The
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, commonly known
as the CBC, is a Canadian
crown corporation that serves as the
national public radio and television broadcaster. In French, it is
called
la Société Radio-Canada
(
Radio-Canada or
SRC). The
umbrella corporate brand is
CBC/Radio-Canada.
CBC is the oldest existing broadcasting service in Canada, first
established in its present form on November 2, 1936.
Radio services include
CBC Radio One, CBC Radio 2
, CBC Radio 3,
Première Chaîne,
Espace musique and the
international radio service Radio Canada
International. Television operations include
CBC Television,
Télévision de
Radio-Canada,
CBC News
Network,
le Réseau
de l'information,
ARTV (part
ownership),
Documentary and
Bold. The CBC operates services
for the Canadian
Arctic under the names
CBC North and
Radio Nord Québec. The CBC also
operates digital audio service
Galaxie and two main websites, one in each
official language; it owns 40% of
satellite radio broadcaster
Sirius Canada, which airs additional CBC
services including
CBC Radio 3 and
Bande à
part.
CBC/Radio-Canada offers programming in English, French and eight
Aboriginal languages on
its domestic radio service; in nine languages on its international
radio service,
Radio Canada
International; and in eight languages on its Web-based radio
service RCI Viva, a service for recent and aspiring immigrants to
Canada.
The financial structure and the nature of the CBC often place it in
the same category as other high-end national broadcasters, such as
the British broadcaster
BBC, although it should
be noted that unlike the BBC, the CBC employs commercial
advertising to supplement its federal funding on its television
broadcasts. Its radio service, like the BBC, is
commercial-free.
History
In 1929, the
Aird
Commission on
public
broadcasting recommended the creation of a national radio
broadcast network. A major concern was the growing influence of
American radio broadcasting as U.S.-based networks began to expand
into Canada.
Graham Spry and
Alan Plaunt lobbied intensely for the project on
behalf of the
Canadian Radio
League. In 1932 the government of
R.B. Bennett
established the CBC’s predecessor, the Canadian Radio Broadcasting
Commission (CRBC).
The CRBC took over a network of
radio
stations formerly set up by a federal Crown corporation, the
Canadian National Railway.
The network was used to broadcast programming to riders aboard its
passenger trains, with coverage primarily in central and eastern
Canada. On November 2, 1936, the CRBC became a full
Crown corporation and gained its present
name.
Leonard Brockington was
the CBC’s first chairman.
For the next few decades, the CBC was responsible for all
broadcasting innovation in Canada. It introduced
FM radio to Canada in 1946.
Television broadcasts
from the CBC began on September 6, 1952, with the opening of a
station in Montreal
, Quebec
(CBFT
), and a
station in Toronto
, Ontario
(CBLT
) opening two
days later. The CBC’s first privately owned affiliate television station, CKSO
in Sudbury
, Ontario
, launched in
October 1953. (At the time, all private stations were
expected to affiliate with the CBC, a condition that relaxed in
1960–61 with the launch of
CTV.)
From 1944 to 1962 the CBC operated two English-language AM radio
services known as the
Trans-Canada
Network and the
Dominion
Network. The latter, carrying lighter programs including
American radio shows, was dissolved in 1962, while the former
became known as CBC Radio. (In the late 1990s, CBC Radio was
rebranded as
CBC Radio One and CBC
Stereo as CBC Radio Two.
The latter was re-branded slightly in 2007 as
CBC Radio
2
.)
On July 1, 1958, CBC’s television signal was extended from coast to
coast. The first Canadian tv show shot in colour was the CBC’s own
The Forest Rangers in
1963. However, colour television broadcasts did not begin until
July 1, 1966, and full-colour service began in 1974. In 1978, CBC
became the first broadcaster in the world to use an orbiting
satellite for television service, linking Canada “from east to west
to north.”
Frontier Coverage Package
Starting in 1967 and continuing until the mid-1970s, the CBC
provided limited television service to remote and northern
communities. Transmitters were built in a few locations and carried
a four-hour selection of black-and-white videotaped programs each
day. The tapes were flown into communities to be shown, then
transported to other communities, often by the “bicycle” method
used in
television
syndication. Transportation delays ranged from one week for
larger centres to almost a month for small communities.
The first
FCP station was started in Yellowknife
in 1967, the second in Whitehorse
in 1968. Additional stations were added from
1969 to 1972. Most stations were fitted for the Anik satellite
signal during 1973, carrying 12 hours of colour programming.
Broadcasts were geared to either the Atlantic time zone (UTC−4 or
−3) or the Pacific time zone (UTC−8 or −7) even though the audience
resided in communities in time zones varying from UTC−5 to
UTC−8.
Some of
these stations used non-CBC callsigns such
as CFWH-TV
in
Whitehorse, while some others used the standard CB_T
callsign.
It would be many years before TV programs originated in the north
without the help of the west, starting with one half-hour per week
in the 1980s with
Focus North and graduating to a daily
half-hour newscast,
Northbeat, in the late 1990s.
