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CFYK-DT (channel 8) is a CBC Television station in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada. It is the flagship station of the CBC North television service. History
On television, the first CBC production centre inside the CBC North service area opened at CFYK-TV in Yellowknife in 1979, producing Our Ways, a monthly news magazine. [33] An additional television production unit was established in Whitehorse in 1986, [ 34 ] and in Iqaluit in 1987 when production of the weekly program Taqravut moved there.
In most other markets, local news returned to the 6:00 p.m. time slot in early 2006, [9] mainly under the banner CBC News at Six, although these remained as 30-minute newscasts. ( Canada Now was retained as a separate 30-minute national newscast at 6:30 p.m., as well as the title of the integrated local/national newscast aired within British ...
CFFB-TV was the television call sign for the former CBC's television transmitter in Iqaluit, Nunavut.It repeated the CBC North service, which consisted of the regular national CBC Television schedule in Mountain Time, with the addition of the northern news programs CBC Igalaaq in Inuktitut at 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. (Eastern Time) and CBC Northbeat in English at 8 p.m. (Eastern Time).
CBC Television is a Canadian English language public television network made up of fourteen owned-and-operated stations. Some privately owned stations were formerly affiliated with the network until as late as August 2016. This is a table listing of CBC Television's stations, arranged by market.
She left the CBC in 2017 to return to APTN as anchor of APTN National News, returning to the CBC the following year as anchor of CBC North's Northbeat. She was the anchor of Northbeat until 2021, when she moved into a new role as a national reporter for the Canadian Arctic region.
CFYK began broadcasting on January 15, 1950. [1] Like other radio stations in Northern Canada at the time, CFYK was licensed to the Canadian Army's Royal Canadian Corps of Signals and utilized the technical infrastructure of the Northwest Territories and Yukon Radio System, but was managed by a civilian committee and operated by volunteers as a commercial-free community radio station.
George Tuccaro was born on May 12, 1950, [1] in northern Alberta.A member of the Mikisew Cree First Nation, Tuccaro began a career in broadcasting in 1971, when he became an Announcer-Operator with CBC North Radio in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.