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CFCF-TV


:''"CFCF" redirects here. The call sign CFCF was also previously used by CINW (AM) and CFQR-FM.''
'CFCF-TV' (now identified on air as 'CTV Montreal') is a CTV-owned and operated station located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. CFCF broadcasts on channel 12 at a maximum ERP of 316 kW.
On cable, CFCF is seen on Videotron channel 11 in the Montreal area (channel 7 in the West-Island), Charter Plattsburgh channel 13 and Comcast Burlington channel 21; it is also seen on Bell ExpressVu and Star Choice systems on channels 205 and 312 respectively. Most cable distributors in Quebec also carry CFCF, as it is the only CTV station in the province. Despite having only one transmitter, its signal reaches all the way to the Laurentides and Lanaudière regions, and also decently covers the Champlain Valley region in Vermont and New York.
Before 1997, when CHCH and CITY launched rebroadcast transmitters in the Ottawa region, local cable companies there carried CFCF as well. Because CHCH and CFCF were sharing some programs, CFCF was removed from these systems, except for Rogers Cable. In Gatineau, Videotron still offers CFCF on channel 71.
Its newscasts, ''CTV News'' (formerly ''CFCF News'', formerly ''Pulse News''), are headed up by main the 6 p.m. weeknight anchors Mutsumi Takahashi and Brian Britt, 12 p.m. weekday anchors Mutsumi Takahashi and Todd van der Heyden, Late-News with Debra Arbec, Weekend News with Tarah Schwartz and First News at 6 a.m. with Herb Luft. CTV Montreal produces 24 separate newscasts each week. One of its most famous anchors, Bill Haugland, is now retired, his last show aired on November 30, 2006. Bill worked at CFCF for more than 40 years. He covered major stories in the 1960s and 1970s before becoming the lead anchor at CFCF in the late-1970s. Bill was an institution and in a special "Farewell to Bill" show broadcast on his final day, he was heralded by colleagues, viewers and former prime ministers alike.
The station now airs virtually all of the standard CTV schedule. In the past, some children's programming was pre-empted, because of provincial regulations on advertising; the station now carries CTV's few remaining children's programs with public service announcements during ad breaks. Additionally, CFCF airs ''Access Hollywood'' in place of ''Jeopardy!''; although no Montreal-area station currently carries ''Jeopardy!'', ''Access'' was in place on CFCF before its acquisition by CTV.
As with most Canadian stations, the prime-time schedule is usually synchronized with the original American airings of the same programs because Plattsburgh/Burlington's WPTZ, WVNY, WFFF and WCAX are all available on cable in Montreal. CFCF's ratings do generally top all of those stations, as well as the regional CBC Montreal station.

Contents
History
Previous slogans
First CFCF-TV prime-time lineup, January-February 1961
External links

History


CFCF-TV was founded by the Canadian Marconi Company, after several failed attempts to gain a licence, beginning in 1938, and then each year after World War II. In 1960, it finally gained a license, and began broadcasting on January 20, 1961 at 5.45pm. The call letters stand for '''C'anada's 'F'irst, 'C'anada's 'F'inest'', referring to CFCF-AM (now ''CINW''), the first radio station in Canada. It was the second privately-owned English-language station in Quebec; CKMI-TV in Quebec City had signed on four years earlier.
The station was originally located above the Avon Theatre. The first night on-air was fraught with problems. A power failure interrupted the opening ceremony, and later on, police raided the downstairs ballroom, with sirens blazing and a number of arrests made. The station's newscast, ''Pulse News,'' faced a few problems because of the noise from the ballroom. CFCF-AM-FM-TV moved into their own facilities at 405 Ogilvy Avenue in Montreal's Park Extension neighborhood on May 19, and channel 12 became an affiliate of CTV on October 1. However, its relationship with CTV was somewhat acrimonious over the years, in part because it felt CTV's flagship station, CFTO-TV in Toronto, had too much influence over the network.
In 1972, because of new foreign ownership guidelines implemented by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), CFCF-TV (owned by General Electric Canada through Canadian Marconi) and its sister stations CFCF-AM, CFQR-FM and CFCX-SW were sold to computer and telecommunications company Multiple Access Ltd. Multiple Access sold the stations to Jean Pouliot in 1979.
In 1986, CFCF became a sister station to CFJP-TV, the flagship station of Pouliot's new French language network, Television Quatre-Saisons (TQS). CFCF's profits were used to fund the ailing TQS. Two years later, the radio stations were sold to Mount-Royal Broadcasting, and moved out of the CFCF building a year later. Prior to this period, Pouliot began CF Cable TV, which was the forerunner (of sorts) to Vidéotron.
Financial relief came to the company in the 1990s, thanks to CanWest Global. CanWest Global invested money into the station, in exchange for applying to the CRTC to operate a Global repeater station in Montreal. However, CanWest Global changed its mind, citing tax problems. It did, however, allow CFCF to carry some Global programs; it was already airing some programming from Citytv. This would not be the end of Global's influence at the station.
In 1997, TVA sold an interest in CKMI to Canwest. The two companies announced plans to turn CKMI into a Global station, along with a CKMI repeater in Montreal and a large studio complex in Montreal. Pouliot was scared by the prospect of new competition and decided to sell his assets to Vidéotron. However, Vidéotron also owned TVA, which retained a half-interest in CKMI. This would have resulted in one company having a significant stake in all of the private stations in Montreal--CFCF, CKMI, CFJP and TVA flagship CFTM-TV.
CFCF logo, 2001-2004 As of October 2005, all CTV Stations eliminated the callsign logos and only use the main CTV network logo.