CBC Television slogans
- 1966: “Television is CBC”
- 1970 (ca.): “When you watch, watch the best”
- 1977: “Bringing Canadians Together”
- 1980: “Now The We Are the CBC”
- 1984: “Look to us for good things” (general)/”Good to Know”
(news and public affairs)
- 1988–1989: “The Best on the Box”
- 1990–1991: “CBC and You”
- 1992–1994: “Go Public”/”CBC: Public Broadcasting” (that season,
the CBC emphasized the fact that they are a public
broadcaster)
- 1995–2001: “Television to Call Our Own”
- 2002–2007: “Canada’s Own”
- 2007 to present: “Canada Lives Here”
- 2009 to present: Mon monde est à Radio-Canada,SRCEnglish Translation : My world is on CBC
Logos
Image:CBC_Logo_1940-1958.png|This is the original logo of the CBC,
used between 1940 and 1958. It features a map of Canada and a
thunderbolt design used to symbolize
broadcasting.Image:CBC_Logo_1958-1966.png|The CBC used this logo at
the end of network programs between 1958 and 1974. It consists
simply of the legends “CBC” and “Radio-Canada” overlaid on a map of
Canada. The version shown here was used by Radio-Canada, while the
CBC used a version with the legends
transposed.Image:CBC_Logo_1966-1974.svg|
This “Butterfly” logo was
designed for the CBC by Hubert Tison in 1966 to mark the network’s
progressing transition from black-and-white to colour television
much in the manner of the American NBC Television Network peacock
symbol. It
was used at the beginning of programs broadcast in colour, and was
used until all CBC TV programs had successfully switched to colour,
at which point it was replaced with “the gem”. A sketch on the CBC Television
program Wayne &
Shuster once referred to this as the logo of the “Cosmic
Butterfly
Corporation.”Image:CBC_Logo_1974-1986.svg|
This logo, officially known
internally as “the gem,” was designed for the CBC by graphic artist
Burton Kramer in 1974, and it is the most widely recognized symbol
of the corporation. (It was also dubbed "The
Exploding Pizza" in the press at the time, and is still sometimes
referred to that way today.) The appearance of this logo marked the
arrival of full-colour network television service.
The large shape in
the middle is the letter C, which stands for Canada, and the
radiating parts of the C symbolize broadcasting.
The theme music
for the 1974 CBC ident was a 3-note synthesized fanfare accompanied
by the voiceover “This is
CBC.”Image:CBC_Logo_1986-1992.svg|The logo was officially
changed to one colour, generally dark blue on white, or white on
dark blue in 1986. Print ads and most television promos, however,
have always used a single-colour version of this logo since
1974.Image:CBC Logo 1992-Present.svg|The logo was simplified in
1992. Since the early 2000s, it has also appeared in white
(sometimes red) on a textured or coloured background.
When the creation of the CBC “gem” logo was in its planning stages
in 1974, designer Burton Kramer put together an early version of
the network’s ID. In it, the C part of the logo zoomed away from
the viewer toward the centre of the screen, followed by the other
parts of the logo in similar fashion until the complete logo formed
on a black background, with the name “Television Canada” (possibly
a planned change of name for the CBC’s television units at the
time) appearing beneath it.
Although that version of the network ID was not used, the
well-known version of the ID (with the logo kaleidoscopically
morphing into its form while radiating outward from the centre of
the screen on a blue background) made its TV debut on the CBC’s
English and French networks in December 1974. Some refer to this
animated version as “The Exploding Pizza.” The jingle initially
used for the ID was a three-note synthesized jingle with an
announcer saying “This is CBC” or
«Ici Radio-Canada» at the end of the ID, but that
short-lived jingle was replaced around 1976 by the more well-known
eleven-note jingle, which lasted until December 31, 1985.
The updated one-colour version of the gem logo was introduced on
January 1, 1986, and with it was introduced a new series of
computer graphic-generated TV IDs for CBC and Radio-Canada. These
IDs consisted of different background colours corresponding to the
time of day behind a translucent CBC gem logo, accompanied by
different arrangements of the CBC’s new, orchestrated five-note
jingle.When the CBC logo was updated to its current form in 1992,
new TV IDs were introduced in November that year, also using CG.
Nicknames
As the oldest currently operating Canadian broadcaster, and still
the largest in terms of national availability of its various
networks, the nickname “Mother Corp” and variants thereof are
sometimes used in reference to the CBC.
A popular satirical nickname for the CBC, commonly used in the
pages of
Frank, is “the
Corpse.”
There is an
urban legend that a CBC
announcer once referred to the network on the air as the “Canadian
Broadcorping Castration,” which also sometimes remains in use as a
satirical nickname. Quotations of the supposed
spoonerism are wildly variable in detail on what
was said, when it was said or even who the announcer was, but there
is no evidence to confirm the truth of the story. The only known
recording of this phrase being spoken was created by American radio
producer
Kermit Schaefer for one of
his best-selling
Pardon My Blooper
record albums in the 1950s, and is not in fact a real recording of
a CBC broadcast.
Some have referred to the CBC as the “Corporate Broadcasting
Corporation” for an alleged
free market
bias, though the CBC is largely publicly funded.
