Everything about Ctvglobemedia totally explained
CTVglobemedia (often abbreviated "CTVgm"),
formerly known as Bell Globemedia ("BGM"), is one of
Canada's largest private
media companies. Its operations include television broadcasting including
CTV and
A-Channel, and radio broadcasting, television production, print media and more.
Operations
CTVglobemedia's core asset is CTV Inc., parent of the
CTV television network, Canada's oldest, largest, and (as of 2006) most-watched private
broadcast television network, including 21
owned and operated stations.
CTVgm's other conventional television assets include
A-Channel; a second system that presently consists 5 television stations in Southern Ontario and 1 in British Columbia,
ACCESS; an educational television channel in Alberta,
CKX-TV; a
CBC Television affiliate in
Brandon, Manitoba,
TQS; a
French language television network located in Quebec of which CTVgm owns 40% and
ASN; a cable channel in
Atlantic Canada that for the most part acts as a local television station without broadcast transmitters. TQS is pending a sale to
Remstar.
Along with broadcast television stations, CTVgm also owns a number of various
cable television specialty channels such as
The Sports Network,
Réseau des sports,
MuchMusic,
Star!,
MTV,
CablePulse 24,
CTV Newsnet,
The Comedy Network,
Discovery Channel and many others.
CTVgm is also Canada's fourth largest radio broadcaster with 35 radio stations across the country including such stations as
CHUM FM,
CHQM-FM,
CHIQ-FM and many more.
In addition, CTVglobemedia owns
The Globe and Mail, Canada's largest national
newspaper, 15% of
Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, television production studios and
websites associated with all of the above properties.
History
Predecessor companies
Baton Broadcasting
For all practical purposes, CTVglobemedia is the successor to
Baton Broadcasting Inc. (first word or
BAY-ton), which by the late 1990s had become one of Canada's largest broadcasters.
Baton Aldred Rogers Broadcasting Ltd. was originally formed in 1960 to operate Toronto's first private TV station,
CFTO-TV. The original investors included the
Bassett and
Eaton families,
Joel Aldred and
Ted Rogers, and
Foster Hewitt in a much smaller role. Aldred sold his shares in 1961, followed by Rogers by 1970; with the Bassett and Eaton families firmly in control, the company went public in the early 1970s. CFTO became a CTV affiliate in October 1961, and soon after Baton became a part-owner in the network.
In
1972, the renamed Baton Broadcasting began purchasing other CTV affiliates, starting with
CFQC-TV Saskatoon. This did not, however, give Baton a substantially higher investment in CTV, which was structured as a
co-operative, not a traditional private company. Baton still only had one vote - as did every other CTV affiliate-owner.
In
1987, Baton expanded further into
Saskatchewan and into CTV, purchasing
CKCK-TV Regina,
Yorkton twinstick CKOS-TV/
CICC-TV, and CBC affiliate
CKBI-TV Prince Albert. A twinstick CTV affiliate was soon launched in Prince Albert,
CIPA-TV.
In the late 1980s, Baton applied for a high-power station in
Ottawa on channel 60. The licence was approved, appealed by rival broadcasters, and ultimately sent back to the CRTC for review, but the licence was surrendered when its owner,
Allan Slaight's
Standard Broadcasting, instead decided to sell the local CTV affiliate,
CJOH-TV, to Baton.
In
1990, Baton purchased the
MCTV system of
twinstick operations in
Pembroke,
North Bay,
Sudbury,
Timmins, and the
Huron Broadcasting twinstick in
Sault Ste. Marie. In
1993, Baton purchased
CFPL-TV London,
CKNX-TV Wingham and received a licence for a new independent station,
CHWI-TV, in
Windsor.
In
1991, the company launched Ontario Network Television, a secondary affiliation carried by Baton's CTV and
independent stations in Ontario. This was expanded in
1994 into the
Baton Broadcast System, or BBS, which included Baton's Saskatchewan stations. BBS was meant as a backup in case Baton's ongoing acquisitions didn't translate into control of CTV itself. CTV had been recently restructured as a traditional private company, meaning that any
future acquisitions by Baton would come with all of that affiliate's CTV shares. It was around this time that former CBC executive
Ivan Fecan joined the company.
