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In most other markets, local news returned to the 6:00 p.m. time slot in early 2006, [9] mainly under the banner CBC News at Six, although these remained as 30-minute newscasts. (Canada Now was retained as a separate 30-minute national newscast at 6:30 p.m., as well as the title of the integrated local/national newscast aired within British ...
City of licence Analog channel Digital channel Virtual channel Callsign Network Notes Antigonish: 21 CIHF-TV-15: Global: Antigonish: 9 CJCB-TV-2: CTV: Bay St. Lawrence
Local morning shows air from 5:30 am or 6 am local time, depending on the station, to 8:30 am. They are followed by a local news update, and then The Current at 8:37 am. The sole exception is Qulliq, the program from Nunavut, which begins at 6:30 am ET and airs until 9:30 am ET. As of the 2015-16 television season, the 6:00 a.m. hour of these ...
The Halifax CBC Radio Building, home to Information Morning from 1970 to 2014. Information Morning was first broadcast on June 1, 1970. [1] The original format of the morning current affairs show was a "fast-paced, tightly made omnibus of news, weather, commentary, reviews and interviews," with the rumble of a distant teletype in the background.
The first CBC newscast was a bilingual radio report on November 2, 1936. The CBC News Service was inaugurated during World War II on January 1, 1941, when Dan McArthur, chief news editor, had Wells Ritchie prepare for the announcer Charles Jennings a national report at 8:00 pm. Previously, CBC relied on The Canadian Press to provide it with wire copy for its news bulletins.
In Victoria, the replacement of the Vancouver analogue transmitters with digital ones only allowed only some northeastern parts of the metropolitan area (total population 330,000) to receive either CBC or Radio-Canada. CBC announced on April 4, 2012, that it will shut down all of its approximately 620 analogue television transmitters on July 31 ...
Despite the name, it is not available on basic cable or analog in Newfoundland and Labrador even though that province is part of Atlantic Canada. The CTV Atlantic stations are: CJCH-DT – Halifax, Nova Scotia (flagship station) CJCB-DT – Sydney, Nova Scotia; CKCW-DT – Moncton, New Brunswick/Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island
In 2000, its local newscast, First Edition, was cancelled and replaced with Canada Now, anchored in Halifax by Norma Lee MacLeod. The latest version of the newscast for Nova Scotia is called CBC Nova Scotia News, hosted by Tom Murphy, Amy Smith and Ryan Snoddon.