The CBC was also jokingly called
BBC
Canada during the 2005 lockout by Canadians and CBC workers due
to the large amount of British content then aired in place of the
regular schedule.
The CBC has also been mistakenly referred to as the Canadian
Broadcasting Company.
Corporation
Mandate
The
1991 Broadcasting Act states that...
...the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, as the
national public broadcaster, should provide radio and television
services incorporating a wide range of programming that informs,
enlightens and entertains;
...the programming provided by the Corporation should:
- be predominantly and distinctively Canadian,
- reflect Canada and its regions to national and regional
audiences, while serving the special needs of those regions,
- actively contribute to the flow and exchange of cultural
expression,
- be in English and in French, reflecting the different needs and
circumstances of each official language community, including the
particular needs and circumstances of English and French linguistic
minorities,
- strive to be of equivalent quality in English and French,
- contribute to shared national consciousness and identity,
- be made available throughout Canada by the most appropriate and
efficient means and as resources become available for the purpose,
and
- reflect the multicultural and multiracial nature of
Canada.
Management
As a
crown corporation, the CBC
operates at arm’s length (autonomously) from the government in its
day-to-day business.
The corporation is governed by the
Broadcasting Act of 1991, under a Board of
Directors and is directly responsible to Parliament
through the Department of Canadian
Heritage. General management of the organization is in
the hands of a President, who is appointed by the Prime
Minister.
Board of Directors
In accordance with the Broadcasting Act, the Board of Directors is
responsible for the management of the Corporation. The Board is
made up of 12 members, including the Chair and the President and
CEO. As of November 2009, the board consists of 12 white
members:
- Timothy Casgrain – Chair,
Board of Directors; Toronto, Ontario
- Hubert Lacroix – President
and CEO; Montreal, Quebec
- Linda Black – member, Law
Enforcement Review Board of Alberta; Calgary, Alberta
- George Cooper –
senior partner, McInnes Cooper; Halifax, Nova Scotia
- Joseph Handley – former
premier of the Northwest Territories; Yellowknife, Northwest
Territories
- Peter
Herrndorf – President and CEO, National Arts
Centre
; Ottawa, Ontario
- Patricia McIver – chartered
accountant with Richardson Partners; Vancouver, British
Columbia
- Trina
McQueen – professor of Broadcast Management, Schulich
School of Business
, York
University
; Toronto,
Ontario
- Brian Mitchell – managing
partner, Mitchell Gattuso; Montreal, Quebec
- Rémi Racine – chairman and
CEO, Artificial Mind & Movement; Montreal, Quebec
- Edna Turpin – educator; St.
John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
- John Fitzgerald
Young – Dean of the College of Arts, Social and Health
Sciences at the University of Northern British Columbia, Senior
Fellow at the International Center for Law and Religion Studies at
Brigham Young University
Presidents
Ombudsmen
English
French
Finance
For the fiscal year 2006, the CBC received a total of $1.53 billion
from all revenue sources, including government funding,
subscription fees, advertising revenue, and other revenue (e.g.
real estate).
Funding
Among its revenue sources for the year ending March 31, 2006, the
CBC received $946 million in its “permanent” funding from the
federal government, as well as $60 million in one-time
supplementary funding for programming. However, this supplementary
funding has been repeated annually, on a year-to-year basis, for a
number of years. This totals just over a billion dollars annually
and is a source of heated debate.
CBC’s funding differs from that of the public broadcasters of many
European nations, which collect a
licence fee, or those in the United
States, such as
PBS and
NPR,
which receive some public funding but rely to a large extent on
voluntary contributions from individual viewers and
listeners.
To supplement this funding, the CBC’s television networks and
websites sell advertising, while cable/satellite-only services such
as Newsworld additionally collect subscriber fees, in line with
their privately owned counterparts. CBC’s radio services do not
sell advertising except when required by law (for example, to
political parties during federal elections).
For the fiscal year 2006, the CBC received a total of $1.53 billion
from all revenue sources. Expenditures for the year included $616
million for English TV, $402 million for French TV, $126 million
for specialty channels, a total of $348 million for radio services
in both languages, $88 million for management and technical costs,
and $124 million for “
amortization of property and
equipment.” Some of this spending was derived from amortization of
funding from previous years.
The network’s defenders note that the CBC’s mandate differs from
private media’s, particularly in its focus on Canadian content;
that much of the public funding actually goes to the radio
networks; and that the CBC is responsible for the full cost of most
of its prime-time programming, while private networks can fill up
most of their prime-time schedules with American series acquired
for a fraction of their production cost. CBC supporters also claim
that additional, long-term funding is required to provide better
Canadian dramas and improved local programming.
The $616 million budget for CBC Television is in fact smaller than,
for example, the $656 million in revenues earned by private
broadcaster
CanWest Global for its
various television operations in fiscal 2006, which trailed rival
CTV’s ratings by a wide margin.
Although the CBC has a similar remit to that of the BBC, and
therefore has a unique national responsibility to advance Canadian
culture without commercial objects, the CBC's budget is a fraction
the size of the BBC's budget. The BBC received about £3.1 billion
(more than $8 billion) in licence fees during 2007/8 compared to
the $946 million the CBC received from the public purse and which
was split between French language and English language
services.
