The history of
television in Canada begins in
Montreal and
Toronto, where the first television stations were started in 1952. The
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation aired its first broadcast on September 6, 1952 from Montreal's station,
CBFT. The program was bilingual. As mentioned by Irving, and supported by Arthur Siegel, modern media such as television and radio have become agents of denationalization because of the spillover of U.S. influence and fragmentation of media within Canada. Siegel implies that because of this, the state of television in Canada (i.e. whether it is healthy or dying) depends on the state of television in the United States. Television was welcomed when it was first introduced into society. It brought about a change from communication which was previously limited to only audio. If one wanted to view something on a screen, one would have to visit the cinema; the television provided a way of sitting at home and having visual communication as well as entertainment. Nowadays, however, with the introduction of smartphones and the Internet, television is headed towards obsolescence according to Rabab Khan. He writes that because smartphones and computers allow one do what a television and radio combined allow, the need for the latter two media is declining. He states that like the newspaper industry, television is beginning to migrate to the web and investing in digital platforms. In addition, the
Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN), a service devoted mainly to programming of interest to the
Indigenous peoples of Canada, is considered a network by the
CRTC, although the network airs terrestrially only in the 3 Canadian territories, and must be carried by all television providers in the rest of Canada. There are, as well, a number of smaller
television systems, such as
CTV Two (a compliment to the main CTV network in smaller and secondary markets), and
Omni Television—a group of Rogers-owned ethnic broadcasters. Several provinces maintain provincial public broadcasting networks in addition to the CBC, including
Télé-Québec,
TVOntario,
TFO, and
Knowledge (British Columbia).
Citytv Saskatchewan and
CTV Two Alberta were formerly provincial public broadcasters (SCN and Access), but both have since been privatized and amalgamated into commercial networks operated by their current owners (
Rogers and
Bell). While both outlets devote a portion of their schedules to their networks' respective, advertising-supported entertainment programming, both networks are still required to adhere to an educational remit in the majority of their programming. Unlike in the United States, where a statewide public network is usually the state's primary
PBS member station, the provincially owned public systems in Canada are independent of each other and have their own programming. Only CBC/Radio-Canada, TVA and APTN are officially considered national networks by the CRTC, while V is a provincial network in Quebec. City, CTV and Global are legally considered "television services" even though they operate as networks for all practical purposes. As well, there are a few independent stations, including
CFTU in
Montreal,
CJON in
St. John's and
CJIL in
Lethbridge. However, most of these are not general entertainment stations like independent stations in the United States, but are instead specialty
community channels or educational services. CJON is the only independent commercial station currently operating in Canada, although CJON sublicenses a mix of programming from Global, CTV and other sources rather than purchasing program rights independently. TV station
callsigns in Canada are usually made up of four letters, although two stations have three call letters (
CKX in
Brandon and
CKY in
Winnipeg) and some (primarily CBC-owned Radio-Canada stations) have five. The first call letter is always
C, and callsigns of privately owned television stations start with the
two-letter combinations of
CF,
CH,
CI,
CJ, or
CK. The combinations
CG,
CY,
CZ and several combinations beginning with
V and
X are also assigned to Canada, but to date no Canadian television station has ever been licensed to take a call sign within those ranges. There is no clear rule for the call letters of
rebroadcasters—some are labelled by the call-letters of the originating station, followed by a number, while others have their own distinct call letters. Low-power repeater transmitters (LPRTs) have their own unique callsign format, which consists of the letters CH followed by four numbers. Some rebroadcast transmitters are licensed as
semi-satellites, which are licensed to air separate commercials (and, on rarer occasions, a limited amount of distinct programming) targeted to their community of license. CBC-owned stations use call letters beginning with the combination
CB (through a special agreement with the government of
Chile); private affiliates of the CBC use the same combinations as other private stations. The CBC has also sometimes directly acquired former private affiliate stations; these usually (although not always) retain their historic call sign rather than changing to a CB call. While Canadian TV stations are technically required to identify themselves over the air by their call letters, the rule is rarely enforced by the CRTC. As a result, most TV stations never use their call letters for any purpose other than official CRTC business, and instead brand under regional names such as
CTV Northern Ontario or
Global Regina. Even then, most network-owned stations may only use these brands for station identification and newscasts, and promote the majority of their programming under the network brand without any disambiguation. Due to their proximity to American media markets, a number of Canadian cities and regions receive US broadcasters as part of their local media. This has required special dispensation for Canadian content for broadcasters in the
Windsor, Ontario region (due to it falling within the
Detroit media footprint), and there have also been cases of US-based broadcasters (
KCND-TV of
Pembina, North Dakota, now
CKND-DT of Winnipeg; also
KVOS-TV of
Bellingham, Washington) targeting its programming and advertising at Canadian viewers. Although all broadcast networks in Canada are required to produce and air some
Canadian content, only the English and French networks of the
CBC run predominantly Canadian-produced schedules, though, the English network does run some imported programming from the
United Kingdom, most notably
Coronation Street. The private networks,
CTV,
Global and
Citytv, have all at times faced criticism over their level of commitment to producing and airing Canadian programming. The commercial networks often find it easier to purchase rights to hit American series than to invest in Canadian productions, which are often prohibitively costly for the comparatively small size of the Canadian market. The French-language networks traditionally have had less difficulty meeting their Canadian content obligations, as the language difference makes francophone audiences much more readily receptive to home-grown programming than to dubbed American imports.
