Timeline of Key Events in Canadian TV History
1901 First
transcontinental radio broadcast
1917 First
scheduled radio broadcast in Montreal at Marconis experimental stn
1919 First
Canadian radio station launched
1932 Broadcasting Act establishes the
Canadian Radio Broadcast Commission
1936 CBC
established
1946 NBC,
CBS and ABC radio networks launch TV stations
1948 First
US TV signals spill across the Canadian border
1949 Massey
Commission launched (to provide TV policy recommendations)
1951 Massey
Commission releases its report (Cdn TV to be public)
1952 CBC
granted monopoly on TV (150,000 TV sets already in Canada)
-- First cable TV systems in Canada
are built (Montreal, London and Van.)
1957 39% of
Canadian households have a TV set
1958 Board
of Broadcast Governors founded
1961 CTV
launches (first private network)
1964 4% of
Canadians subscriber to cable
1967 Colour
TV launches
1968 Broadcasting Act is revised. Creates the CRTC, regulates cable.
1970 Content
regulations established
-- Global and CityTV launched (in the
70s)
1972 97% of
Canadian households have a TV set
1973 HBO
launches
1976 Income
tax advantages for companies advertising on Canadian media
1982 58% of
TV homes connected to cable
-- Framework for specialty services
(managed choice)
-- CRTC licenses first pay services
TMN, SuperChannel, Super Ecran
1983 Direct
subsidies for independent producers through Telefilm Canada
-- CBC to license 50% of content from
independents
1984 CRTC
licenses five specialty services, including TSN and MuchMusic
1987 CRTC
licenses more specialty services, including YTV and Musique Plus
1988 First
major cuts at CBC begin
1990
Audience share: Broadcasters 84%, Specialty 14%
1991 New Broadcasting Act, emphasizes programming
and technological
change, and
private/public contribution and interests
-- Videotron launches Videoway, a
crude interactive TV service
-- Supply of Canadian programs 42%. Share of Viewership 32%
1994 Cable
companies contribute to production fund
-- DTH is introduced in the US by
DirecTV
-- CRTC licenses new specialty
services, including WTN and Showcase
-- The Web emerges into the mainstream
1996 CRTC
licenses new specialty services, including SportsNet and Comedy
-- High-speed Internet begins to
roll-out on cable
1997
Canadian Heritage contributes $100 million to create CTF
-- Cable monopoly broken with launch
of DTH in Canada
-- Audience share: Broadcasters 70%, Specialty 30%
-- Internet penetration: ~25%
1998 Digital
cable is launched
-- CTV changes ownership, becomes
corporation rather than cooperative
-- Alliance and Atlantis merge
1999 Quebecor
out bids Rogers for Videotron
-- CRTC releases its new media
decision (wont regulate the Internet)
-- CTV buys Netstar
-- AOL buys Time Warner
-- iCraveTV.com launches
-- TiVO launched at CES
2000 CRTC
licenses some 200 digital specialty services
-- Rogers launches interactive TV
-- BCE buys CTV and Globe & Mail,
creates Bell Globemedia
-- CanWest buys WIC then Hollinger
Newspapers
-- Benchmark for a hit TV show is
700,000 viewers
2001
Technology sector crash. Along with the
Internet economy?
-- Events of September 11
-- Federal budget focuses on security
gives CTF and CBC more money
-- Supply of Canadian programs 46%. Share of Viewership 34%
-- Audience share: Broadcasters 58%, Specialty 42%
-- Digital cable and DTH penetration: 25%
-- Internet household penetration: ~65%
-- High-speed household penetration: ~25%
-- DVDs: ~25%
2002 AOL
writes down $40 to $60 billion of goodwill
-- VOD launched in markets across
North America
-- 1 million TiVO households in North
America