Services
News
CBC News is the largest broadcast newsgathering operation in
Canada, providing services to CBC radio as well as
CBC News Network, local supper-hour
newscasts, CBC News Online, and
Air
Canada’s in-flight entertainment. New CBC News services also
proving popular such as news alerts to mobile phones and PDAs.
Desktop news alerts, e-mail alerts, and digital TV alerts are also
available.
Radio
CBC Radio
has four separate services, two in English, known as CBC Radio One and CBC Radio 2
, and two in French, known as Première Chaîne and
Espace musique. CBC
Radio One and
Première Chaîne focus on
news and information programming, but they air some
music programs, variety shows, comedy, and sports programming.
Historically, CBC Radio One has broadcast primarily on the
AM band, but many stations have moved over to
FM. Over the years, a number of CBC radio
transmitters with a majority of them on the AM band have either
moved to FM or had shutdown completely. CBC Radio 2 and
Espace
musique, found exclusively on FM, air arts and cultural
programming, with a focus on
music (mostly
classical and
jazz).
CBC Radio also operates two
shortwave
services. One,
Radio Nord
Québec, broadcasts domestically to Northern Quebec on a static
frequency of 9625
kHz, and the other,
Radio Canada
International, provides broadcasts to the United States and
around the world in eight languages.
Additionally, the
Radio One stations in St. John’s
and Vancouver
operate shortwave relay transmitters, broadcasting
at 6160 kHz. Some have suggested that CBC/Radio-Canada
create a new high-power shortwave
digital radio service for more
effective coverage of isolated areas.
In November, 2004, the CBC, in partnership with
Standard Broadcasting and
Sirius Satellite Radio, applied to
the CRTC for a license to introduce
satellite radio service to Canada. The
CRTC
approved the subscription radio application, as well as two others
for satellite radio service, on June 16, 2005.
Sirius Canada launched on December 1, 2005,
with a number of CBC Radio channels, including the new services
CBC Radio 3 and
Bande à part.
In some areas, especially national or provincial parks, the CBC
also operates an
AM or
FM transmitter rebroadcasting weather alerts from
the
Meteorological
Service of Canada’s
Weatheradio
Canada service.
Television
The CBC operates two national broadcast television networks –
CBC Television in English, and
la
Télévision de
Radio-Canada in French. Like private broadcasters, both
those networks sell advertising, but offer more Canadian-produced
programming. Most CBC television stations, including those in the
major cities, are owned and operated by the CBC itself and carry a
common schedule, aside from local programming.
Some stations that broadcast from smaller cities are private
affiliates of the CBC, that is, stations
which are owned by commercial broadcasters and air a predominantly
CBC schedule. However, most affiliates of the English network opt
out of some network programs to air local programming or more
popular foreign programs acquired from other broadcasters.
Private
affiliates of the French network, all of which are located in
Quebec
, rarely have the means to provide alternate
programming. Such private affiliates are becoming
increasingly rare.
CBC
television stations in Nunavut
, the Northwest Territories
and Yukon
tailor their
programming mostly to the local native population, and broadcast in
many native languages, such as Inuktitut,
Gwichʼin, and Dene.
One of the most popular shows is the weekly Saturday night
broadcast of
NHL hockey games. In English, the program is known as
Hockey Night in
Canada, and in French, it was called
La Soirée du hockey. Both
shows began in 1952. The French edition was discontinued in 2004,
though Radio-Canada stations outside of Quebec simulcast some
Saturday night games produced by
RDS until 2006. The network suffered
considerable public embarrassment when it lost the rights to the
show's theme music following a protracted lawsuit launched by the
song's composer and publishers.
Ratings for CBC Television have declined in recent years.
In
Quebec
, where the majority speaks French, la
Télévision de Radio-Canada is popular and garners some of the
highest ratings in the province.
Both terrestrial networks have also begun to roll out
high-definition television feeds,
with selected
NHL and
CFL games produced in HD for the
English network.
The CBC also operates three specialty television channels –
CBC News Network, an
English-language news channel;
RDI, a French-language news
channel; and
Bold, a
Category 1 digital service. It
owns a managing interest in the Francophone arts service
ARTV, and (82%) of the digital channel,
Documentary
Online
The CBC has two main websites. One is in English, at
CBC.ca, which was established in 1996; the other is
in French. The website allows the CBC to produce sections which
complement the various programs on television and radio.
Merchandising
Established in 2002, the CBC/Radio Canada
merchandising business operates retail locations and cbcshop.ca,
its educational sales department CBC Learning [10443] sells CBC
content and media to educational institutions, CBC Merchandising
also licenses brands such as Hockey Night in Canada and
Coronation
Street
.
Interactive television
CBC provides viewers with interactive on demand TV programs every
year through
digital-cable services
like
Rogers Cable.
Commercial services
CBC/Radio-Canada offers a 24-hour, 52-channel digital audio service
known as
Galaxie. The service is available
on
digital cable and
direct broadcast satellite
television providers across Canada. Some cable companies, as well
as
direct broadcast
satellite service provider
Shaw
Direct, carry only 20 of these 52 channels alongside
Max Trax, a competing 20-channel digital music
service offered by
Corus
Entertainment.