Digital television is an emerging technology in Canada. Although some TV stations have begun broadcasting digital signals in addition to their regular VHF or UHF broadcasts, this is not yet as widespread as in the United States. Although most markets have digital channel assignments already in place, to date digital broadcasts have only launched in the largest
metropolitan areas. Digital television sets are available in Canadian stores, but are not universally present in all Canadian homes. Several broadcasters, including the CBC, have argued that there is no viable business case for a comprehensive digital conversion strategy in Canada. At
CRTC hearings in 2007 on the future direction of regulatory policy for television, broadcasters proposed a number of strategies, including funding digital conversion by eliminating restrictions on the amount of advertising that television broadcasters are permitted to air, allowing terrestrial broadcasters to charge cable viewers a subscription fee similar to that already charged by cable
specialty channels, permitting
license fees similar to those which fund the
BBC in the
United Kingdom, or eliminating terrestrial television broadcasting entirely and moving to an exclusively cable-based distribution model. In May 2007, the CRTC set August 31, 2011 as the deadline for digital conversion in Canada. This is approximately two years later than the cutoff date in the United States. The CRTC ultimately decided to relax restrictions on advertising as the funding mechanism. However, a CRTC statement issued in June 2008 indicated that as of that date, only 22 digital transmitters had been fully installed across the entire country, and expressed the regulator's concern that Canada's television broadcasters were not adequately preparing for the shift to digital broadcasting.
Cable television Cable television is a very common method of television programming delivery in Canada. By 1997, already 77% of Canadian homes subscribed to a cable television service.
Vancouver, with 93% of its homes connected to cable, had one of the highest cable connection rates in the world. There are currently 739 licensed cable distributors in Canada. This significant decline from over 2,000 just a few years ago is attributable both to major cable companies acquiring smaller distributors and to a recent change in CRTC rules by which independent cable operators with fewer than 2,000 subscribers are no longer required to operate under full CRTC licences. (However, the CRTC does retain some regulatory authority over these operators. This is an exemption granted by the CRTC to previously licensed companies that continue to meet certain conditions, and does
not mean that anybody can simply set up their own small cable company without CRTC approval.) Major Canadian cable companies include
Rogers,
Shaw,
Cogeco,
Vidéotron and
EastLink/
Persona. Most Canadian cities are served by only one cable company per market; in the few cities that are served by more than one cable company, each company is restricted to a specific geographical division within the market. For instance, in
Hamilton,
Cogeco Cable,
Rogers Cable and
Source Cable are all licensed operators, but each has a monopoly in a specific area of the city. However, two major companies offer
direct broadcast satellite delivery as an alternative to cable:
Bell Satellite TV, which is a division of
BCE Inc., and
Shaw Direct, which is a division of Shaw.
Grey market DBS dishes can also be obtained from American services such as
DirecTV and
Dish Network, but as these are not licensed Canadian providers, stores that sell those packages—and users who buy them—are at risk of criminal charges. In some remote communities in the Territories (
Yukon,
Northwest Territories,
Nunavut), cable delivery is prohibitively costly. As such, similar services are offered through
MMDS technology. An English-language 'basic cable' package in Canada traditionally includes: •
CTV,
CTV Two,
Global,
City – the major English-language Canadian commercial networks; •
CBC Television and
Ici Radio-Canada Télé – the English- and French-language CBC networks; • a provincial educational broadcast undertaking (e.g.
TVO in Ontario), if available (not all provinces have one); • a
community channel, produced by the particular cable company, which usually includes
public affairs and information programming as well as community events listings (cf.
public-access television in the United States); •
APTN – a network devoted to
Aboriginal programming; •
TVA – one of the two private French-language broadcasters in Quebec; • nearby independent channels or channels from smaller television systems such as
Omni Television or
Yes TV; •
CPAC – a channel that broadcasts
parliamentary sessions and committee meetings, along with some political public-affairs programming; • a similar channel to CPAC, but broadcasting the proceedings of the provincial legislature; •
network affiliates (typically from the nearest major American city) of
ABC,
CBS,
Fox,
NBC, and
PBS; • a mixture of Canadian and American special-interest channels (e.g.
TSN,
MuchMusic,
CNN,
CTV News Channel,
Showcase). A further set of Canadian and American special-interest channels are offered as 'extended cable' packages, which are available for additional fees. In the past, cable companies have engaged in the controversial practice of
negative option billing, in which a subscriber is automatically given and billed for the new services unless they specifically declines them, but this is now illegal. A package of '
pay TV' channels is also available for additional fees, including movie networks such as
Crave TV,
Movie Central,
Super Channel, and
Super Écran; and American
superstations such as
WSBK,
WPIX,
WGN, and
KTLA (which are often affiliated with
The CW and
MyNetworkTV.) These services, however, require a
descrambler box. A study in 2006 said that the CRTC had licensed 44 digital specialty services and 5 ethnic specialty- and pay-television services across the country. Although this package has had some popularity, the traditional larger and more expensive cable packages remain the dominant subscription mode. Although this is sometimes controversial, Canadian cable companies are required by the CRTC to practise
simultaneous substitution when a Canadian channel and a non-Canadian channel (which is usually American) are airing the same program at the same time. Programming on an American service may also be blocked if it has significant bearing on a Canadian legal matter (e.g., one episode of
Law & Order, inspired by the trials of
Paul Bernardo and
Karla Homolka, was blocked in Canada) or if it interferes with a Canadian channel's broadcast rights (such as
James Bond movies airing on
Spike TV; the Canadian broadcast rights are held by
Bell Media.) Many cable companies also offer high speed
cable Internet service.
Notes ==Radio==