The network has long been a distant third in the ratings to TVA and
Ici Radio-Canada Télé. During the analogue era, most of its affiliates operated on the
UHF band, and operated at moderate-to-low power compared to their TVA and Radio-Canada counterparts. Even in digital, most V affiliates do not have nearly the reach of their TVA and Radio-Canada counterparts. However, it has produced a number of major hit series in Quebec.
News From the network's launch to its 2008 restructuring, the nightly
Le Grand Journal formed the core of Noovo's news programming when it was named TQS. As with the channel per-se, Le Grand Journal failed to establish itself as a hard competitor to the very popular TVA and Radio-Canada newscasts, trying on several different formats to mixed success; however, it launched the careers of many Quebec TV news presenters who would later land bigger jobs at other radio and TV outlets. The newscast would become a factor on the ratings when popular anchor and political commentator
Jean-Luc Mongrain was hired as lead presenter in 1999, and the show adopted a harded-edge, tabloid and more aggressive approach, with a mix of hard news, commentary and heavy viewer interaction; the move coincided with TQS moving all of its daily programming to a street-front studio at Quebecor's headquarters. He anchored the program from August 30, 1999, until its final edition aired on August 29, 2008. The 10 p.m. edition, presented by Denis Lévesque, became increasingly known for its aggressive and often confrontative debates on hot topics, leading to it regularly beating
Le Téléjournal on the ratings. Lévesque left TQS shortly before the start of the 2005 season, over a controversy regarding the hiring of presenter Isabelle Maréchal to serve as commentator and newsreader; in an interview with
La Presse, he told he didn't want to do "spectacle information", as Maréchal was mostly known for presenting entertainment programming. Eventually, she anchored the 10 p.m. edition during that season, before being replaced by
Benoît Dutrizac, freshly hired from
Télé-Québec, who anchored a 10 p.m. news talk show,
Dutrizac, focusing on interviews and analysis, with the news element relegated to the final part of the slot. The format was not a success, with a conventional news bulletin reinstated in 2007, with Esther Bégin being hired from
LCN and presenting it until the closure of the news service. News programming continued in a reduced form on V, however, outsourced to independent producer ADN5. News summaries of approximately three minutes were inserted into the network's morning and noontime programming, along with a 30-minute newscast weekend evenings. In 2012, the provision on news programming was taken over by a newly formed production division of Montreal-based publishing company
Transcontinental, which took over the production of these updates, alongside producing a newly created news-oriented
morning show,
Ça commence bien !, which attempted to attract viewers away from TVA's
Salut, Bonjour! by showcasing content from the group's print and magazine brands. Even after suffering three different host transitions and numerous format changes to make it look closer to its rival, the show would be ultimately unsuccessful and eventually cancelled in 2015. By 2017, the network's news programming evolved after production was taken over by another producer, Attraction Images, now as a full-fledged half-hour bulletin under the title
NVL (an abbreviation of "nouvelles", the French term for news), featuring a voiceover anchorless format that blended both network-wide and regionalized news reports similar to the current format of
CityNews on the English Canadian
Citytv network. As part of the sale to Bell Media, the company stated that it planned to add in-house newscasts on all five O&O stations, with 90 minutes per-day on weekdays in Montreal and Quebec City, 60 minutes elsewhere, and half-hour weekend newscasts in all markets. The network's other owned-and-operated stations carry their own regional editions, all broadcast from a centralised studio in Quebec City with Blais anchoring, but still featuring footage and two-ways from locally based reporters; its affiliate stations will continue to produce their own local newscasts in lieu of the regional editions. Lacking the resources of its well-established competitors, Noovo is leveraging the resources of the
Énergie,
Rouge and Boom-branded local radio stations owned by Bell Media to complement its own reporting; the combined resources are being promoted under the Noovo Info moniker.