CBC Records is a Canadian record label
which distributes CBC programming, including live concert
performances and album transcripts of news and information
programming such as the
Massey
Lectures, in album format. Music albums on the label,
predominantly in the classical and jazz genres, are distributed
across Canada in commercial record stores, while albums containing
spoken word programming are predominantly distributed by the CBC's
own retail merchandising operations.
Miscellaneous
CBC provides news, business, weather and sports information on
Air Canada’s inflight entertainment as
Enroute Journal.
Unions
Unions representing employees at CBC/Radio-Canada include:
Labour issues
During the summer of 1981 there was a major disruption of CBC
programming as the technicians union, N.A.B.E.T. (National
Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians) went on strike.
Local newscasts were cut back to the bare minimum. This had the
effect of delaying the debut of
The Journal, which had
to wait until January 1982.
On August 15, 2005, 5,500 employees of the CBC (about 90%) were
locked out by CBC CEO
Robert Rabinovitch in a dispute over
future hiring practices. At issue were the rules governing the
hiring of contract workers in preference to full time hires.
The
locked-out employees were members of the Canadian Media Guild, representing all
production, journalistic and on-air personnel outside Quebec
and Moncton
, including several foreign correspondents.
While CBC services continued during the lockout, they were
comprised primarily of repeats, with news programming from the
BBC and newswires. Major CBC programs such as
The National and
Royal Canadian Air Farce were
not produced during the lockout; some non-CBC-owned programs seen
on the network, such as
The Red
Green Show, shifted to other studios. Meanwhile, the
locked-out employees produced podcasts and websites such as
CBCunplugged.com, which many credited with
swaying public opinion to the union’s side.
After a hiatus, talks re-opened. In addition, the Canadian public
was becoming irritated with the loss of quality of their publicly
funded service. On September 23, the
federal
minister of labour called Robert Rabinovitch and Arnold Amber
(the president of the CBC branch of the
Canadian Media Guild) to his office for
talks aimed at ending the dispute.
Late in the evening of October 2, 2005, it was announced that the
CBC management and staff had reached a tentative deal which
resulted in the CBC returning to normal operations on October 11.
Some speculated that the looming October 8 start date for the
network’s most important television property,
Hockey Night in Canada, had
acted as an additional incentive to resolve the dispute.
The CBC has been affected by a number of other labour disputes
since the late 1990s:
- A similar dispute, again involving all technicians outside
Quebec and Moncton, occurred in late 2001 and concluded by the end of the
year.
- In spring 2002, on-air staff in Quebec and Moncton (again, on
both English and French networks) were locked out by local
management, leaving, among other things, NHL
playoff games without commentary on French television.
While all labour disputes resulted in cut-back programming and
numerous repeat airings, the 2005 lockout may have been the most
damaging to CBC. All local programming in the affected regions was
cancelled and replaced by abbreviated national newscasts and
national radio morning shows.
BBC World
(television) and
World Service
(radio) and
Broadcast News feeds
were used to provide the remainder of original news content, and
the CBC website was comprised mainly of rewritten wire copy. Some
BBC staff protested against their material being used during the
CBC lockout. “The
NUJ
and
BECTU
will not tolerate their members’ work being used against colleagues
in Canada,” said a joint statement by BBC unions. The CMG
questioned whether, with its limited Canadian news
content, the CBC was meeting its legal requirements under the
Broadcasting Act and its
CRTC
licences.
Galaxie supplied some music content
for the radio networks. Tapes of previously-aired or -produced
documentaries, interviews and entertainment programs were also
aired widely. Selected television sports coverage, including that
of the
Canadian Football
League, continued, but without commentary.
As before, French-language staff outside of Quebec were also
affected by the 2005 lockout, although with Quebec producing the
bulk of the French networks’ programming, those networks were not
as visibly affected by the dispute apart from local programs.
Cultural significance
Since the 1970s, the CBC has not maintained the dominance in
broadcasting it formerly had, but it still plays an important role.
The CBC’s cultural influence, like that of many public
broadcasters, has waned in recent decades. This is partly due to
severe budget cuts by the Canadian federal government, which began
in the late 1980s and levelled off in the late 1990s. It is also
due to industry-wide fragmentation of TV audiences (the decline of
network TV generally, due to the rise in specialty channel
viewership, as well as the increase of non-TV entertainment options
such as video games, the Internet, etc.). Private networks in
Canada face the same competition, but their viewership is declining
more slowly than CBC Television’s.
In English-speaking Canada, the decline in CBC viewership can be
partly attributed to the fact that private TV networks primarily
rebroadcast popular American programming with substituted Canadian
advertising. American programs appear to attract higher audiences
than do much of the made-in-Canada programming that is a CBC
specialty.
Viewership on the CBC’s French TV network has also declined, mostly
because of stiff competition from private French-language networks.
Audience
fragmentation is another issue – French Canadians prefer home-grown
television programming, a vibrant Quebec
star system
is in place, and little American or foreign content airs on
French-language networks, public or private. On the other
hand, the CBC’s French-language
radio channel
is sometimes the top-
rated network.
