TVA (TV network)

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TVA
Image:Tva-logo.gif
Type Broadcast television network
Country Flag of Canada Canada
Availability    Quebec, parts of Ontario, New Brunswick and northern U.S. via antenna, nationally via cable
Slogan C'est vrai (It's real)
Owner Groupe TVA (Quebecor Media)
Launch date 1963 (formally organized 1971)
Website tva.canoe.com

TVA is a Canadian French language privately owned television network.

TVA is based in Quebec and has affiliates in only Quebec, although the affiliates in Rivière-du-Loup and Carleton-sur-Mer have rebroadcast transmitters in New Brunswick. Also, the affiliate in Gatineau is part of the Ottawa television market. Since 1998, it has been available on cable across Canada. It is widely considered to be the French counterpart of CTV. In fact, its logo is similar to CTV's, although the two networks have never been jointly owned. TVA is presently owned by Groupe TVA Inc. (TSXTVA), a publicly-traded subsidiary of Quebecor Média.

TVA is short for Téléviseurs associés or Télédiffuseurs associés, depending on the source (both can be roughly translated to "Associated Telecasters"). The name reflects TVA's roots as a cooperative network owned by its affiliates. However, only the initials are used on-air.

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TVA traces its roots to 1963, when CJPM-TV in Chicoutimi (now part of Saguenay), a station only a few months old and in need of revenue, began sharing programs with the biggest privately owned francophone station in Canada, CFTM-TV in Montreal. They were joined by CFCM-TV in Quebec City in 1964 after CFCM lost its SRC affiliation. While the three stations shared programs for many years, it wasn't until 1971 that the informal link became a proper network, TVA, with CFTM as the flagship station. The network began the first private French-language network news service in Canada in 1972. Between 1973 and 1983, seven more stations joined the network.

When the network was formally organized in 1971, its affiliates ran it as a cooperative, much like CTV operated for many years. In 1982, the cooperative became a corporation with the station owners as shareholders.

For many years, TVA's programming was very similar to what Global offers today in that it didn't have what could be called a main schedule aside from news. For instance, Pathonic Communications, which owned the TVA affiliates in Quebec City, Sherbrooke, Trois-Rivières, Rimouski and Rivière-du-Loup; offered programming that was radically different from that offered on CFTM. The differences were enough that Sherbrooke's CHLT-TV, whose over-the-air signal reaches Montreal, was carried on Montreal cable systems. However, CFTM dominated the network, contributing as much of 90% of the network's programming. This was not surprising, as Montreal has long been the centre of French-language broadcasting in Canada.

In 1989 Télé-Metropole, which owned CFTM and CJPM, bought out Pathonic and changed its name to Groupe TVA Inc., a subsidiary of cable company Vidéotron. The other station owners sold the outstanding shares of the network in 1992. Nine years later, Quebecor became owner of TVA.

TVA also owns Le Canal Nouvelles, Canada's only private French-language headline news channel. When TVA completes its broadcast day, the TVA stations simulcast LCN until TVA's next broadcast day begins. As well, the company owns a magazine publishing division unit, a film production and distribution house, and a number of other Internet and cable properties, many of which are often used to cross-promote TVA series and events.

In 1998, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission made it compulsory for all cable systems in Canada to carry a TVA station, in order to give Canada's francophone minority communities a second French-language programming choice. The station offered is usually the network's flagship, CFTM. Some cable companies in Ontario and New Brunswick carried the affiliates from Gatineau, Rouyn-Noranda or Rivière-du-Loup long before TVA carriage became mandatory, and these companies have mostly continued to carry their existing affiliates rather than switching to CFTM.

CFTM also provides a time-shifted feed for British Columbia cable companies. However, this feed is little more than a machine that records CFTM's programming and then rebroadcasts it three hours later to viewers in British Columbia.

In 2004, TVA, in partnership with fellow Quebecor subsidiary Sun Media acquired CKXT-TV in Toronto, once known as Toronto One and now known as "Sun TV." The company's first English-language television station, it will continue to be run as an independent station, not as a TVA affiliate, but it is in the process of a major programming shift. In early 2005, TVA confirmed to The Globe and Mail that it will continue to look for other expansion opportunities in English Canada.

Although TVA is a full-fledged network, its network feed is basically a retransmission of CFTM. While this allows TVA to air more network programming than any other Canadian network (the basis for its longtime slogan, Le sens de la télé or "Television's meaning"), it also means that CFTM usually can't interrupt its programming for news or weather bulletins in Montreal without interrupting the entire network.

For many years, TVA has been more popular than Télévision de Radio-Canada, the French-language counterpart of CBC Television. All but 10 of the 50 most popular television shows in Quebec come from TVA.

  • Current: "C'est vrai" (It's real)
  • Past: "Le sens de la télé" (The meaning of television)
"Le Réseau d'Ici" (The network here)

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