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Canadian English-language news channel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CBC News Network (formerly CBC Newsworld) is a Canadian English-language specialty news channel owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). It is Canada's first all-news channel,[1] and the world's third-oldest television service of this nature (after CNN in the United States, and Sky News in the United Kingdom.)
Type | Broadcasting news, discussions |
---|---|
Country | Canada |
Broadcast area | National |
Programming | |
Language(s) | English |
Picture format | 720p HDTV (downscaled to letterboxed 480i for the SDTV feed) |
Ownership | |
Owner | Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |
Sister channels | CBC Television Ici Radio-Canada Télé Ici RDI Ici ARTV Ici Explora Documentary Channel CBC North |
History | |
Launched | July 31, 1989 |
Former names | CBC Newsworld (1989–2009) |
Links | |
Website | cbc |
Availability | |
Streaming media | |
CBC Gem | Over-the-top TV |
RiverTV | Over-the-top TV |
CBC News Network is funded by cable subscriber fees and commercial advertising, unlike the CBC's main television network, and it cannot directly receive operational funds from the corporation's public funding allotment. Nonetheless, the network benefits from synergies with other CBC services; such as the ability to share reporters and programs with the main network.[2]
CBC News Network's French-language counterpart is Ici RDI, also owned by the CBC (or, Société Radio-Canada in French).
According to the 2014 "Communications Monitoring Report" by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), CBC News Network in 2014 had 11.3 million subscribers and a revenue of $86.7 million.[3]
With CNN and CNN International already being widely available in Canada during the 1980s and beyond, private and state-owned Canadian broadcasters began to apply for a licence for a similar 24-hour news service in Canada. In 1987, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) awarded a licence to the CBC.[4]
The launch of the CBC's 24-hour news service was delayed several times: first when Allarcom, who had filed a competing application for an all-news channel, chose to appeal the CRTC decision;[5] second, when the federal cabinet issued a directive to the CBC to revise its service plan for the network to include private commercial broadcasters and to launch a parallel French language service;[6] and lastly, when cable companies were reluctant to add the service just five months after a similar launch of numerous other channels.[7]
CBC Newsworld finally began broadcasting on 31 July 1989 from several regional studios in Halifax, Toronto, Winnipeg and Calgary, becoming Canada's first all-news channel.[1] (As of 2017, there are production studios in Vancouver, Toronto and Halifax.)
In the 1990s, the channel also aired repeats of CBC Television's political sketch comedy series This Hour Has 22 Minutes and Royal Canadian Air Farce, but these were discontinued in 2001 after a CRTC directive that the shows did not qualify as news programming.[8]
In 2000, because of a fee dispute between Persona (then known as Regional Cablesystems; later acquired by Eastlink) and the CBC, CBC News Network was dropped by a number of Persona-owned cable systems. Thereafter, while CBC News Network was sometimes thought to be a mandatory basic cable channel, these cable systems did not carry the channel at all during much of the 2000s.[9]
Some of CBC News Network's programming also aired on the now-defunct Newsworld International, an American cable news network co-owned by the CBC and the Power Corporation of Canada. CBC Newsworld (as it was then known) produced some programming for Newsworld International, and scheduled programming from other news networks like Britain's BBC World, which did not air on the Canadian channel.
Soon after, Newsworld International was sold to USA Networks in 2000, then to Vivendi Universal Entertainment in 2001, and then to Al Gore and Joel Hyatt in 2004. Newsworld continued to provide the network's programming until Gore and Hyatt launched their own network, Current TV, on 1 August 2005. In 2013, the channel was sold again to the Al Jazeera Media Network and became Al Jazeera America on 20 August 2013.
In December 2008, it was reported that the CBC planned to revamp Newsworld in 2009, as the result of a strategic review and market survey. The CBC found that consumer awareness of CBC Newsworld was lower in comparison to other specialty channels, and there was a perception that the CBC broke stories too slowly. Tentative plans also called for the revamped channel to have more prominent displays of news headlines and weather reports.[10]
On 21 October 2009, it was announced that CBC Newsworld would be renamed CBC News Network on October 26 as part of a larger re-launch of the CBC News division. A new lineup of programs was introduced to the network, with a greater emphasis towards live news coverage. New programs included CBC News Now (the channel's rolling news coverage), Power & Politics, The Lang and O'Leary Exchange (a business news program hosted by Amanda Lang and Dragons' Den-investor Kevin O'Leary), and Connect with Mark Kelley.[11]
In January 2009, the CBC launched an HD simulcast of CBC News Network (then CBC Newsworld) called CBC Newsworld HD. The channel was renamed CBC News Network HD on 26 October 2009 to coincide with the renaming of CBC Newsworld to CBC News Network. The HD feed has been confirmed at 720p resolution on Shaw Cable after it was added to the lineup in 2014.[citation needed] It is available through all major television providers in the country.