In the case of breaking news, including
federal elections, the CBC may
still hold a slight edge. For instance, after
election night 2006, CBC
Television took out full-page newspaper ads claiming that 2.2
million Canadians watched their coverage, more than any other
broadcaster. However, in similar ads, CTV also claimed to be number
one, stating there was a CBC audience of only 1.2 million. In both
cases, the methodologies were not clear from the ads, such as
whether simulcasts on one or both of the networks’ news channels
(Newsworld for CBC,
Newsnet for CTV) were
counted.
The CBC was the only television network broadcasting in Canada
until the creation of ITO, a short-lived predecessor of today’s
CTV, in 1960; even then,
large parts of Canada did not receive CTV service until the late
1960s or early 1970s. The CBC also had the only national radio
network. Its cultural impact was therefore significant since many
Canadians had little or no choice for their information and
entertainment other than from these two powerful media.
Even after the advent of commercial television and radio, the CBC
has remained one of the main elements in Canadian popular culture
through its obligation to produce Canadian TV and radio
programming. The CBC has made programs for mass audiences and for
smaller audiences interested in drama, performance arts,
documentaries, current affairs, entertainment and sport.
The 1950s saw the CBC providing hands-on training and employment
for actors, writers, and directors in the developing field of its
television dramatic services, and later saw much of the talent
heading south to seek fame and fortune in New York and
Hollywood.
Competition from private broadcasters like
CTV,
Global, and other broadcast
television stations and specialty channels has lessened the CBC’s
reach, but nevertheless it remains a major influence on Canadian
popular culture. According to the corporation’s research, 92% of
Canadians consider the CBC an essential service.
CBC in other countries
Newsworld International
From 1994
to 2000, the CBC, in a venture with Power Broadcasting (former owner
of CKWS
in Kingston
), jointly owned two networks:
- Newsworld International
(NWI), an American cable channel that rebroadcast much of the
programming of CBC Newsworld (now known as CBC News Network)
- Trio, an arts and entertainment
channel
In 2000, CBC and Power Broadcasting sold these channels to
Barry Diller’s
USA
Networks. Diller’s company was later acquired by
Vivendi Universal, which in turn was
partially acquired by
NBC to form
NBC Universal. NBC Universal still owns the
Trio brand, which no longer has any association with the CBC (and,
as of the end of 2005, became an Internet-only broadband
channel).
However, the CBC continued to program NWI, with much of its
programming simulcast on the domestic Newsworld service. In late
2004, as a result of a further change in NWI’s ownership to the
INdTV consortium (including
Joel Hyatt and former
Vice-President of the United
States Al Gore), NWI ceased airing CBC
programming on August 1, 2005, when it was renamed
Current TV.
U.S. border audiences
In U.S.
border communities such as Bellingham
, Seattle
, Buffalo
, Detroit
and Burlington
, CBC radio and television stations can be received
over-the-air and have a
significant audience.
Some CBC programming is also rebroadcast on local radio, such as
New Hampshire Public
Radio. CBC television channels are available on cable systems
located near the Canadian border.
For example, CBET
Windsor
is available on cable systems in the Detroit, Michigan
and Toledo,
Ohio
area. CBUT
is
broadcast on Comcast in the Seattle
, Washington
area.
Hockey Night in
Canada is widely preferred to American television’s NHL
coverage in the border states and has a loyal following. Also, CBC
signals are not subject to FCC censorship. CBC’s
Olympic coverage is also well-received, as it
provides an alternative to
NBC’s coverage,
which, some have alleged, focuses too much on American athletes.
CBC’s Olympic coverage is also carried live, regardless of
broadcast time, compared to NBC’s tape delay. Also several of CBC's
original shows such as
Little Mosque on the
Prairie have large American viewership.
At night,
the AM radio transmissions of both CBC and SRC services can be
received over much of the northern portion of the United States,
from stations such as CBE in Windsor
, CBW in Winnipeg
and CBK
in Saskatchewan
.
Carriage of CBC News
On
September 11, 2001, several American broadcasters without their own
news operations, including C-SPAN, carried
the CBC’s coverage of the September 11, 2001 attacks in New
York City and Washington, D.C.
. In the days after September 11, C-SPAN
carried CBC’s nightly newscast,
The National, anchored by
Peter Mansbridge. The quality of this
coverage was recognized specifically by the
Canadian Journalism
Foundation; editor-in-chief
Tony
Burman later accepted the Excellence in Journalism Award
(2004) – for “rigorous professional practice, accuracy,
originality and public accountability” – on behalf of the
service.
C-SPAN has also carried CBC’s coverage of major events affecting
Canadians, including:
Several
PBS stations also air some CBC
programming, especially
The Red
Green Show. However, these programs are syndicated by
independent distributors and are not governed by the PBS “common
carriage” policy.
Other American broadcast networks sometimes air CBC reports,
especially for Canadian events of international significance.
For
example, in the early hours after the Swissair
Flight 111
disaster, CNN aired CBC’s live
coverage of the event. Also in the late 1990s,
CNN Headline News aired a few CBC reports
of events that were not significant outside Canada.
