CTV News
CTV News logo (2013-present) | |
Industry | Media |
---|---|
Genre | News |
Headquarters | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Area served | National |
Key people | Wendy Freeman, President[1] |
Owner | Bell Media |
Parent | CTV Television Network |
Website |
www |
CTV News is the news division of the CTV Television Network in Canada. The name CTV News is also applied as the title of local and regional newscasts on the network's owned-and-operated stations (O&Os), which are closely tied to the national news division. Local newscasts on CTV Two are also branded as CTV News, although in most cases they are managed separately from the newscasts on the main CTV network.
National programs
CTV's national news division produces the following programs:
- CTV National News, the nightly newscast anchored by Lisa LaFlamme (weekdays) and Sandie Rinaldo (weekends);
- W5, a weekly newsmagazine series;
- Question Period, a weekly news and interview series;.
CTV News also operates the national 24-hour news channel CTV News Channel and the 24-hour national business news channel Business News Network, both of which are available across Canada on cable and satellite.
The news division produced the weekday morning news and entertainment program Canada AM from 1972 to October 2015, when responsibility for the program was transferred to Bell Media In-House Productions, the division responsible for CTV's other daytime lifestyle programming, until the program's cancellation in June 2016.[2] Canada AM's replacement Your Morning is produced by Bell Media In-House Productions, with news content provided by CTV News.[3]
Local programs
In most markets, local CTV News programs air at noon, 6 p.m., and 11:00 p.m. (CTV Two) or 11:30 p.m. (CTV) on weekdays, and at 6 p.m. and 11:00 p.m. / 11:30 p.m. on weekends. In selected markets, 5:00 and/or 5:30 p.m. newscasts are also produced, and several CTV stations in western Canada (and some CTV Two stations in eastern Canada) produce local morning newscasts under the title CTV Morning Live.
In 1998, shortly following the merger of the CTV network with Baton Broadcasting, local news branding on the CTV O&Os was unified with network news presentation, with newscast titles standardized under the format "(call sign) News", e.g. CFTO News for the Toronto station. By late 2005 the O&Os' local newscasts had been renamed CTV News.
Beginning in February 2014, local programs were again rebranded using region-specific on-air titles such as CTV News Toronto. At the same time the CTV and CTV Two O&O stations received a new graphics package, which is in a blue and white color scheme, a revised logo (similar to the ones already in use on CTV News Channel and CTV National News), and new theme music.
National aggregate ratings published by BBM Canada refer to the local broadcasts collectively as CTV Evening News, CTV Late News, CTV Noon News, etc., although these titles are not used on-air. Since most CTV affiliates are owned by the network, CTV offers the opportunity to buy national ads on local programming across its O&Os, making these aggregate ratings useful for advertisers.
Local CTV News programs are produced in the following markets:
- Barrie (CKVR)
- Calgary (CFCN) (in HD)
- Edmonton (CFRN) (in HD)
- Greater Sudbury (CICI)
- Halifax (CJCH / CTV Two Atlantic) (in HD)
- Kitchener (CKCO)
- London (CFPL)
- Montreal (CFCF) (in HD)
- Ottawa (CJOH / CHRO) (in HD)
- Regina (CKCK) (in HD)
- Saskatoon (CFQC) (in HD)
- Toronto (CFTO) (in HD)
- Vancouver (CIVT) (in HD)
- Victoria (CIVI)
- Winnipeg (CKY) (in HD)
- Windsor (CHWI)
CTV O&Os in smaller markets air a newscast produced in one of the larger markets noted above, although some may also produce a shorter local news insert aired during a break in the main market's program, and some of these smaller stations produce their own noon newscasts.