CBC News Network used to air a number of magazine-style programs, along with hourly news updates. The network has moved from that style of programming to focusing solely on live-news and documentary programs, including The Passionate Eye and Rough Cuts—both of which used to be hosted by Michaëlle Jean—and Politics—a political affairs program hosted by Don Newman that aired twice daily. The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos was launched in 2005 in an attempt to attract younger viewers; similar news-oriented talk shows, such as Pamela Wallin Live, CounterSpin, Face Off, and Benmergui Live, also aired on the network in the 1990s.[citation needed]
The network's daytime schedule consists of live rolling news coverage, branded as CBC Newsroom (formerly known as CBC News Now), which airs weekdays from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET, Saturdays from 6:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. ET, and Sundays from 6:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET (with a two-hour break from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. ET).[1] Instead of producing a separate noon-hour program, most CBC Television stations simulcast CBC News Network from 12:00 to 1:00 pm local time, with an "L-bar" showing local news and weather headlines.[citation needed]
Power & Politics airs live from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. ET.[12] From 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. on weekdays, CBC News Network airs Canada Tonight.
Beginning with the Atlantic Time Zone airing at 9:00 p.m. ET, The National—CBC News' flagship nightly newscast—runs live until 2:00 a.m. ET and then on a loop until 6:00 a.m. ET the following morning.[1]
Other original programming that appear on CBC News Network includes:[1]
Since 2021, the channel has also simulcast CBC Radio One's news phone-in show Cross Country Checkup on Sunday afternoons.
In 2023, CBC announced several programming changes, including news hosts, for both weekday and weekend programs. Among the changes was an official name change to daytime and weekend rolling news programming to ‘CBC Newsroom’. ‘CBC Rundown with Andrew Nichols’ was also ended, in favour of an expanded two-hour Canada Tonight.[15]
Program | Day | Time (ET) | Anchor/host | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Weekday programming | ||||
CBC Morning Live | Mon – Fri | 6 – 10 am | Heather Hiscox | |
CBC Newsrooom with... | 10 am – 1 pm | Aarti Pole | live rolling news | |
1 – 5 pm | Andrew Nichols (Toronto) and Hannah Thibedeau (Ottawa) | |||
Power & Politics | 5 – 7 pm | David Cochrane | news & political talk show | |
Canada Tonight | 7 – 9 pm | Travis Dhanraj (as of January 2024) | news & political talk show | |
All-week programming | ||||
The National | Mon – Thurs | 12 – 6 am;
9 – 11:59 pm |
Adrienne Arsenault | news broadcast |
Fri | Ian Hanomansing | |||
Sat | 12 – 6 am | |||
Sun | 9 – 11:59 pm | |||
Weekend programming | ||||
CBC Newsroom with.... | Sat | 6 – 11 am | Marianne Dimain | live rolling news |
11 am – 4 pm | Natasha Fatah | |||
Sun | 6 – 10 am | Marianne Dimain | ||
12 – 4 pm | Natasha Fatah | |||
Rosemary Barton Live[14] | Sun | 10 am – 12 pm;
5 – 7 pm |
Rosemary Barton | weekly program on political news and issues |
Cross Country Checkup | Sun | 4 – 5 pm | Ian Hanomansing | Weekly call-in news show simulcast from CBC Radio One |
Marketplace[13] | Sat | 5:30 – 6 pm;
9:30 – 10 pm; 11:30 pm – 12:00 am |
Asha Tomlinson, Charlsie Agro and David Common | Canadian consumer watchdog series |
CBC Newsroom with... | Sat | 4 – 5:30, 6 – 6:30 pm, 9 – 9:30 pm, 11 – 11:30 pm | Deana Sumanac-Johnson | live news |
The Fifth Estate | Sat – Sun | 7 – 8 pm | Bob McKeown, Mark Kelley, Habiba Nosheen, and Gillian Findlay | investigative documentary newsmagazine series |
CBC Docs POV[17] | Sat | 10 – 11 pm | N/A | point-of-view documentary series |
Sun | 1 – 2 am | |||
At Issue[18] | Sat | 6:30 – 7 pm | Rosemary Barton; Chantal Hébert, Andrew Coyne and Althia Raj (panelists) | political panel show |
Sun | 12:30 – 1 am;
2:30 – 3 am; | |||
CBC News Network | Sun | 8 – 9 pm | Deanna Sumanac-Johnson | live news |
The Nature of Things[19] | Sat | 8 – 9 pm | David Suzuki | popular science program |
Sun | 4 – 5 am | |||
Mon | 2 – 3 am |
Original members of the first Newsworld anchor team:
Other former anchors:
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