As a result, Vidéotron sold CFCF to Western International Communications (WIC), who also owned CHAN and CHEK in British Columbia, CHCH in Ontario and several stations in Alberta. TQS was then sold to Quebecor, and later to Cogeco and Bell Globemedia (now CTVglobemedia).
CanWest bought WIC's television assets in 2000. However, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC])would not allow CFCF to be twinsticked with CKMI because Montreal's Anglophone population was too small (though it allowed CanWest to keep CJNT-TV, a multicultural station it had bought a year earlier). The station was placed under trusteeship, and had to be sold in short order. In 2001, amid all these wranglings over ownership, Bell Globemedia, owner of CTV, bought the station. With the opening of the Fall 2001 television season, CFCF officially adopted the CTV schedule and all non-CTV shows were dropped. After 40 years of being master of its own house to a large degree, CFCF lost much of that independence and manoeuverability through the CTV/Bell Globemedia deal.
With the exception of local newscasts, which all CTV stations have, and Access Hollywood (which airs weekdays at 7:00 p.m.), CFCF's program schedule is virtually identical to every other CTV station. On October 3, 2005, the unique "CFCF" name used for the station ID and its local news, CFCF News (formerly known as Pulse News), was abolished and simply renamed "CTV Montreal" and "CTV News". So strong was the "Pulse" brand-name that even six years after it was eliminated, many viewers still refer to the newscast as "Pulse". This renaming to "CTV News" was done at all affiliates across the country - to provide a common brand for the entire network. In 2003, CTV Montreal moved to 1205 Papineau Avenue in the eastern part of downtown. The area has now become Montreal's (and French Canada's) main media district; CBC, Global, RDS, TQS and TVA are all within several blocks.
By 2005, Bell Globemedia was considered to be a non-core asset by parent company BCE (Bell Canada Enterprises) and was sold to a group of investors, which includes the Thomson family. The Bell Globemedia group (made up of the entire CTV Network, as well as the ''Globe and Mail'' newspaper and a variety of other channels and media assets) was renamed "CTVGlobemedia" in late-2006.
The new media giant also acquired "CHUM" Television's holdings in 2006, which include the highly successful Citytv stations, MuchMusic and a variety of other specialty channels. But the CHUM deal has also raised serious questions about the high degree of media concentration in Canada. This new conglomerate now owns more than one TV station in several Canadian markets - increasing the worry about job losses and cutbacks. In all likelihood, CTVglobemedia will be forced by the federal government to sell off some of its new CHUM stations - to avoid owning two stations (CTV and CHUM) in one market.
CFCF has always been the number one, top-rated television station for Anglophone Quebeckers. The relatively small size of the community means that many rally around their institutions and CFCF has continued to be the preferred choice. As well, a significant number of bilingual Francophones also watch CFCF - for both programming and news - although CFTM (TVA), CFJP (TQS) and CBFT (Radio-Canada) are the obvious market leaders for Quebec's French community.
Previous slogans


★ More to See

★ Taking you to the Stars (1981/82)

★ It's All Happening Right Here (1983/84)

★ Twelve's the One (1984/85)

★ Just Look! Look What's Here on 12. (1985/86)

★ More On 12.

★ Great Things Going On. (1989-1993)

★ 10,20,30 Years...It Seems Like Yesterday (1991, 30th anniversary celebrations)

★ The 1 2 Watch. (1993-1997)

★ Montreal's 1 2 Watch, CFCF 12. (1997-2001)

★ Montreal's 1 2 Watch, CTV. (2001-2006; used as a slogan only, no jingle)

★ Montreal's Watching CTV (2006-present)

First CFCF-TV prime-time lineup, January-February 1961


PM 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 10:00 10:30 11:00
SUN Specials Maverick Interpol Calling Little White Lie The Real McCoys Trackdown Dateline Playhouse 90
MON Carte Blanche The Donna Reed Show Sunset Theatre 77 Sunset Strip Pulse Pajama Playhouse
TUE Carte Blanche Huckleberry Hound Sunset Theatre Alfred Hitchcock Presents San Francisco Beat Pulse Pajama Playhouse
WED Carte Blanche Guestward Ho! Sunset Theatre War in the Air Mr. Adams and Eve Pulse Pajama Playhouse
THU Carte Blanche The Rifleman Sunset Theatre Naked City Pulse Pajama Playhouse
FRI Carte Blanche The Adventures of Robin Hood Sunset Theatre The Andy Griffith Show Lock-Up Pulse Pajama Playhouse
SAT The Buccaneers Know Your Rights Route 66 Wagon Train Four to Go Mike Hammer Pulse Playboy Penthouse

Note: ''Leave It to Beaver'' aired Sun. 6-6:30pm. ''Playhouse 90'' aired Sun. 11pm-Mon. 12:30am. ''Carte Blanche'' aired Monday-Friday 5:45-7pm. ''Pajama Playhouse'' movies usually ended at 1am. ''Popeye'' aired Sat. 6-6:30pm. ''Shock Theatre'' aired Saturday 12 midnight-Sun 2am. ''San Francisco Beat'' was the syndicated title for ''The Lineup''.

External links



CFCF

CFCF at TV Hat



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