CBC Radio
Some CBC Radio One programs, such as
Definitely Not the Opera and
As It Happens, also air on
some stations associated with
American Public Media.
With the launch of
Sirius Canada in
December 2005, some of the CBC’s radio networks (including Radio
Canada International and Sirius-exclusive Radio Three and
Bande
à part channels) are available to
Sirius subscribers in the United
States.
Caribbean and Bermuda
Several Caribbean nations carry feeds of CBC TV:
Controversies
Closed captioning
CBC Television was an early leader in broadcasting programming with
closed captioning for
deaf and
hard-of-hearing
viewers, airing its first captioned programming in 1981. Captioned
programming in Canada began with the airing of
Clown White
in English- and French-language versions on CBC Television and
Radio-Canada, respectively. (Most sources list that event as
occurring in 1981, while others list the year as 1982.)
In 1997, Henry Vlug, a deaf lawyer in Vancouver, filed a complaint
with the
Canadian Human
Rights Commission alleging that an absence of captioning on
some programming on CBC Television and Newsworld infringed on his
rights as a person with a disability. A ruling in 2000 by the
Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, which later heard the case, sided
with Vlug and found that an absence of captioning constituted
discrimination on the basis of disability. The Tribunal ordered CBC
Television and Newsworld to caption the entirety of their broadcast
days, “including television shows, commercials, promos and
unscheduled news flashes, from sign-on until sign-off.”
The ruling recognized that “there will inevitably be glitches with
respect to the delivery of captioning” but that “the rule should be
full captioning.” In a negotiated settlement to avoid appealing the
ruling to the
Federal Court of
Canada, CBC agreed to commence 100% captioning on CBC
Television and Newsworld beginning November 1, 2002. CBC Television
and Newsworld are apparently the only broadcasters in the world
required to caption the entire broadcast day. However, published
evidence asserts that CBC is not providing the 100% captioning
ordered by the Tribunal.
In 2004, retired Canadian Senator
Jean-Robert Gauthier, a hard-of-hearing
person, filed a complaint with the Canadian Human Rights Commission
against Radio-Canada concerning captioning, particularly the
absence of real-time captioning on newscasts and other live
programming. As part of the settlement process, Radio-Canada agreed
to submit a report on the state of captioning, especially real-time
captioning, on Radio-Canada and
RDI.
The report, which was
the subject of some criticism, proposed an arrangement with
Cité
Collégiale
, a community college in Ottawa, to train more
French-language real-time captioners.
English-language
specialty networks owned
or co-owned by CBC, including
Bold
and
Documentary, have the
lower captioning requirements typical of larger Canadian
broadcasters (90% of the broadcast day by the end of both networks’
licence terms).
ARTV, the French-language
specialty network co-owned by CBC, has a maximum captioning
requirement of 53%.
“Beyond the Red Wall”
In November 2007, the CBC replaced their documentary ‘‘Beyond the
Red Wall: Persecution of
Falun Gong’’ at
the last minute with a rerun episode regarding President
Pervez Musharaf in Pakistan. Originally, the
broadcaster had said to the press that “the crisis in Pakistan was
considered more urgent and much more newsworthy,” but sources from
within the network itself had stated that the Chinese government
had called the Canadian Embassy and demanded repeatedly that the
program be taken off the air. The documentary in question was to
air on Tuesday, November 6, 2007 on
CBC
Newsworld, but was replaced. The documentary aired two weeks
later on November 20, 2007, after editing.
Personalities
Widely known CBC alumni
- Dan Aykroyd in Coming Up Rosie as Purvis Bickle
- Jim Bittermann, Toronto based
reporter; now CNN senior correspondent
- Denise Bombardier, host of,
among others, the shows Présent international, Le
point, Noir sur blanc (1979–1983) and
Trait-d’union (1987–1988)
- Stephan Bureau participated in
Telejeans as a teenager and later hosted Le Téléjournal/Le
point(1998–2003)
- Bill Cameron, correspondent and
anchor
- John Candy in Coming Up Rosie as Wally
Wypyzypywchuk
- Adrienne Clarkson, a former
Governor General of
Canada, hosted shows such as Take
30 and the fifth
estate
- Joan Donaldson, former journalist
and producer of CBC Newsworld
- Max Ferguson, radio and TV
announcer for over 50 years.
- Dave Foley, writer and actor on
Kids in the Hall from
1989–1994, starred in the NBC sitcom
Newsradio
- Michael J. Fox as The Master in The Magic Lie series, 1978
- Barbara Frum, host of As It Happens (1971–1981) and
The Journal
(1982–1992)
- Lorne Greene, CBC’s chief radio
announcer and newsreader (1939–1942)
- Peter Gzowski, prominent
journalist and author, host of Morningside
- Jay Ingram hosted Quirks and Quarks from 1979 to 1992
- Judith Jasmin
started working for Radio-Canada in the late 1940s, co-hosted
Carrefour with René
Lévesque on Radio-Canada (radio);, hosted Reportage
and Conférence de presse; became the first woman named
foreign correspondent for Radio-Canada at the UN
(1966), and then in Washington, DC
.