Le Fil would have a more informal and personality-based style in comparison to its competitors, with a focus on long-form and human interest stories, analysis and commentary, as well as viewer interaction on social media. Initial reviews were mixed, praising the story selection and unique presentation, but criticising the over-recycling of segments and lack of appropriate imagery during news briefs, as well as no international news, sports or weather segments. Due to low ratings, the early evening edition began adding over time some more conventional elements to increase the pace, whilst retaining some of the magazine elements, making it closer to a conventional newscast. In May 2022, Mercier announced her departure from
Le Fil after signing a deal with Bell Media to produce and present long-form documentaries for the network; she was later replaced by former
LCN anchor and
TVA reporter Marie-Christine Bergeron, who took over the anchor chair on August 29. The appointment of Bergeron led to the broadcast increasingly taking on a more conventional format, with more live reports and breaking news coverage; additionally, Michel Bherer began presenting a debate and analysis program,
Les débatteurs de Noovo, after the late edition of
Le Fil, which launched on September 12. In August 2024, Marie-Claude Paradis-Desfossés, a journalist formerly associated with
TVA Nouvelles, was announced as joining
Noovo Info. In the same month, the network also reintroduced a half-hour noon newscast, titled
Noovo Info 12. In December 2024, Bell Media announced that it would merge its French and English language newsrooms in Quebec, bringing the Noovo Info and radio news operations together with
CTV News Montreal and
CJAD.
Sports Noovo has long aired a nighttime sports show, beginning with
Sports Plus (1986–1998), then
110% (1998–2009), followed by ''L'attaque à 5'' (2009–2010). Its carriage of live sporting events began with
Super Bowl XXI in 1987. It has carried games of the
National Hockey League, including the
Quebec Nordiques from 1988 to 1994 and the
Montreal Canadiens from 1994 to 2002. It also aired games of the
Montreal Expos from 1994 to 1998. Noovo carries boxing events organized by Groupe Yvon Michel. In February 2005, the network acquired rights to the
2010 Winter Olympics and
2012 Summer Olympics as part of
Canada's Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium (a joint venture of CTVglobemedia and
Rogers Media) as the French broadcast television partner, in partnership with
RDS (a sister via CTVglobemedia's stake at the time). It shared morning coverage of the 2010 Winter Olympics with RDS, followed by its own afternoon and evening programming. As the network's carriage was limited outside of Quebec (unlike previous rights holder
Télévision de Radio-Canada), the non-profit public affairs network
CPAC (which has must-carry status nationwide) received special authorization from the CRTC to simulcast the coverage in order to ensure nationwide availability.
Movies The network is known to many viewers for
Bleu Nuit, a showcase of softcore
pornography which formerly broadcast late Saturday nights, similar to
The Baby Blue Movie that once aired on
Toronto's
Citytv.
Prime time The network's prime time schedule currently consists predominantly of reality and non-fiction programming, scheduled around
Julie Snyder's nightly talk show
La Semaine des 4 Julie (The Week of the 4 Julies) at 9 p.m. Scripted entertainment programming currently consists primarily of
dubbed versions of English Canadian or American comedy or drama series, rather than original francophone comedy or drama; however, a few Quebec-produced comedy or drama series are also broadcast, including
Pour toujours, plus un jour (Forever, Not Another Day),
Mon ex à moi (My Ex),
Entre deux draps (Pillow Talk) and
Max et Livia (Max and Livia).
Programming outside Montreal and Quebec City Since the rebranding of the TQS network to V, on August 31, 2009, V's three
owned and operated stations (O&Os) outside
Montreal and
Quebec City have dropped all non-network programming and become de facto repeaters of flagship
CFJP-DT in Montreal. Unlike O&O stations, non-owned affiliates of the network, such as
CFGS-DT in
Gatineau/
Ottawa,
CJPC-DT in
Rimouski,
CFTF-DT in
Rivière-du-Loup and
CFVS-DT in
Val-d'Or/
Rouyn-Noranda, continue to broadcast local programming. ==Coverage==