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Logo Television network Founded Type of network Number of owned and operated stations Number of private affiliates CBC Television: 1952 [note 1]: Public 14 None CTV: 1961 Commercial
CBC Television, a national public network owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).; Citytv, a privately owned television network owned by Rogers Media, with stations in Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.
This is a list of television stations in Canada licensed to broadcast by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), all having call signs which begin with the letter C. A blue background indicates a station that continues to broadcast exclusively via an analogue transmission in lieu of a conversion to digital ...
List of Ici Radio-Canada Télé television stations for stations affiliated with or owned by the CBC's French-language television network Ici Radio-Canada Télé; List of assets owned by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation; List of defunct CBC and Radio-Canada television transmitters - decommissioned on July 31, 2012
Peter Armstrong; former host of World Report on CBC Radio 1, foreign correspondent for CBC Television and CBC Newsworld; currently the economics reporter for CBC News; Adrienne Arsenault, Chief Correspondent for CBC News, co-host of The National; Marie-Louise Arsenault, arts journalist; Michel C. Auger, former host of CBF-FM, Ici Radio-Canada ...
U.S. Agency for Global Media [8] [disputed (for: conflict between sources - also listed on list of state media by country) – discuss] Voice of America (1942) [62] Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) Current Time TV; Radio Free Asia (RFA) Middle East Broadcasting Networks. Alhurra; Radio Sawa; Office of Cuba Broadcasting (Radio y ...
Jim Munson – former broadcast news and CTV reporter, former director of communications in the Prime Minister's Office of Jean Chrétien, former Liberal senator; Rex Murphy – host of CBC Radio's Cross Country Canada; Kasia Mychajlowycz – Canadaland, Globe & Mail
The most-watched television broadcast in Canadian history was the gold medal game of the men's hockey tournament at the 2010 Winter Olympics, played between the United States and Canada in Vancouver, with an average minute audience of 16.6 million Canadians watching the game, roughly one-half of Canada's population in 2010. [1]