Bell Media's secondary A system which was acquired through the purchase of CHUM Limited, and operated primarily in smaller markets (or alternate areas of larger markets) produced similar local newscasts known as A News. When the A system re-branded as "CTV Two" on August 29, 2011, the stations' newscasts switched to the CTV News branding,[4] likely because "CTV Two News" might be seen as connoting a second-class newscast. The CTV News broadcasts on the CTV Two stations previously used the main CTV logo as their logo bug during these newscasts as did the main CTV network, but they currently use the regionally branded titles such as CTV News Barrie as is now the case for the CTV O&Os. Most of these stations are nevertheless required to operate their local news operations separately from CTV stations serving the same or adjacent markets. This restriction does not apply to CTV Two Atlantic, a cable channel which has been co-owned with the CTV stations serving that region since its launch (their news operations have been fully integrated since 1998), or to CTV Two Alberta, also a cable-only channel, which produces a current affairs program, Alberta Primetime, using resources from that province's CTV stations.
Affiliates not owned by the network also air their own local newscasts, such as NTV (which despite dropping CTV's entertainment programming in 2002, still provides coverage of Newfoundland for CTV News and airs its national newscasts), and CITL-TV (which airs "Newcap News", a production shared with its sister station, Global TV affiliate CKSA-TV).
Bell Media also operates CP24, a regional news channel focusing on the Greater Toronto Area and most of Southern Ontario, which was acquired through its purchase of CHUM Limited, and formerly aligned with CITY-TV. The channel airs news programs focused on the region, and currently airs simulcasts of CFTO's 6:00pm and 11:30pm newscasts.
News bureaus
CTV News has bureaus across Canada and around the world, but many were closed to cut costs ( the most recent being the ones in Moscow and Kampala) and replaced with reporters sent to locations from the existing bureaus.
A list of current bureaus:
National
- Halifax
- Bureau Chief: Todd Battis
- Montreal
- Bureau Chief: Geneviève Beauchemin
- Reporters: Vanessa Lee
- Ottawa
- Bureau Chief: Joyce Napier[5]
- Deputy Bureau Chief: Glen McGregor
- Chief Parliamentary Correspondent: Craig Oliver
- Power Play Host: Don Martin
- Reporters: Richard Madan, Omar Sachedina, Mercedes Stephenson and Michel Boyer
- Toronto
- Medical Correspondent: Avis Favaro
- Medical Contributor: Dr. Marla Shapiro
- Investigative Reporters: Victor Malarek
- Reporters: Scott Laurie, John Vennavally-Rao, Peter Akman
- Winnipeg
- Bureau Chief: Jill Macyshon
- Calgary
- Bureau Chief: Janet Dirks
- Vancouver
- Bureau Chief: Melanie Nagy
International
- Washington - United States
- Bureau Chief: Paul Workman
- Correspondent: Joy Malbon
- Los Angeles - United States
- Bureau Chief: Tom Walters
- London - Europe and Africa
- Bureau Chief: Daniele Hamamdjian
- Jerusalem - Middle East
- Currently Vacant (formerly held by Martin Seemungal)
- Beijing - Far East and Southeast Asia
- Bureau Chief: Janis Mackey Frayer
My News
In 2008, the CTV News website introduced My News, a citizen journalism feature allowing citizens to upload their images or videos relating to current events. Viewers may also upload media for any station or program.[6]
References
- ↑ "Bell". Bell Media. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
- ↑ Yarr, Kevin (2016-06-06). "Canada AM co-host 'saddened and disappointed' by show's cancellation". CBC News. Retrieved 2016-06-09.
- ↑ Bell Media (press release) (2016-06-06). "Welcome to YOUR MORNING: CTV's New Morning Show to Premiere this Summer". Retrieved 2016-06-09.
- ↑ "Bell Media's /A\ Network to Become "CTV Two" This Fall". Bell Media Media Centre. Retrieved 30 May 2011.
- ↑ "CTV Announces Appointment of Ottawa Bureau Chief". Broadcaster, March 11, 2016.
- ↑ "MyNews.CTVNews.ca". CTV News. Retrieved 2008-11-29.