London pioneered in the establishment of
cable television in Canada, being either the first or second city in Canada with cable service, when
Ed Jarmain and others wired the first 15 homes, and had to purchase TV sets for 14 of them. London's first cable system, established in 1952, broadcast American signals that crossed the border, including
WICU from
Erie, Pennsylvania. Shortly afterward, another cable operator, named Community Television was also established serving southwestern London and a "gentleman's agreement" set a boundary, convoluted in the old London South (Wortley Road) area; Community Television was later purchased by
Maclean-Hunter, and Maclean Hunter was ultimately purchased by Rogers Cablesystems. London Cable TV later merged with Canadian Cablesystems, a cable operator owned by the Famous Players Theatre chain, with Jarmain remaining as chief executive. Canadian Cablesystems was acquired by Rogers in 1978, and Rogers purchased Maclean Hunter in 1993.
Rogers TV Cable 13, brings around 60 of the 76 home and away games of the
London Knights of the
Ontario Hockey League. In the 2009 OHL Playoffs
Rogers TV carried all home and away games in the London Knights schedule. This was the first time games from the Tulio Arena in Erie, PA and The Dow Event Centre in Saginaw, MI were broadcast on Canadian television.
Rogers TV also has exclusive coverage of the
Western Mustangs. London had the second private local television station in Canada,
CFPL (on-air November 28, 1953), and CFPL was the first Canadian local channel to broadcast in
colour (1966). As part of
CHUM Limited's
NewNet system was branded as
The New PL. In August 2005, CFPL was re-branded as
A-Channel. In August 2008,
A-Channel was re-branded to
A, effectively re-branding the CFPL station once more and on August 31, 2011, A was re-branded as
CTV Two until September 2018 now
CTV 2. Several other stations from neighbouring cities have established retransmitters or are otherwise available in London, as follows: Both the English- and French-language television services of the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (
CBC Television and
Ici Radio-Canada Télé, respectively) and French-language provincial broadcaster
TFO are only available via
pay television in London. On cable, television stations from
Detroit,
Michigan are available, along with several stations from the
Cleveland, Ohio,
Erie, Pennsylvania and
Buffalo, New York markets. From late 1970 to the mid-1980s, Erie dominated as its four network affiliates were the only American stations available on the basic cable dial of two-thirds of Londoners, and Londoners came to know Erie fairly well, familiar with Mayor
Louis Tullio,
Millcreek Mall, the Miracle Mile and other Erie landmarks. Londoners were contributors to
WQLN-TV, the public broadcasting station. Erie stations, other than WQLN, are now no longer carried on London cable systems. ==Radio==