CICT-DT
- For the present-day CHCT in St. Andrews, New Brunswick, see CHCT-TV.
| Calgary | |
|---|---|
| City of license | Calgary, Alberta |
| Branding | Global Calgary |
| Slogan | Think. Global. |
| Channels | Digital: 41 (UHF) Virtual: 2.1 (PSIP) |
| Translators | see below |
| Affiliations | Global (secondary 1988-2000, sole affiliate 2000-present) |
| Owner | Shaw Media (Shaw Television Limited Partnership) |
| First air date | October 8, 1954 |
| Call letters' meaning | Canadian Independent Calgary Television or Calgary Independent Channel Two |
| Sister station(s) | CISA-TV |
| Former callsigns | CHCT-TV (1954-1968) CFAC-TV (1968-1990) CKKX-TV (1990-1993) CICT-TV (1993-2011) |
| Former channel number(s) | Analog 2 (1954-2011) (VHF) |
| Former affiliations | CBC (1954-1975) independent (1975-2000) |
| Transmitter power | 50 kW |
| Height | 378 m |
| Transmitter coordinates | 51°4′21.1″N 114°15′38.3″W / 51.072528°N 114.260639°W |
| Website | Global Calgary |
CICT-DT (known on-air as Global Calgary) is a Canadian television station, licensed to and serving Calgary, Alberta. It is owned by Shaw Media, and is an owned-and-operated station of the Global Television Network. It transmits on channel 2 and cable 7 in Calgary, and on the Bell TV (channel 244), Rogers Personal TV (channel 118), and Shaw Direct (channel 338) services.
The station first went on air in 1954, making it Global's oldest station. It serves as the master control hub for all Global owned and operated stations across Canada.
Contents |
[edit] History
CICT-TV signed on October 8, 1954 as CHCT, an affiliate of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC), and the first television station in Alberta. The studios, offices and antenna were located on a hill seven miles (11 km) west of the city. The station’s owners, Calgary Television Ltd., were a consortium of the three Calgary radio stations CFCN, CFAC and CKXL. The CT in CHCT stood for Calgary Television.
During the construction of the transmitter, the 70 foot, 5 ton antenna was being hoisted on the top of the 600-foot (180 m) tower when the cable snapped and the antenna fell all the way down the tower to imbed itself 15 feet (4.6 m) in the ground. Fortunately no one was injured, and the antenna was able to be repaired, but the station’s launch was delayed by 10 days. A year later, CHCT moved its studios and offices from the transmitter site on Old Banff Coach Road, to a renovated badminton club/sea cadet drill hall on 955 Rideau Road S.W. Calgary.
Notable productions at the original studio include:
- Klara’s Korner: a cooking show that was in national syndication for many years
- Yan Can Cook: another cooking show, this time hosted by Martin Yan, over 600 shows were produced. It also aired for many years on PBS in North America.
- Stampede Wrestling: produced for over 20 years, finding loyal audiences worldwide
- It Figures: the show originated at the station and it was produced for nearly 20 years
In 1957, CKXL Ltd. sold its share in Calgary Television Ltd., to Fredrick Shaw, who had recently sold his share in CKXL-AM to Tel-Ray Ltd. CFCN sold off its share in 1961 when it opened its own station, CFCN-TV. In 1968, Selkirk Broadcasting, owner of CFAC-AM, became sole owner of the station, and its call sign was accordingly changed to CFAC-TV. On September 1, 1975, after the CBC launched its own station in Calgary, CBRT, CFAC-TV disaffiliated from CBC and became independent. In 1979, the station branded itself as Channel 2&7, referring to its cable location. For a number of years afterwards, it continued to use the old CFAC "star" logo alongside the 2&7 logo.
In 1981, the station moved to its new home, the Calgary Television Center, a move reflecting its growth since its disaffiliation from the CBC. After obtaining the television rights to the Calgary Flames National Hockey League franchise the year before, the station purchased a seven camera mobile unit soon after. The station has been the Flames’ television partner since 1980. In the fall of 1982, the station began broadcasting 24 hours a day, a first for Calgary. Overnight shows consisted of Late Night movies and reruns of the Jackie Gleason Show amongst others.
In 1989, Maclean-Hunter purchased Selkirk Communications, but due to ownership regulations at the time (Maclean-Hunter already owned CFCN-TV), CFAC-TV was sold to Western International Communications (WIC). A year after WIC bought channel 2, it changed the calls to CKKX-TV. In 1992, CKKX’s news operations were expanded with the acquisitions of a satellite uplink truck and a fleet of electronic news gathering microwave trucks.
