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CFCN Sets Up for Whoop Up Days Parade

https://collections.galtmuseum.com/link/descriptions98714
Date Range
ca. 1970
Description Level
Item
Accession No.
20211095017
Physical Description
Betamax tape; digital copy available
Scope and Content
Video of CFCN TV crews as they set up their equipment and prepare for the Whoop-Up Days Parade broadcast outside in downtown Lethbridge.
More detail
Date Range
ca. 1970
Description Level
Item
Creator
CTV Lethbridge
Physical Description
Betamax tape; digital copy available
History Biographical
In 1958, Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and the Canadian Government created the Broadcasting Act, which established the Broadcasting Board of Governors, to diversify Canada’s television programming across the country. The Broadcasting Board of Governors became the governing body of Canadian broadcasting, and replaced the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s (CBC) role as regulator and broadcaster. Calgary, Vancouver, Winnipeg, Toronto, Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa and Edmonton, each received their own television stations under the new legislation. In July 1960, John Bassett, owner of the Toronto television station, formed another television station in Toronto, called the Independent Television Organization; this new organization consisted of eight privately owned stations. The ITO faced opposition from Spencer Caldwell, a former CBC executive and media pioneer. The fall of 1960, Calwell’s privately owned station named the Canadian Television Network, or CTN. The network launched as the CTV Television Network on October 1, 1961. Expansion of the network spread throughout Canada in the 1960s. On May 16, 1968, CFCN, the affiliate of CTV, was granted by the Board of Governors to operate in Lethbridge. The CJLH cooperated with the Calgary CHCT-TV and broadcasted part-time, and the two stations shared a television facility in Lethbridge. The CFCN brought CTV service to the Lethbridge and southern Alberta region. CFCN-TV-5 in Lethbridge opened on September 3, 1968, and continued to operate as CTV Lethbridge. In 1998, the Baton Broadcasting System and Spencer Caldwell, bought the rights to CTV and merged operations into the CTV Network, and the Baton Broadcasting System became known as CTV Inc.
Scope and Content
Video of CFCN TV crews as they set up their equipment and prepare for the Whoop-Up Days Parade broadcast outside in downtown Lethbridge.
Accession No.
20211095017
Collection
Archive
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