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Canada has adopted the NTSC and ATSC television transmission standards without any alterations. However, some unique local variations exist for DTH television because of transponder design variation in the Anik series of satellites. Television in Canada has many individual stations and networks and systems.
CBC Television, a national public network owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).; Citytv, a privately owned television network owned by Rogers Media, with stations in Quebec, Ontario, Nova Scotia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.
This is a list of television stations in Canada licensed to broadcast by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), all having call signs which begin with the letter C. A blue background indicates a station that continues to broadcast exclusively via an analogue transmission in lieu of a conversion to digital ...
List of Canadian television channels; List of television stations in Canada; A. ... List of television stations in Newfoundland and Labrador;
While American television stations, including affiliates of ABC, NBC and CBS, near the Canada–US border were available for several years prior, and gained a sizeable audience in cities like Toronto, within range of U.S. signals, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) was the first entity to broadcast television programming within Canada, launching in September 1952 in both Montreal and ...
List of Canadian television networks * List of Canadian television channels This page was last edited on 9 October 2020, at 22:37 (UTC). Text ...
Carried on cable via Comcast in Royal Oak and Troy, in TV guide listings throughout Metro area. Also available over the air in most cities in Metro Detroit. Detroit, Michigan: CKCO-DT: Kitchener: CTV: Listed in local Detroit TV guides CKCO-TV-3 ch. 42 transmitter from Oil Springs/Sarnia: Detroit, Michigan: CIII-DT-22: Paris-Toronto: Global
The most-watched television broadcast in Canadian history was the gold medal game of the men's hockey tournament at the 2010 Winter Olympics, played between the United States and Canada in Vancouver, with an average minute audience of 16.6 million Canadians watching the game, roughly one-half of Canada's population in 2010.