Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
CFCF-DT
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==History== ===Canadian Marconi Company (1961–1972)=== CFCF-TV was founded by the [[Canadian Marconi Company]], owner of CFCF radio (600 AM, later [[CINW]] on 940 AM before its closure in 2010; and 106.5 FM, now [[CKBE-FM]] at 92.5), after several failed attempts to gain a [[broadcast license|licence]], beginning in 1938, and then each year after [[World War II]]. In 1960, it finally gained a licence, and began broadcasting on January 20, [[1961 in television|1961]] at 5:45 p.m. It was the second privately owned English language station in Quebec; [[CKMI-TV]] in [[Quebec City]] had signed on four years earlier in March 1957. [[File:CFCF 1990s.svg|left|120px|thumb|CFCF's classic logo, used from the late 1970s until 2001.]] The station was originally located above the Avon Theatre. The first night on-air was fraught with problems. A power failure interrupted the opening ceremony, and later on, [[Service de police de la Ville de Montréal|police]] raided the downstairs ballroom, with sirens blazing and a number of arrests made. The station's newscast, ''Pulse News'', faced a few problems because of the noise from the ballroom. CFCF-AM-FM-TV moved into their own facilities at 405 Ogilvy Avenue in Montreal's [[Park Extension]] neighbourhood on May 19. Channel 12 joined CTV as a charter affiliate on October 1, 1961. However, despite its status as CTV's second-largest affiliate, its relationship with CTV was somewhat acrimonious over the years. Canadian Marconi, as would channel 12's numerous owners over the years, felt CTV's flagship station, [[CFTO-TV]] in [[Toronto]], had too much influence over the network. ===Multiple Access (1972–1979)=== In 1968, the [[Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission]] (CRTC) required that all broadcasting outlets be 80% Canadian owned. Canadian Marconi was a subsidiary of the UK-based [[General Electric Company plc]], and was forced to put its entire broadcasting division—CFCF-TV, CFCF (AM), CFQR-FM and CFCX—on the market. A deal to sell the stations to Ernie Bushnell, owner of [[CJOH-TV]] in [[Ottawa]], collapsed in the spring of 1971 when Bushnell was unable to secure the necessary financing.<ref>[http://broadcasting-history.ca/listing_and_histories/television/cfcf-dt CFCF-DT] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210614005104/http://broadcasting-history.ca/listing_and_histories/television/cfcf-dt |date=June 14, 2021 }} at Canadian Communications Foundation</ref> Later in 1971, Canadian Marconi agreed to sell the stations to computer and telecommunications company [[Multiple Access Ltd.]], owned by the [[Bronfman family]].<ref name="CFCFArchivesLibraryArchivesCanada">{{cite web | author = Library and Archives Canada | author-link = Library and Archives Canada | title = Description of archived material: CFCF (Montreal) fonds | url = http://mikan3.archives.ca/pam/public_mikan/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=fre&rec_nbr=190543&rec_nbr_list=106964,97903,190543,190316,189452&print_version=yes | date = August 7, 2005 | access-date = December 2, 2007}}{{Dead link|date=October 2019|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}}</ref> In so doing, Canadian Marconi earned a handsome return on its original investment in CFCF, which long claimed to be the oldest radio station in Canada. Multiple Access bought the stations after the CRTC refused to approve purchase offers by [[Baton Broadcast System|Baton Broadcasting]], owner of CFTO (other CTV partners opposed the sale, and Baton was not interested in buying the radio stations without channel 12 being included in the purchase), and by [[CHUM Limited]] (because of indecision over which radio stations would be sold to meet radio ownership limits in Montreal). Multiple Access also was co-owner of [[CITY-TV]] in Toronto (with CHUM) during this time (both Baton and CHUM-CITY, minus CHUM's television stations, became CTVglobemedia, which was later in turn became [[Bell Media]], the current owner of CTV and CFCF). ===CFCF Inc. (1979–1992)=== In 1979, Multiple Access sold the stations and its production company, Champlain Productions, to CFCF Inc., headed by [[Jean Pouliot]].