Regular local programming With the exception of networked shows
Your Morning (along with its predecessor
Canada AM) and
Question Period, none of these programs are available in
high definition. •
Regional Contact, with Joel Haslam since 1988 and Kathie Donovan from 1998 to 2012, was the second last local program on CJOH besides standard newscasts. The show was a weekly program that previously aired at 6:30 p.m. on Saturdays, but has been moved to Sunday at the same time beginning in September 2011. Episodes produced during or after 2007 are available as
streaming media on CJOH's website. The last episode featuring Donovan aired on May 13, 2012. CJOH has since discontinued
Regional Contact as a weekly show, but it remains on the station as a weekly segment during the 6 p.m. newscasts. •
Question Period is a national program about
Canadian politics produced in Ottawa since 1967. It is the last non-newscast local program on CJOH since the discontinuation of
Regional Contact.
Former local programming • ''Bang Bang You're Alive'' •
Compass •
Vue (where
Peter Jennings made his debut) •
Platform •
Dear Charlotte •
Wok with Yan (produced for
CBC Television) •
Wayne Rostad Show •
Country Way •
Celebrity Cooks with
Bruno Gerussi (produced for CBC Television, later moved to
Global) •
Joys of Collecting •
Uncle Chichimus (originally for CBC Television in 1950s; moved to CJOH in 1960s) •
Saturday Date (1961–1969) was a music and dance show targeted at teenagers, with local performances as well as the top songs on Canadian music charts. Peter Jennings was the host of this show until some time in 1962, when he was replaced by John Pozer. Dick Maloney would replace Pozer in 1964. Although the show ended in 1969, Pozer and Maloney would later return on March 13, 1991, for a
Saturday Date reunion along with original participants forming the audience. •
Miss Helen (1960s) was a bilingual show designed for pre-sechoolers. It used the
Oogly Woogly worm as one of the actors. This format would later be used by its successor Marie-Soleil. •
Strange Paradise (1969–1970; produced for CBC Television) •
The Galloping Gourmet with Graham Kerr (1969–1971; produced for CBC Television) •
The Wonderful World of Kreskin (1970s) •
Mr. Wizard (1971–1972; produced for CBC Television) •
Family Brown Country (1972–1985) •
Morning Magazine (1972–1987; replaced by the national
Canada AM) with
Bill Luxton and various co-hosts including
Margaret Trudeau •
Marie-Soleil (1980s), although the show's host
Suzanne Pinel reappears yearly for the
CHEO telethon. •
Homegrown Cafe (1980s–1998) was a talent show hosted by J. J. Clarke, who was CJOH's weatherman for the 6 p.m. weekday news until his retirement in 2020. •
Tech Now (2001–2011) was a local
technology journalism news program hosted by Paul Brent. It aired from 6:30 p.m. to about 6:55 p.m. on Sundays, and the last episode aired on July 3, 2011. The program's production has been cancelled after Brent retired, with no new episodes or host, although re-runs of older episodes briefly played after the show was discontinued. Eventually,
Tech Now ceased to play on CJOH, and was replaced by
Regional Contact which previously played on Saturdays during the same time slot. •
Uncle Willy & Floyd (1966–1988) children's comedy with
Bill Luxton and
Les Lye • ''
You Can't Do That on Television'' (1979–1990) with
Les Lye and
Christine McGlade; children's sketch comedy program which was a locally-oriented show that included contests and live segments in its first two seasons before being picked up by
Nickelodeon; a short-lived spinoff,
Whatever Turns You On, aired nationally in prime time on CTV in the fall of 1979. •
Something Else (1982) teen-oriented contest and variety show hosted by
Christine McGlade with the cast of ''You Can't Do That on Television'' ==News operation==