Everything about T L Vision De Radio-canada totally explained
Télévision de Radio-Canada is a
Canadian French language television network. It is owned by the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Headquarters are at
Maison Radio-Canada in
Montreal, which is also home to the network's flagship station,
CBFT.
It is the only
francophone network in
Canada to broadcast over-the-air in all Canadian provinces, although its programming is generally directed at residents of
Quebec as opposed to
francophones outside Quebec. Indeed, until the
1970s, its only stations outside Quebec were in
Ottawa and
Winnipeg.
Generally considered more populist than its English counterpart
CBC Television, this network has certainly been the more successful of the two, as it doesn't face such immense competition from
American networks. For most of the last 30 years it has trailed
TVA in the ratings, but has recently pulled closer with a resurgent schedule including offbeat
sitcom Les Bougon and
talk show Tout le monde en parle.
With this success, however, have come accusations of
dumbing down.
Tout le monde en parle replaced the long-running Sunday night arts series
Les Beaux Dimanches. The following season, Radio-Canada moved its supper-hour newscasts (in Quebec and Ontario only) to 5:00 p.m. to make room for a new
talk show fronted by
Véronique Cloutier (former host of
La Fureur) at 6:00 p.m. While Radio-Canada's newscasts had already fallen well behind those of TVA and often even
TQS, the resulting uproar led to a reversal that December, with a full-hour newscast returned to the 6:00 - 7:00 timeslot in all markets.
News programming is anchored by
Le Téléjournal, which airs nightly at 10:00 p.m.; on weeknights it includes a current affairs segment,
Le Point. Local newscasts, which air during the lunch and supper hours, now also carry the
Téléjournal name, for example
Le Téléjournal Montréal. Originally, the regional newscasts had the name
Ce Soir (This Evening).
CBC/Radio-Canada also operates le
Réseau de l'information (RDI), Canada's first French-language news channel.
In television listings such as
TV Guide, where space limitations usually require television networks to be referred to by a three-letter abbreviation, the network is normally coded as
SRC (for
Société Radio-Canada, the French language corporate name of the CBC as a whole.) This has no official standing as a name for the network — although the network did once experiment with using SRC as its on-air brand in the 1990s, it reverted to
Radio-Canada within a few months.
On
10 September 2007, Radio-Canada (as well as sister cable news network
RDI) became the first
over-the-air network in North America to broadcast solely in 16:9
widescreen aspect ratio, including on its standard definition signals.
See also
List of programs broadcast by Télévision de Radio-Canada.
Radio-Canada HD
In 2006, Télévision de Radio-Canada launched an
HD simulcast of its Montreal station
CBFT which is available nationally via satellite and digital cable operators.
As of 2007, Radio-Canada is available in HD over-the-air in
Toronto,
Ottawa,
Montreal and
Quebec City.
Stations and affiliates
Of Canada's three major French language television networks, Radio-Canada is the only one that broadcasts terrestrially in all Canadian provinces. With the exception of
Atlantic Canada, where a single station serves all four provinces through an extensive network of rebroadcasters, the network has at least one originating station in every province. These stations serve every major market in French and English Canada, with privately owned
affiliates serving smaller markets in Quebec. Unlike CBC Television affiliates, which often have several alternative programming sources, Radio-Canada affiliates are effectively constrained to carry network programming throughout the day, excluding local and regional programming and commercials.
The network currently has an application before the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to acquire three of its five remaining private affiliate stations in Quebec from their current owner,
Cogeco.
Slogans
- Prior to fall 2004: « Ici Radio-Canada » (tr. "This is Radio-Canada"). This is what the announcer said during the system cue, when the network logo is displayed on-screen. But in the early-2000s, it became a promotional slogan in its own right.
- 2005: « Vous allez voir » (tr. "You are going to see", "We will show you" (in a positive way) or "You will see").
- Current (Fall 2006): « Ici comme dans la vie » (tr. "Here as in life") and « Radio-Canada, source d'information » (tr. "Radio-Canada, source of information").
Ombudsmen
The current
ombudsman of Radio-Canada is
Julie Miville-Dechêne, since
April 1,
2007. She was preceded by
Renaud Gilbert (2000-2007),
Marcel Pépin (1997-1999),
Mario Cardinal (1993-1997) and
Bruno Gauron (1992).
Further Information
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