- Michaëlle Jean, Governor General of Canada,
hosted the documentary series The
Passionate Eye and Grands
Reportages and produced and hosted individual documentary
films
- Peter Jennings, at age nine,
hosted a kids’ program called Peter’s People on CBC Radio
in Ottawa
- Kristin Kreuk and Laurel
Yeung, in the teen soap Edgemont, 2001
- René Lecavalier, war
correspondent (World War II), later
hosted La Soirée du
hockey from its beginning on Radio-Canada television on
October 11, 1952 (Montreal
Canadiens vs. Detroit Red
Wings) until the 1970s
- René Lévesque,
journalist for Radio-Canada from after
World War II (during which he served as
war correspondent for the US Army) to 1960.
Lévesque covered such events as the Korean
War (1951–1953) and hosted Point
de mire. He moved on, becoming a prominent cabinet
minister in Quebec
’s Liberal
Government under Jean Lesage (1960), and
later Premier of Quebec (Parti Québécois,
1976).
- Mark McKinney, writer and actor in
Kids in the Hall from
1989–1994
- Lorne Michaels in The Hart and Lorne Terrific
Hour, 1970–1971
- Anne Murray appeared on
Singalong Jubilee, in the 1960s.
- Mike Myers in Range Ryder and the Calgary
Kid, 1977; guest role on King of Kensington
- Knowlton Nash, prominent
newsreader and host
- Catherine O’Hara in
Coming Up Rosie as Myrna
Wallbacker
- Christopher Plummer starred
in a CBC TV production of Othello
in 1951
- Lloyd Robertson hosted CBC
Weekend in 1969 and anchored CBC’s The National from 1970 to 1976
- Fred Rogers’ Misterogers
show (CBC, 1962) show became Mister Rogers’
Neighborhood on NET (later PBS) in 1968
- Percy Saltzman, weatherman, was
the first person to have appeared on CBC Television in 1952
- Jeanne Sauvé, a Governor General of Canada, was a
freelance journalist for CBC Radio starting in 1952
- Lorne Saxberg, original CBC
Newsworld anchor
- Martin Short in Peep Show
(“Goldberg is Waiting” episode)
- Lister Sinclair, long time host
of CBC radio program Ideas
- Cy Strange, host of As It Happens and Fresh
Air for many decades
- Donald
Sutherland started at age 14 with CBC Radio in Halifax
, Nova
Scotia
- Jan Tennant, the first woman to host
The National when she
appeared as a substitute and weekend newsreader
- Scott Thompson writer and actor
in Kids in the Hall from
1989–1994
- Alex Trebek, Reach for the Top co-host,
Strategy host,
1969
- Pamela Wallin, producer on CBC
Radio. Her first TV work was on CTV’s Canada AM. She later appeared on CBC
Television as cohost of Prime Time
News and later as host of Pamela Wallin Live.
- Al Waxman, star of the 1970s sitcom
King of Kensington,
starred on CBS drama Cagney & Lacey
See also
References
- Canadian Communications Foundation.
- YouTube – CBC Butterfly
- YouTube – CBC Television ID (70s-86)
- Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Logo and TV
Identification storyboard
- Colloquialism
- Playback :: The cuts continue at Mother
Corp
- Behind the CBC’s Hit Piece on Medicare ::
Mediacheck :: thetyee.ca
- CNN Transcript – Breaking News: CBC Reports Former
Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau Dead – September 28,
2000
- Board of Directors, CBC/Radio-Canada, accessed
- CBC Annual Report 2005-2006
- Combined revenues for Global, CH, and specialty channels such
as TVtropolis.
CanWest does not release publicly its expenditures for its
TV operations, nor does it break out figures for individual
channels.
- CanWest fiscal 2006 year-end results (press
release)
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/annualreport/
- CBC-SRC
North/Radio-Canada/Radio One Audibility Improvement
Proposal
- "How CBC Lost Its Hockey Theme" The Tyee June 13,
2008[1].
- [2]
- Radio-Canada.ca
- [3]
- [4]
- [5]
- CBC/Radio-Canada – History –
1980s
- Welcome to.../Bienvenue à
-
http://www.cab-acr.ca/english/social/captioning/captioning.pdf#search=%22%22clown%20white%22%20captioning%22
- Vlug v. CBC
- Canadian Human Rights Commission :: Resources ::
News Room :: News Releases
- Background: CBC captioning errors and omissions
(Joe Clark: Media access)
- Canadian Human Rights Commission :: Resources ::
What’s New
- Canadian Human Rights Commission :: Resources ::
News Room :: Télévision de Radio-Canada’s Working
Committee
- Response to report on captioning on French CBC
channels (Joe Clark: Media Access)
- Decision CRTC 2000-453
- Decision CRTC 2000-455
- Decision CRTC 2000-386
- Beyond the Red Wall: The Persecution of Falun Gong,
Cbc.ca, November 20, 2007.
- CBC still tinkering with Falun Gong
documentary, TheStar.com, November 20, 2007.
- CTV.ca | Jennings remembered as ‘the best of the
breed’
- Christopher Plummer Article
- [6]
External links