<ref name="CFCFArchivesLibraryArchivesCanada"/><ref name="CCF-CINW-AM">{{cite web | last = DuImage | first = Bill | title = Radio Station History: CINW(CFCF)-AM, Montreal, Corus Entertainment Inc | publisher = Canadian Communications Foundation | date = October 2007 | url = http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/listings_and_histories/radio/histories.php?id=492&historyID=243 | access-date = December 2, 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100202143614/http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/listings_and_histories/radio/histories.php?id=492&historyID=243 | archive-date = February 2, 2010 | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref name="CCF-JeanPouliot">{{cite web | last = Chouinard | first = Yvon | title = Biographies: Pouliot, Jean Adelard (1923–2004) | publisher = Canadian Communications Foundation | date = August 2004 | url = http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/personalities/personalities.php?id=336 | access-date = December 2, 2007 | archive-date = October 5, 2007 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071005163544/http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/personalities/personalities.php?id=336 | url-status = dead }}</ref> This came after a deal by Baton (this time a willing partner) to purchase Multiple Access' Montreal broadcasting operations fell through. CHUM successfully purchased Multiple Access' Toronto operations (its share of CITY-TV). Later on, the station began broadcasting a 24-hour schedule full of classic television shows and movies during the late night hours, because of the popularity of [[VHS]] and [[Betamax]] [[VCRs]] by that time. As of the present day, the station now airs mostly infomercials in late night. CFCF Inc., expanded to include the assets of [[CF Cable TV]], which was acquired by Pouliot in 1982,<ref name="CNW-JeanPouliot">{{cite web|author=Canadian Newswire |title=Canada loses one of its broadcasting pioneers |publisher=Channel Canada |date=August 2004 |url=http://www.channelcanada.com/Article528.html |access-date=December 2, 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071025234416/http://www.channelcanada.com/Article528.html |archive-date=October 25, 2007 }}</ref> and went public in 1985.<ref name="CCF-JeanPouliot"/> In 1986, CFCF gained a sister station: [[CFJP-TV]], the flagship station of Pouliot's new French language network, Television Quatre-Saisons (TQS); now known as [[Noovo]]. TQS spent most of its early years in serious financial difficulty; the revenues from channel 12 were all that kept it afloat. Two years later, the radio stations were sold to [[Mount-Royal Broadcasting]], and moved out of the CFCF building a year later. 1986 also saw CFCF become the home base for a Canadian game show: ''[[Chain Reaction (game show)|The New Chain Reaction]]'' was taped there, as was the French counterpart, ''[[Action Réaction]]''. ''Chain'' was initially hosted by Canadian musician [[Blake Emmons]], but he quit after only a few weeks. Producer [[Bob Stewart (television producer)|Bob Stewart]] then brought in [[Geoff Edwards]] to replace him; in turn, CFCF staff announcer Rod Charlebois was then given an on-air role, to satisfy [[CanCon]] requirements. This version ran until 1991 on [[Global Television Network|Global]] in Canada and in America on the [[USA Network]]. ===Canwest Global and Videotron (1992–1997)=== Financial relief came to the company in the 1990s with an investment from [[Canwest Global Communications]]. In return, CFCF did not stand in the way of Canwest's plans to apply for a Global repeater station in Montreal. However, Canwest Global changed its mind, citing tax problems. It did, however, allow CFCF to carry some Global programs; it was already airing some programming from [[Citytv]]. This would not be the end of Global's influence at the station. In 1997, [[TVA (Canadian TV network)|TVA]] sold controlling interest in CKMI to Canwest. The two companies announced plans to turn CKMI into a Global station, along with a CKMI repeater in Montreal and a large studio complex in Montreal. Pouliot was scared by the prospect of new competition and decided to get out. He initially planned to sell CFCF to Vidéotron. However, Vidéotron