On September 7, 1993, CKKX was recalled CICT-TV, and also took on the brand of Calgary 7, referring to the station’s cable channel.
WIC's properties were split between Shaw Communications Inc. and Canwest in 1998. This move required Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approval, the plans for which were filed in 1999 and approved in 2000. Canwest acquired WIC's television assets, including CICT, which Shaw later bought Canwest's assets decades later becoming Shaw Media (which is based in the same city) amidst seeking creditor protection.
On September 4, 2000, CICT joined the Global Television Network, along with fellow Alberta stations CITV-TV and CISA. By 2001, CICT-TV began relays in Drumheller (CICT-TV-1) and Banff (CICT-TV-2). The station had been airing some Global shows since 1988.
[edit] Programming
CICT airs the same schedule as Global Edmonton. All non-news programming and some Calgary-based newscasts are also aired on Global Lethbridge.
[edit] News operation
Global Calgary currently airs a total of 43 hours of local news a week. Global Calgary became the first television station in Calgary, and the second television station in the province of Alberta, to shoot and transmit its local newscasts in High Definition on November 22, 2010.
On April 11, 2007, the station became the first in Calgary with a news helicopter. Named Global 1, it provides traffic reports on the Morning News in combination with studio traffic segments. It is also intended to provide breaking news coverage. The helicopter is also shared with AM 770 CHQR during the morning and afternoon rush hour.
On May 31, 2011, Shaw Media announced that a new Sunday morning local newscast would begin broadcasting on Global Calgary in September 2011, running from 8-10 a.m. Mountain Time.[1]
[edit] News/station presentation
[edit] Newscast titles
- Eyewitness News (1960s–early 1970s)
- CFAC Action News (mid 1970s–1979)
- 2&7 NewsFirst (1979–1990)
- Calgary 7 News (1990–2000)
- Global (Calgary) News (2000–present)[2]
[edit] Station slogans
- "Global's Got It!" (2000–2006)
- "Think. Global." (2006–present)
[edit] News team[3]
Anchors
- Jayme Doll - News Hour and News Final (weekends at 6 and 11 p.m.)
- Scott Fee - Morning News and Noon News Hour (weekdays at 5:30 a.m. and noon)
- Reid Fiest - Saturday Morning News (Saturdays at 7 a.m.) and Sunday Morning News (Sundays at 8 a.m.)
- Dallas Flexhaug - News Hour Final (weeknights at 11 p.m.)
- Susanne Fox - Morning News (weekdays at 5:30 a.m.) - on maternity leave
- Cara Fullerton - Noon News Hour (weekdays at noon)
- Gord Gillies - News Hour (weeknights at 6 p.m.)
- Linda Olsen - Early News and News Hour (weeknights at 5 and 6 p.m.)
- Amber Schinkel - Morning News (weekdays at 5:30 a.m.)
- Bindu Suri - Saturday Morning News (Saturdays at 7 a.m.) and Sunday Morning News (Sundays at 8 a.m.)
Weather team
- Paul Dunphy (CMOS-endorsed weathercaster) - lead meteorologist; Early News (weeknights at 5 p.m.), News Hour (weeknights at 6 p.m.) and News Hour Final (weeknights at 11 p.m.)
- Carla Bosacki - weather specialist; News Hour (weekends at 6 p.m.) and "News Final" (weekends at 11 p.m.)
- Gemma Lynne - weather specialist; Saturday Morning News (Saturdays at 7 a.m.) and Sunday Morning News (Sundays at 8 a.m.)
- Jordan Witzel - meteorologist; Morning News and "Noon News Hour" (weekdays at 5:30 a.m. and noon)
Sports team
- Grant Pollock - sports director; News Hour (weeknights at 6 p.m.)
- Brendan Parker - sports anchor; News Hour (weekends at 6 p.m.) and News Final (weekends at 11 p.m.)
- Kevin Smith - sports anchor; News Hour Final (weeknights at 11 p.m.)
Traffic
- Katrina Green - Saturday Morning News (Saturdays at 7 a.m.) and Sunday Morning News (Sundays at 8 a.m.) (in Global 1)
- Leslie Horton - Morning News (weekdays at 5:30 a.m.) and Noon News Hour (weekdays at noon)
- Jim King - Early News (weeknights at 5 p.m.) and News Hour (weeknights at 6 p.m.)