Baton-Electrohome Alliance
In 1996, the CRTC approved two major deals involving Baton. First was the acquisition of
CFCN-TV in
Calgary from
Rogers Communications, which had recently purchased
Maclean Hunter. Second, Baton and
Electrohome formed an alliance, under which the companies would share ownership of CFCN, Baton's stations in Saskatchewan and its independent stations in southwestern Ontario, and Electrohome's
CKCO-TV Kitchener. The deals doubled Baton's own interest in CTV to 28.6%, but also gave it control over Electrohome's shares, for a total of 42.9%.
In January 1997, Baton-Electrohome's "Vancouver Television" proposal emerged as the CRTC's choice for the new independent station in
Vancouver, British Columbia, beating out four other competitors. The new station,
CIVT-TV, would compete directly with
WIC's two CTV affiliates in the market when it launched that fall.
On
February 25,
1997, the Baton-Electrohome alliance and
CHUM Limited announced that several stations would be swapped between them, giving Baton control of CTV. Baton-Electrohome would acquire CHUM's
Atlantic Television System (ATV), consisting of four CTV affiliates in the
Maritimes, the
Atlantic Satellite Network (ASN), and a further 14.3% in CTV. CHUM would receive Baton's independent stations in southwestern Ontario, as well as
CHRO-TV Pembroke/Ottawa, which had recently disaffiliated from CTV.
Shortly thereafter, Electrohome announced it would sell its broadcasting assets – including its interest in the alliance, its CTV shares, and
CFRN-TV Edmonton – to Baton in exchange for shares in Baton. These two deals were approved by the CRTC in August. Baton acquired the remaining CTV shares from WIC and
Moffat Communications, which remained affiliates for the moment, that fall.
The BBS brand was summarily discontinued in favour of CTV, and the company itself was renamed CTV Inc. the following year. The Eatons' remaining shares, representing 41% of Baton, were sold off to the general public in early 1998. By the end of 2001, nearly all CTV stations would be consolidated under network ownership (including one replacement).
CTV Inc. continues to exist as a subsidiary of CTVglobemedia.
NetStar Communications
NetStar Communications Inc. (previously Labatt Communications Inc., and currently CTV Specialty Television Inc.) was formed by
Labatt Brewing Company to hold that firm's broadcasting assets, which included TSN, RDS,
Viewers Choice and
Discovery Channel. In 1995, when the parent company was sold to the foreign brewing conglomerate
Interbrew, a consortium of four Canadian investors -
Stephen Bronfman (22.5%),
Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (22.5%),
Reitmans (16.5%), and senior management (6.5%) - along with
ESPN, with 32%, took over the company.
After a takeover attempt by
CanWest Global that was vetoed by ESPN, CTV announced a friendly bid to take over NetStar Communications in early 1999, with CRTC approval on
March 24,
2000.
2000 to present
Under Bell Canada ownership - Bell Globemedia (2000-2006)
CTVglobemedia in its current form was masterminded by former
Bell Canada Enterprises chief executive
Jean Monty, largely as a response to
CanWest Global Communications's purchase of the
Southam newspaper chain as well as the trend of
media convergence, particularly the
AOL-
Time Warner merger. Monty believed that, to survive in a changing technological landscape, and in particular to drive subscriptions to
satellite television provider
Bell ExpressVu and
internet service provider Bell Sympatico, BCE had to have control over content.
In early
2000, under Monty, BCE acquired CTV Inc. in an all-cash transaction valued at $2.3 billion (
CAD). Soon after, Monty arranged to have
Thomson Corporation transfer control of
The Globe and Mail, the
Toronto-based national newspaper, to BCE in exchange for a significant (20%) interest in the merged CTV/
Globe entity. The Thomson family, which originally held a direct 9.9% interest through
The Woodbridge Company Ltd., later bought Thomson Corp.'s interests itself.
