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Talentvision is the first Mandarin channel in Canada and it first went on the air in 1993 (together with Fairchild TV). It started out as a channel with mixed Cantonese and Mandarin content. Originally the broadcasting content was 60% Cantonese and 40% Mandarin. It started broadcasting entirely in Mandarin from June 1998 onwards. All of the ...
On May 7, 2015, Rogers announced a restructuring of Omni News programs as part of cutbacks that led to the loss of 110 jobs across the company. The existing newscasts would be replaced by new public affairs-oriented programs produced in Cantonese, Mandarin, and Punjabi on May 11. The new programs featured in-depth discussion of local issues but ...
Fairchild Radio Vancouver: CJVB/1470 & CHKG-FM/96.1 (Cantonese & Mandarin broadcast) In October 2019, Fairchild Radio gained public attention when it fired a Toronto talk-show host allegedly because of his questions during an interview perceived as critical of the Chinese government's stance on the 2019–2020 Hong Kong protests .
Canada Global Media Investment Inc. Available nationwide WOWtv: Canadian Chinese Media Network: Available nationwide New Tang Dynasty Television: New Tang Dynasty Television Canada: Available nationwide Canada Chinese TV: Canada National TV Inc. Available nationwide Canada National TV: Canada National TV Inc. Available nationwide
Rikko Lee (李靄璣), former Fairchild Radio Vancouver DJ and host of What's On Vancouver. Signed to TVB as an artist and was a host and reporter for the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2009 Hong Kong East-Asian Games. She is currently hosting TVB's weekly sports programme Sports World and daily financial programme Money Smart on HD Jade.
The television station, called Channel M (Multivan Broadcast Corp. or MVBC), was launched on June 2003 to serve more than 800,000 ethnic residents around the Vancouver Lower Mainland. Channel M was sold to Rogers Media in May 2008 and it is currently a part of Omni Television, a Canada's multilingual and multicultural television network.
Vancouver Centre of Excellence. April 2003. Guo, Shibao An interpretive study of a voluntary organization serving Chinese immigrants in Vancouver, Canada Archived 2014-12-26 at the Wayback Machine (PhD thesis) . University of British Columbia. See profile. Available at ProQuest. Guo, Shibao.
As of 1970 there were fewer than 100 Hakka Chinese speakers in Vancouver. [115] By 2003, Mandarin began to have a presence, including in the media, due to an increase in immigrants from mainland China. [114] By 2012 Mandarin was displacing Cantonese in Greater Vancouver. [58] Cantonese and Mandarin are commonly spoken in Richmond. [116]