also owned TVA, which retained a 49 percent stake in CKMI. This would have resulted in one company having a significant stake in all of the private stations in Montreal – CFCF, CKMI, CFJP and TVA flagship [[CFTM-TV]]. Vidéotron knew that the CRTC would never approve such an arrangement, so it sold CFCF to [[Western International Communications]] (WIC), who also owned [[CHAN-TV]] and [[CHEK-TV]] in [[British Columbia]], [[CHCH-TV]] in [[Ontario]] and several stations in [[Alberta]]. Over the next few years, CFCF cut back its carriage of CTV programming to little more than the base schedule of 40 hours per week. This was due to longstanding tensions between WIC and CTV (stemming from similar issues to those raised by CFCF, in that they felt CFTO and Baton had too much influence over the network); the station filled out the rest of their schedule with WIC's own library of programming. This didn't pose a problem at first, since Ottawa's CJOH was available on cable in Montreal for most of the 1980s and 1990s; CJOH operates a repeater in [[Cornwall, Ontario]] whose footprint reaches Montreal. Meanwhile, TQS was sold to [[Quebecor]], and later to [[Cogeco]] and Bell Globemedia (which later became CTVglobemedia and is now known as Bell Media). Before 1997, when CHCH and CITY launched rebroadcast transmitters in the Ottawa region, local cable companies there carried CFCF as well. Because CHCH and CFCF were sharing some programs, CFCF was removed from these systems, except for [[Rogers Cable]]. Also around this time, CJOH was dropped from Montreal cable systems after its owner, Baton, bought controlling interest in CTV. ===CTV (2001–present)=== [[Image:CFCF-TV.jpg|thumb|left|CFCF-TV's former logo (2001–2005). As of October 2005, logos with the stations' callsigns are no longer used on CTV stations; instead they all use the main CTV logo.]] Canwest bought WIC's television assets in 2000. However, the CRTC did not allow Canwest to [[Duopoly (broadcasting)#Canada|twinstick]] CFCF with CKMI. The commission believed that the Montreal region's anglophone population was too small to allow a twinstick of the city's private anglophone stations. It did, however, allow Canwest to keep [[CJNT-TV]], a multicultural station WIC had bought a year earlier. CFCF was placed under trusteeship, and had to be sold in short order. In 2001, amid all these wranglings over ownership, Bell Globemedia, owner of CTV, bought the station. After 40 years of being master of its own house to a large degree, CFCF lost much of that independence and maneuverability through the CTV/Bell Globemedia deal. With the opening of the Fall 2001 television season, CFCF officially adopted the full CTV schedule. The newscast dropped its longtime ''Pulse'' title in favour of the generic ''CFCF News''. However, the ''Pulse'' brand was so firmly established that viewers still continued to called the newscasts by that title for several years. The station also adopted a new golden call letter logo similar to all other CTV owned stations, as well as similar promo and newscast graphics. In 2003, CFCF left its location on Ogilvy Avenue it had occupied since 1961 and moved to a studio on Papineau Avenue in the eastern part of [[Downtown Montreal|downtown]], and the master control operations were moved to [[9 Channel Nine Court]] in Toronto, the home of CTV flagship CFTO. By this situation, CFCF overtook [[Vancouver]]'s [[CIVT-TV]] to become the largest market with a CTV O&O station whose studios were located in a downtown area (Toronto's CFTO-TV/DT had operated in the same 9 Channel Nine Court studios since its inception). The area has now become Montreal's main media district. In addition to sister Bell Media properties [[Noovo]] and [[Réseau des sports|RDS]], which are located in the same building as CFCF, the studio facilities of [[CBC/Radio-Canada]], [[TVA (Canadian TV network)|TVA]], [[Télé-Québec]], [[MétéoMédia]] and Bell Media's radio stations are all within several blocks. On October 3, 2005, the station dropped the use of its call letters on-air, instead branding as simply "CTV", with the newscast becoming ''CTV News''. This type of rebranding was instituted at all affiliates across the country to provide a common brand for the entire network. By 2005, Bell Globemedia