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Discovery Channel Canada Discovery Channel is a Canadian exempt discretionary service owned by Rogers Sports & Media . Based of the U.S. cable network of the same name , the channel focuses primarily on programming related to nature, science, and technology.
CTV Nature Channel is a Canadian discretionary specialty channel owned by CTV Specialty Television, a joint venture between Bell Media and ESPN Inc., with minority interests owned by Warner Bros. Discovery via licensee Discovery Science Canada Company. [1] It broadcasts factual and reality-style series related to science, nature, and history.
Science's first foray into dramatic programming, its premiere on the channel will be simulcast on sister network Discovery Channel. [2] The Critical Eye – An eight-part series examining pseudoscientific and paranormal phenomena. Dinosaur Revolution – A four-part miniseries on the natural history of dinosaurs. The last two episodes were ...
Canada's Worst Driver (2005–18) Canada's Worst Handyman (2006–11) Carfellas; Cash Cab (2005–18) Chop Shop London; Choppers; The Colony (2009–10) Colosseum: Rome's Arena of Death; Connect; Construction Intervention (2010) Contact (2019) Crash of the Century; Curiosity (2011–13) Curious and Unusual Deaths; Curse of Akakor (2021) The ...
How It's Made (Comment c'est fait in French) is a Canadian documentary television series which focuses on how everyday items are being made. It premiered on January 6, 2001 on the Discovery Channel in Canada and the Science Channel in the United States.
Date Event Source 1 Rogers Sports & Media's new agreement for Warner Bros. Discovery lifestyle and factual brands, announced in June 2024, takes effect. New versions of five WBD-licensed channel brands previously licensed to Bell Media or Corus Entertainment launched under Rogers ownership, with other affected brands available through Citytv+.
Discovery Channel Canada logo used from 1995 to 2009. In October 1992, brewer John Labatt Ltd.—owner of TSN through its JLL Broadcast Group division, later renamed Labatt Communications—announced an agreement with Discovery Communications to apply to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) for a specialty television licence, to launch a Canadian service ...
[3] [4] [5] The subsidiary, now CTV Specialty Television, would launch other Discovery channel brands in Canada, including a Canadian version of Animal Planet in 2000, [6] and then Discovery World, Investigation Discovery, and Discovery Science (Science Channel) in 2010 as part of an expanded licensing agreement with Discovery Communications. [7]