Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
TVA's offices in Montreal where local station CFTM and its owner have been headquartered since October 1975 [3]. TVA traces its roots to 1963, when CJPM-TV in Chicoutimi, a station only a few months old and in need of revenue, began sharing programs with the largest privately owned francophone station in Canada, CFTM-TV in Montreal.
CFTM-DT (channel 10) is a television station in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, serving as the flagship of the French-language network TVA.Owned by Groupe TVA, the station has studios on Boulevard de Maisonneuve East and Rue Alexandre de Sève in the Ville-Marie borough of Montreal, and its transmitter is located on Voie Camillien Houde (near Mount Royal).
Chop Suey - TV Series (1986–1994) Ciel, mon Pinard! - cooking; Le Cimetière des CD - music critic show; Claire Lamarche - panel talk show; Le Club des 100 Watts (1988–94) Le coeur a ses raisons - comedy soap opera parody (2005-2007) Comme dans l'espace - children's educational series; Contact, l'encyclopédie de la création - documentary ...
TVA Nouvelles is the news division of TVA, a French language television network in Canada. Programs produced by the division include nightly local and national newscasts branded as TVA Nouvelles, as well as the news magazine program JE. The division also owns and operates the 24-hour news channel Le Canal Nouvelles.
Accordingly, around 1980, CHAU began carrying TVA programming in off-hours. It became an exclusive TVA affiliate on December 18, 1983, when Radio-Canada opened a rebroadcaster of CBGAT in the Carleton area. In 2000, CHAU-TV was one of four television stations purchased from the Power Corporation of Canada by Corus Entertainment, and the only ...
Final 24 is a Canadian documentary series which airs on the Discovery Channel, Global Television Network, and OWN.Released in Canada in 2006, the series chronicles the last 24 hours of the lives of famous celebrities of the late 20th century.
For most of the time from the 1980s through the early 2000s, it was known on-air as "Télé-7" (TV-7 or channel 7), sharing a similar branding with sister station CFCM-TV in Quebec City. During the analogue era, CHLT was one of TVA's most powerful stations; its terrestrial footprint extended as far as northwestern Maine .