was considered to be a non-core asset by parent company [[Bell Canada Enterprises]] and was sold to a group of investors, which included the Thomson family. The Bell Globemedia group (made up of the entire CTV network, as well as ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'' newspaper and a variety of other channels and media assets) was renamed CTVglobemedia in late 2006. In April 2011, BCE re-acquired full ownership of CTVglobemedia and changed the new division's name to Bell Media. The new media giant also acquired CHUM Limited's holdings in 2006, including the [[CTV 2|A-Channel]] stations, [[MuchMusic]] and a variety of other specialty channels. But the CHUM deal also raised serious questions about the high degree of media concentration in Canada. This new conglomerate owned more than one television station in several Canadian markets—increasing the worry about job losses and cutbacks. In 2009, CFCF discontinued the ''Telethon of Stars'' that aired during the first weekend of December, consecutively, for 32 years from 1977 to 2009; the removal of the telethon from the station was due to budget cuts made by CTV as a result of the [[Late 2000s recession|economic crisis]]. In December 2010, the ''Telethon of Stars'' could only be seen through the Internet (via an 8-hour [[webcast]]), with no television equivalent broadcast.<ref>http://blog.fagstein.com/2010/12/01/no-telethon-on-cfcf/ End of Telethon of stars</ref> It was dropped entirely shortly thereafter. On August 5, [[2009 in Canadian television|2009]], CTV camera operator, 44-year-old Hugh Haugland was killed after a helicopter crash near [[Mont-Laurier]] about {{convert|240|km|mi|0}} from Montreal, Haugland was shooting footage of the destruction left behind by a [[Tornadoes of 2009#August 4|tornado]] that touched down in the area on August 4, 2009. Haugland was the son of Canadian journalist and retired former television news anchor for CFCF-TV in Montreal, [[Bill Haugland]]. The other person killed in the crash was Roger Belanger, a veteran pilot and local businessman who was in his 60s.<ref>[http://www.ctvnews.ca/ctv-camera-operator-killed-in-helicopter-crash-1.422859 CTV camera operator killed in helicopter crash 8/5/2009.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160427145357/http://www.ctvnews.ca/ctv-camera-operator-killed-in-helicopter-crash-1.422859 |date=April 27, 2016 }} CTV.ca</ref><ref>[https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/condolences-for-the-haugland-and-belanger-families-1.422728 CFCF-TV: "Condolences for the Haugland and Belanger families" 8/5/2009.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211026114733/https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/condolences-for-the-haugland-and-belanger-families-1.422728 |date=October 26, 2021 }} CTVMontreal.ca</ref><ref>[http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/August2009/05/c2881.html Statement on the Death of CTV Cameraman Hugh Haugland] CTVglobemedia press release via [[Canada NewsWire]], August 5, 2009,</ref> On August 16, 2024, a water main break on [[René Lévesque Boulevard]] caused the flooding and evacuation of CFCF's main studio and newsroom, as well as the closure of those facilities for eventual restoration. The flood destroyed several pieces of equipment stored in the station's basement, including satellite trucks and field equipment. Newscast production was temporarily moved to the offices of corporate parent BCE Inc. on nearby [[Nuns' Island]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/news-never-stops-ctv-montreal-sets-up-makeshift-studio-on-nuns-island-after-damaging-water-main-break-1.7005998|last=Roberts|first=Denise|title=News never stops: CTV Montreal sets up makeshift studio on Nuns' Island after damaging water main break|date=August 19, 2024|accessdate=August 19, 2024|publisher=[[Bell Media]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://broadcastdialogue.com/ctv-montreal-newsroom-working-out-of-makeshift-studio-in-wake-of-flooding/|title=CTV Montreal newsroom working out of makeshift studio in wake of flooding|last=Thiessen|first=Connie|date=August 19, 2024|accessdate=August 19, 2024|publisher=Broadcast Dialogue}}</ref>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)