CTV Northern Ontario
CTV Logo | |
Type | Broadcast television system |
---|---|
Country | |
Availability | Most communities in Northeastern Ontario, also available nationally via satellite |
Owner | Bell Media |
Key people | Scott Lund - President |
Launch date | 1953 |
Former names | MCTV (1980 - 2005) |
Official website | CTV Northern Ontario |
CTV Northern Ontario, formerly known as MCTV, is a system of four television stations in Northern Ontario, Canada, owned and operated by the CTV Television Network, a division of Bell Media.
These stations are:
- CICI - Greater Sudbury (flagship station)
- CKNY - North Bay
- CHBX - Sault Ste. Marie
- CITO - Timmins
All four stations refer to themselves on air as CTV, not by their call letters, and have common local programming, however they remain legally licensed as separate stations as of 2012. Station information and history is discussed on each station's own page.
History
Mid-Canada Television, or MCTV, was created in 1980 when Cambrian Broadcasting, which owned the CTV affiliates in Sudbury, North Bay and Timmins, merged with J. Conrad Lavigne's CBC affiliates in the same cities to create Mid-Canada Communications. This twinstick structure was permitted by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission because both companies were on the brink of bankruptcy due to their aggressive competition for limited advertising dollars in small markets. In its decision, however, the CRTC explicitly communicated the expectation that this would exist only as a temporary arrangement, to end as soon as the CBC could afford to directly acquire MCTV's CBC affiliates.
The CBC twinsticks in the original MCTV system were:
All of the stations were also referred to on air as MCTV — the stations were distinguished from each other by use of their network affiliation (i.e., "MCTV-CTV" and "MCTV-CBC"). Sault Ste. Marie's CHBX and CJIC were owned by Huron Broadcasting, and remained under different ownership and branding until 1990.
As well, MCTV owned CHRO in Pembroke, a market with no other television stations. CHRO used the same logo and programming schedule as MCTV's other stations, and changed its affiliation from CBC to CTV during its time in the MCTV group, but it always used its own callsign, rather than MCTV, as its on-air identification.
Baton Broadcasting acquired both Mid-Canada and Huron in 1990, and converted the Huron stations to the MCTV branding. As well, Baton reaffiliated CHRO with CTV. Baton eventually became the sole corporate proprietor of CTV, and sold CHRO to CHUM Limited in 1998; at the time CHUM acquired CHRO, it disaffiliated from CTV and became an independent station for a short time before joining the NewNet system (now CTV Two).
Baton retained the CBC twinsticks until 2002, when it sold them to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.[2] Once the deal was finalized in early 2003, the CBC converted them to retransmitters of CBLT, Toronto's CBC owned-and-operated station. All four stations surrendered their old call letters. In 2003, MCTV's master control operations were transferred to the CTV facilities in Toronto.
News operations
In 2002, CTV merged the news production facilities of the MCTV stations into a single regional newscast, with only short inserts for each city's local coverage. The regional newscast is produced at CICI. This created extensive controversy, with many public interest groups across Canada raising concerns about the disappearance of local news coverage in small markets. Organizations in Sault Ste. Marie, North Bay and Timmins began to call for a boycott of MCTV news, and local companies began offering web-based sources of local news, weather and sports information.
In October 2005, MCTV News was renamed as CTV News, in line all other CTV owned-and-operated stations. CTV News uses WSI's TrueView Max Weather Technology to broadcast weather reports during all its newscasts.
News/system presentation
Newscast titles
- MCTV News (1980–2005)
- CTV News (2005–present)
CTV Northern Ontario slogans
- "Good Lookin' MCTV-CTV" (1980s)
- "No Where Else But MCTV" (1980s–1990s)
- "News for the North" (2000–present)
News team
Anchors
- Brendan Connor - weeknights at 11:30 p.m.
- Carrie Trownson - weekends at 6 and 11:30 p.m.; also Sudbury reporter
- Sacha Novack - weekdays at noon; also Sudbury reporter
- Tony Ryma - weeknights at 6 p.m.
- Michelle Tonner - weeknights at 6 p.m.
Weather
- Jill Colton - lead weather specialist; weekdays noon, 6, and 11:30 p.m., Sudbury reporter
Sports
- Andy Barbato - lead sports anchor; weeknights at 6 and 11:30 p.m.
- Isaac Cohen - sports anchor; weekends at 6 and 11:30 p.m., also Sudbury sports reporter
- Lincoln Louttit - Sault Ste. Marie sports reporter
Reporters
- Alana Everson - Sudbury reporter
- Linda Holmes - North Bay reporter
- Tamara Ischenko - Sudbury reporter
- Jessica Gosselin - Timmins reporter
- Cindy Males - North Bay reporter
- Ben Mercer - Sudbury reporter
- Marina Moore - North Bay reporter
- Gord Nicholls - Sudbury reporter
- Claude Sharma - Timmins reporter
- Carrie Trownson - Sudbury reporter
- Kari Vierimaa - Sudbury reporter
- Surane Weerasinghe - Sault Ste. Marie reporter
- Jairus Patterson - Sault Ste. Marie reporter