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X Company is a Canadian/Hungarian spy thriller television series created by Mark Ellis and Stephanie Morgenstern, the creators of the CTV series Flashpoint, which ran from 2008 to 2012. The series premiered on February 18, 2015, on CBC Television .
Camp X has been featured in movies and television programs, including the CBC series of X Company, three seasons, 2015 to 2017, and the History Channel's documentary Camp X: Secret Agent School, July 2014, by Toronto's Yap Films. The latter included recreations of scenes and featured interviews with actual individuals who had been associated ...
CBC Films is the film finance and production arm of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, focusing mostly on films by female, LGBT, indigenous, and diverse Canadian filmmakers. [3] Its initiatives include funding, pre-buys, and acquisitions for CBC broadcast and streaming platforms.
CBC: Yes Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan: CJIC-TV: Sault Ste. Marie: CBC: No Eastern Upper Peninsula only, later CBLT-TV-5, shut down on July 31, 2012 due to budget cuts. Replaced on EUP cable systems by CBMT. Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan: CHBX-TV: Sault Ste. Marie: CTV: Partial Eastern Upper Peninsula: Marquette, Michigan: CKPR-DT: Thunder Bay ...
CBC Championship Curling (1966–1979) CBC Concert (1952) CBC Concert Hour (1954–55) CBC Drama '73 (September 30 to December 2, 1973) CBC Docs POV (2015–2021) CBC Family Hour (anthology series, 1989–c. 2001) CBC Film Festival (1979–80) CBC Music Backstage Pass (2013–2020) CBC News: Sunday (2002–2009) CBC Selects (2014) CBC Summer ...
Eleanor Wachtel, Writers and Company; Connie Walker; Claire Wallace, host of They Tell Me from 1942 to 1952, first woman broadcaster to learn how to fly a plane; Pamela Wallin - Worked as a producer on CBC Radio. Her first TV work was on CTV's Canada AM. She later appeared on CBC TV, as cohost of Prime Time News and later host of Pamela Wallin ...
CBC Television (also known as CBC TV, or simply CBC) [1] [2] is a Canadian English-language broadcast television network owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the national public broadcaster. The network began operations on September 6, 1952, with its main studios at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre in Toronto.
On November 2, 1936, the CRBC was reorganized under its present name. While the CRBC was a state-owned company, the CBC was a Crown corporation on the model of the British Broadcasting Corporation, which had been reformed from a private company into a statutory corporation in 1927. Leonard Brockington was the CBC's first chairman. [10]