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Joytv was dismantled as a television system in August 2013 by the re-launch of its Winnipeg station, CIIT-TV, as "Hope TV"—a traditional religious station with no secular programming. The Joytv brand and format is still used by sister station CHNU-TV in Fraser Valley / Vancouver, British Columbia .
The original logo used by CHNU, NOWTV, was used from the station's launch in 2001 until 2005. A television set replaced the "O". [1]CHNU-TV was licensed in July 2000 by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to Trinity Television Inc. Trinity Television initially requested to assign CFVT as the station's call letters (standing for "Fraser Valley Television ...
CHET-TV Independent: Cranbrook: 5 CFCN-TV-9: CTV: satellite of CFCN-DT Calgary, Alberta: Dawson Creek: 5 CJDC-TV: CTV 2: Fraser Valley: 47 66.1 CHNU-DT: Joytv: serves Greater Vancouver and Fraser Valley Kamloops: 4 CFJC-TV: Citytv: semi-satellite of CKVU-DT Vancouver (except for newscasts) Kamloops: 6 CHKM-TV: Global: satellite of CHAN-DT ...
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.
The following is a list of programs broadcast by Joytv, a regional multiple faith-based television system consisting of two stations in the Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Manitoba (CIIT-DT, now branded Faith TV) that also carries syndicated reruns of family-oriented mainstream programming.
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On August 27, 2012, CHAN-DT expanded its weekday morning newscast to four hours, with the addition of a half-hour at 5 a.m. (making it only the second Canadian station with a pre-5:30 a.m. morning newscast, after CHCH-DT), the 5 to 6 a.m. hour of the newscast was re-titled as the Early Morning News; in addition on September 2, 2012, the station ...
After his CBC evening broadcast, he would fly to Victoria (where he also resides with his wife), often by helicopter, to anchor the 10 pm news on CHEK-TV. [6] On December 20, 2013, Parsons retired as co-anchor on CBC News: Vancouver. Parsons has written a book on his journalistic career, called A Life in the News. [7]