- Cathy McDonald - News Hour (weekends at 6 p.m.) (in Global 1)
- Pauline Rees - Morning News (weekdays at 5:30 a.m.) (in Global 1)
Reporters
- Gary Bobrovitz
- David Boushy
- Jill Croteau
- Tomasia Dasilva - Minding Your Business reporter (on maternity leave)
- Jayme Doll
- Reid Fiest - city hall reporter
- Dallas Flexhaug
- Cara Fullerton - weekday morning reporter
- Brienne Glass - also fill-in anchor
- Nancy Hixt - crime specialist
- Jeremy Hunka
- Carolyn Kury de Castillo
- Tracy Nagai
- Sarah Offin
- Linda Olsen - Woman of Vision feature reporter
- Hal Roberts - Minding Your Business reporter
- Mia Sosiak
- Bindu Suri
- Tony Tighe - consumer advocate; also fill-in anchor
- Gil Tucker - special features reporter
- Doug Vaessen
- Heather Yourex - Health FYI reporter
[edit] Former on-air staff
- Mil Arcega - weekend morning anchor/reporter (1998–2004; later at WRC-TV in Washington, D.C.)
- Ashleigh Banfield (was with MSNBC, now at TruTV, formerly Court TV)
- Tish Bell - roving reporter and fill-in traffic anchor (now creative director at BizBOXTV.com)
- Rick Castiglione - (President and Executive Producer of Cielo Pictures inc.)
- Larry Day (now COO of Pyramid Productions)
- Brenda Finley (now at CKUA radio)
- Chris Gailus (now at CHAN-TV)
- Todd Gallant (now at CFCN-TV; Co-Creator of BizBOXTV.com)
- John Gulka (retired)
- Ted Henley (now at CKAL-TV)
- Jimmy Hughes - weather (retired from television; co-host of Classic Country Mornings on AM 1060 radio (Calgary), real estate agent with Royal LePage Foothills
- Scott Jantzie - working for Mountain View Pictures
- Angela Kokott (now host of Calgary Today on CHQR; married to Grant Pollock)
- Louie Koutis (retired)
- Astrid Kuhn - (Owner of Astrid On Air Media; TV Host, TV/Video Producer of homebiztv.ca) [4]
- Ryan Leslie (now with Sportsnet)
- Mike Lownsbrough (President of Straycatt Productions)
- Ron Manz (now at Power 104 FM radio in Kelowna)
- Bruce McAllister - Wildrose Alliance Candidate for Chestermere – Rocky View
- Tara McCool (now with CKAL-TV)
- Leslie Miller (now at ABC7 eyewitness news in Los Angeles)
- Nirmala Naidoo (now with CBRT)
- Lisa Ostrikoff (Co-Creator of BizBOXTV.com)
- Andrew Schultz weather (now with CKAL-TV)
- Mike Toth (now a Freelance Writer, TV & Radio Host and Professional Speaker & Broadcaster Coach in Toronto)
- Ed Whalen - deceased - was with Global the first day it went on the air. News & Sports Director, news anchor & editorial. Host of Stampede Wrestling. Later, sports anchor & Calgary Flames play-by-play announcer. (Also worked for CFAC Radio & Calgary Sun)
- Don Wood - weather (retired; host of Sunday Morning Oldies Host on The Range radio (Airdrie)
[edit] Transmitters
| Station | City of licence | Channel | ERP | HAAT | Transmitter Coordinates |
| CICT-TV-1 | Drumheller | 8 (VHF) | 0.009 kW | NA | 51°27′1″N 112°44′10″W / 51.45028°N 112.73611°W |
| CICT-TV-2 | Banff | 13 (VHF) | 0.009 kW | NA | 51°11′53″N 115°36′47″W / 51.19806°N 115.61306°W |
[edit] Digital television and high definition
CICT-DT received a construction permit for channel 41 on March 5, 2009 and began broadcasting on May 25, 2009.[5] Digital television receivers will display CICT-DT's virtual channel as 2.1.
After the analogue television shutdown and digital conversion, which takes place on August 31, 2011,[6] CICT-DT remained on UHF channel 41.
CICT began broadcasting newscasts in high definition on November 22, 2010, as well as introducing a brand new Digital Studio.
[edit] References
- ^ http://shawmedia.ca/advertising/broadcast/television/stations/globalcalgary/schedule.asp
- ^ Global Calgary News Hour Final Open
- ^ Personalities
- ^ [1]
- ^ Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2009-119, CICT-TV Calgary – Transitional digital television
- ^ http://www.ic.gc.ca/epic/site/oca-bc.nsf/en/ca02336e.html
[edit] External links
- Global Calgary
- Canadian Communications Foundation - CICT-TV History
- Query the REC's Canadian station database for CICT-TV
- Query TV Fool's coverage map for CICT
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