The resulting company, Bell Globemedia Inc. (hereafter abbreviated "BGM"), consisted of CTV,
The Globe and Mail, and the
internet portal then known as
Sympatico-
Lycos (Lycos was later replaced by
MSN). Fecan was named the combined firm's president and CEO, a role he continues in today. After Monty resigned and was replaced by
Michael Sabia in
2002, it became clear that Monty's vision wasn't producing anything near the desired results, notwithstanding the good results for the individual units, particularly the CTV network.
The following years provided a few cosmetic changes in BGM's assets. In 2001, CTV acquired
CKY-TV in
Winnipeg and
CFCF-TV in Montreal, and moved the CTV affiliation in British Columbia to CIVT, replacing two affiliates that had been purchased by CanWest. That fall also brought the launch of the first digital
specialty channels, including several owned by CTV.
The company acquired partial ownership in TQS in 2002, the Sympatico portal was sold back to Bell Canada, while a further investment from the Thomsons (whose ownership increased to 31.5%) funded the acquisition of 15% of
Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment. However, since BGM was first termed a non-core asset by BCE management in
2003, much attention was given to its likely sale, and a possible breakup into several different pieces.
Reorganization and CHUM Limited merger
On
December 2,
2005,
BCE announced it would sell an 8.5% interest to Woodbridge (increasing their total ownership to 40%), a 20% interest to
Torstar, and a 20% interest to
Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan.
BCE will retain 20% of the group - a condition that would ensure that ExpressVu, Sympatico, and other
Bell units continued to have access to Globemedia content. The transaction closed on August 30, 2006.
This deal suggests any breakup is unlikely in the near future. However, Torstar's involvement led to additional media concentration concerns, mainly from media
unions. Torstar insisted it was committed to maintaining the
editorial independence of the
Globe and its own
Toronto Star, and ultimately there were no major regulatory hurdles due to this.
On
July 12,
2006, BGM announced a friendly bid to take over
CHUM Limited for an estimated $1.7 billion. The acquisition would bring the secondary broadcast system (
Citytv), as well as brands such as
CablePulse24,
MuchMusic,
Star!,
Bravo!, and
Space, and all of CHUM's radio stations, into the BGM fold. BGM originally announced that CHUM's
A-Channel stations,
ACCESS and
CKX-TV stations along with
MusiquePlus,
MusiMax,
CLT, and BGM's own
OLN wouldn't be retained.
On September 7, 2006, in order to pay for the CHUM acquisition, BGM sold additional shares to its existing shareholders. BCE didn't participate in the refinancing; the net effect was an increase in Teachers' ownership to 25%, while BCE's interests are now 15%.
On
December 14 2006, as a result of BCE's reduced ownership Bell Globemedia announced that the company's name will be renamed as CTVglobemedia as of
January 1 2007.
On
April 9,
2007,
Rogers Communications announced a tentative deal, to purchase
A-Channel,
CKX-TV,
Access Alberta,
Canadian Learning Television, and from CTVglobemedia as part of its pending takeover of CHUM Limited.
On
April 11,
2007, Astral Media announced that that'll acquire CHUM's 50% interest in MusiMax and MusiquePlus from CTVglobemedia.
On
June 8,
2007, the CRTC approved the CTVglobemedia takeover of CHUM Limited, but it added a condition that CTV must sell off the
Citytv stations, because they already have CTV O&O stations in those same markets. (CTV ultimately chose to keep the
A-Channel stations along with the rest of CHUM assets it had previously said it would sell, except for MusiquePlus/MusiMax.)
Rogers Communications was announced as the buyer of the Citytv stations on
June 11,
2007, and the CHUM acquisition was finalized on June 22.
Later that year, BCE announced on
June 30 that it'll be sold to a group lead by the
Ontario Teachers Pension Plan which will become the majority shareholder of BCE. Teachers' effective stake in CTVglobemedia will increase to 40% as a result of the pending transaction.
On
November 16,
2007, CTVglobemedia and
Comcast (the owners of the
American Cable Channel,
Versus) announced that it would sell the remaining interest of OLN to Rogers Communications.
On
March 7,
2008,
Corus Entertainment announced that it'll acquire CLT from CTVglobemedia for an estimated worth $73 million.
Related links
Further Information
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