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Family Jr. is a Canadian specialty channel owned by WildBrain.A sister channel to Family Channel, it broadcasts children's programming aimed at viewers aged 2 to 7. Legally, the channel operates as a multiplex service of Family Channel, stemming from its former licensing status as a premium television service; therefore, it is distributed at no additional charge to Family Channel subscribers.
Rogers confirms that it will move its broadcast television operations in Toronto (CITY, CFMT and CJMT) to 35 Dundas Street East, the former Olympic Spirit building on Dundas Square. October 28: 2007 Gemini Awards. November 30: Playhouse Disney Channel launches in Canada, as a multiplex channel of Family. December 5
Disney Jr. is a Canadian English-language discretionary specialty channel owned by Corus Entertainment which launched on December 1, 2015. It is a localized version of the U.S. network of the same name operated under license from Disney Branded Television, a division of The Walt Disney Company which broadcasts animated programming aimed at children and preschoolers ages 2 to 8.
This is a list of television programs currently broadcast (in first-run or reruns), scheduled to be broadcast or formerly broadcast on Disney Channel (formerly "The Disney Channel"), that are of Canadian origin.
Magnolia Network (Canada) - shut down, relaunched by Rogers Sports & Media as a new discretionary service; Max Trax — now Stingray Music; Nick+ - shut down, replaced with Teletoon+; OWN (Canada) — shut down; Sundance Channel (Canada) — shut down; Teletoon — replaced by the current incarnation of Cartoon Network (Canada)
The first Disney Junior to launch outside the U.S. was in Latin America on April 1, 2011, [7] replacing the Playhouse Disney Channel, it later rebranded in most countries replacing their Playhouse Disney brands mostly in 2011, such as Canada on May 6, [8] the United Kingdom and Ireland on May 7, [9] Italy on May 14, France on May 28, [10 ...
Like Disney Channel, Playhouse Disney was a commercial-free service, but it did show short "promotional spots" (structured as short-form segments for Disney products targeted at the block's demographics) alongside underwriter sponsorships beginning in 2002, (with companies such as McDonald's [6]) within breaks between programs [7] (preschool ...
The company cited Rogers' undue preference of foreign streaming service Disney+ over Corus' licensed Disney Branded Television specialty services, including offering plans for its ad-supported version (whose Canadian advertising sales are handled by Rogers) bundled with television subscriptions, and giving Disney+ greater prominence on the ...