling nearly C$660 million) to cover for him in news reports (including asking him "softball" questions while whitewashing and ignoring the numerous scandals he has faced while in power) and spout the same fake news, lies and twisting of narratives already being spewed by the CBC.[18] In an ironic recent turn of events, CTV became one of several media outlets that denounced Trudeau's invocation of the Emergencies Act on February 14, 2022 (and its ratification by a Liberal/NDP bloc via parliamentary vote one week later on February 21) and his lack of faith-motivated heavy-handed dealings with the anti-CCP flu mandate Freedom Convoy protesters in Ottawa before and after the vote;[19] CTV News contributor Don Martin called the use of the Act to disproportionately and violently deal with the peaceful protesters "(a)n emergency about nothing" and predicted that Trudeau's time in office is running short due to the ensuing controversy, though Martin still saw fit to attack Conservative MPs who supported the protesters and to deny that Trudeau's jackboots had instigated violence against the protesters.[20] The Canadian Taxpayers Federation launched a petition in February 2022 that called for an end to Trudeau's unethical use of taxpayer funds to bribe other media outlets (including CTV) to report favorably about the Trudeau regime and to lie about and smear the regime's opponents like the CBC does, as well as calling for the CBC to be defunded.[21]

CTV affiliates[edit]

Owned by Bell Media[edit]

Station City First sign-on date Notes
CIVT-DT Vancouver, British Columbia September 22, 1997 Replaced CHAN-DT as Vancouver's CTV affiliate when CHAN switched to the Global Television Network on September 1, 2001
CFCN-DT Calgary, Alberta September 9, 1960 Was Canada's first independent TV station prior to CTV signing on
CFRN-DT Edmonton, Alberta October 25, 1954 Was Edmonton's original CBC affiliate until October 1, 1961, when it switched to CTV after CBC-owned CBXT signed on
CFQC-DT Saskatoon, Saskatchewan December 5, 1954 Was Saskatoon's original CBC affiliate until 1969, then a dual CBC-CTV affiliate until CBC-owned CBKST went on the air on October 17, 1971
CIPA-TV Prince Albert, Saskatchewan January 12, 1987
CKCK-DT Regina, Saskatchewan July 28, 1954 Was Regina's original CBC affiliate until September 12, 1969, when it joined CTV after the CBC purchased original Regina CTV affiliate CHRE-TV and switched it to CBC with the new call sign CBKRT (now CBKT-DT)
CICC-TV Yorkton, Saskatchewan Fall 1971
CKY-DT Winnipeg, Manitoba November 12, 1960 Was originally called CJAY-TV until May 31, 1973
CHBX-TV Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario September 23, 1978 Was originally call CKCY-TV until 1986
CICI-TV Greater Sudbury, Ontario October 25, 1953 Was Sudbury's original CBC affiliate until October 3, 1971, when it switched to CTV when new CBC affiliate CKNC-TV signed on; was originally called CKSO-TV until 1980
CITO-TV Timmins, Ontario April 1, 1971 Began as CKSO-TV-2, a rebroadcaster of CKSO-TV in Sudbury; became a standalone station and changed to its current call sign in 1980
CKNY-TV North Bay, Ontario December 19, 1955 Was North Bay's original CBC affiliate until October 15, 1971, when it switched to CTV when new CBC affiliate CHNB-TV signed on; was originally called CKGN-TV until 1960, then CFCH-TV until 1970
CKCO-DT Kitchener, Ontario March 1, 1954 Was a CBC affiliate until 1964
CFTO-DT Toronto, Ontario December 31, 1960 Flagship station of CTV
CJOH-DT Ottawa, Ontario March 12, 1961
CFCF-DT Montreal, Quebec January 20, 1961
CKLT-DT Saint John, New Brunswick September 21, 1969
CKCW-DT Moncton, New Brunswick November 30, 1954 Was Moncton's original CBC affiliate until September 21, 1969, when it switched to CTV the same day Saint John CBC affiliate CHSJ-TV (now CBC-owned CBAT-DT) added a rebroadcaster in Moncton
CJCH-DT Halifax, Nova Scotia January 1, 1961
CJCB-TV Sydney, Nova Scotia October 9, 1954 Was Sydney's original CBC affiliate until September 26, 1972, when it switched to CTV when CBC-owned CBIT signed on

Independently owned[edit]

Station City First sign-on date Notes
CITL-DT Lloydminster, Alberta/Saskatchewan July 28, 1976 Owned by Stingray Digital Group
CKPR-DT Thunder Bay, Ontario October 4, 1954 Owned by Dougall Media; was a CBC affiliate until September 1, 2014; was called CFPA-TV until July 20, 1957, then CFCJ-TV until 1967

References[edit]

  1. CTV history
  2. 2.0 2.1 1. CTV calls the police on the anti-lockdown rodeo. 2. CTV complains that people at the rodeo dare to take their picture. This is why people hate CTV and the rest of the Media Party at Twitter
  3. 3.0 3.1 Ezra Levant: "When CTV reporters show up, you really don’t know if they’re asking questions for the news, or to pass their intel on to the police. Do not trust them" at Twitter
  4. Media’s “true allegiance” revealed in Antifa’s violent attack on Faith Goldy at the Rebel Media (Warning: Video contains coarse language and violence)
  5. Angela MacKenzie: "Far-right blogger Faith Goldy makes an appearance and counter protestors push her out" at Twitter
  6. Faith Goldy: "ANTIFA EVERYWHERE" at Twitter
  7. CTV News reporter MELTS DOWN after Rebel News asks McKenna tough questions at Rebel News YouTube channel
  8. CTV host's hockey-hating, “white boy” rant on Don Cherry goes viral at Rebel News YouTube channel
  9. Jessica Allen: "I hate to say it but a lot of you are proving the point I tried to make" at Twitter
  10. Jessica Allen: "I never said every white boy, just the ones whose unsavoury behaviour, which didn’t feel very Canadian, I witnessed" at Twitter
  11. Establishment Media Shares Shortened Clip Of Chief Allan Adam Arrest In Attempt To Generate Rage & Divide Canadians
  12. After Criticism For Spreading Short Video Clip, CTV News Exec Deletes Tweet & Network Shares Full Video
  13. CTV broke ethics code in biased report on former president Trump at True North
  14. Canadian MSM journalists fawn over Biden inauguration at True North
  15. Mike Hansen: "Someone just like you alerted authorities that the Frank family was hiding in someone's attic" at Twitter
  16. Canadian CTV Uses Stock Photo of Chris Watts, Who Murdered His Wife and Two Girls, In Segment on Family Planning at the Gateway Pundit
  17. CTV News uses neo-Nazi news source
  18. Multiple references:
  19. Canadian Media Reject Justin Trudeau’s ‘Emergency About Nothing’ at Breitbart News Network
  20. Don Martin: An emergency about nothing as tow trucks become the excuse to act at CTV News
  21. Taxpayer watchdog launches petition to defund CBC and end media funding at True North

External links[edit]


Categories: [TV Networks] [Media] [Canada] [Liberal Media]


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