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CFTO-DT (channel 9) is a television station in , Ontario, Canada, serving as the of the CTV Television Network. It is owned and operated by network parent alongside -based CTV 2 flagship , channel 3 (although the two stations maintain separate operations). CFTO-DT's studios are located at 9 Channel Nine Court in the former city of Scarborough, and its transmitter is located atop the in . The station shares the Agincourt studio complex with CTV's national headquarters, which includes studios for the network's news programming ( CTV National News and the CTV News Channel), along with most of Bell Media's specialty channels.


History
The station first signed on the air at 10 p.m. on December 31, 1960; its first official day of programming was on January 1, 1961. The inaugural program broadcast on CFTO was a for the Ontario Association for Community Living, hosted by broadcaster Joel Aldred, Joel Walkden Aldred complete with a ceremony.

The station was founded by Baton Aldred Rogers Broadcasting, a between Telegram Corporation (owned by the Bassett and Eaton families), Aldred-Rogers Broadcasting (owned by Joel Aldred and Ted Rogers), and Foster Hewitt Broadcasting, which owned radio station CKFH (1430 AM, now on 590 AM). The 'Baton' portion of the name was pronounced , rather than the conducting tool's traditional pronunciation.

The station's first children's show, shown on weekday afternoons, was The Professor's Hideaway, starring Stan Francis.

(1998). 9781896943442, Homeland Press. .
"Here's looking at you, Kiddo" . Showbiz, Bill Brioux, November 26, 2004 "Happy Homes for Adoptable Children". Broadcaster, April 25, 1963, page 90 American television network ABC held a minority share in the partnership, which it sold to each of the partners shortly before CFTO-TV went on the air. Ted Rogers' uncle J. Elsworth Rogers was a minority (and originally primary) owner of Western Ontario Broadcasting, Ltd., owners of CKLW-TV (now ) in Windsor, Ontario (which was mostly owned by ). The station's original studio and transmitter facilities were located at 1550 McCowan Road, later renamed 9 Channel Nine Court.

In March 1961, Aldred sold his interest in the station, and on October 1 of that year, CFTO became a charter affiliate of CTV, as well as the network's flagship station. In 1970, Ted Rogers sold his interest in CFTO and the Bassett-Eaton group sold their interest in in an exchange of assets. On May 31, 1976, CFTO began transmitting its signal from the , while its studios remained in Agincourt. CFTO began broadcasting in in 1985. In 1991, the station joined with several other Ontario stations to form Ontario Network Television, which evolved into the Baton Broadcast System, a subsystem within the CTV network. In 1995, CFTO began operating rebroadcast stations at (on UHF channel 21) and (near Peterborough, on UHF channel 54).

When CTV's stations proposed to buy the network and run it as a in 1966, the Board of Broadcast Governors initially balked at the proposal. CFTO was by far the largest, richest and most profitable station (it was more than double the size of the next-largest station, in ). This led to fears that CFTO would dominate a station-owned network. The BBG was only appeased when the station owners promised that each owner would have an equal vote, regardless of how large it was. As it turned out, though, Baton gradually grew powerful enough that it was able to buy controlling interest in CTV in 1997, changing its name to CTV Inc. in 1998.

On January 27, 1998, the sold its 41% interest in CTV. On that same day, the Baton Broadcast System merged into CTV. With rumours of an impending takeover, proposed to buy CTV Inc. for $2.3 billion; this was approved by the CTV board in March 2000. The deal still required approval from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), but with the promise of the largest benefits package ever presented to the regulators, the deal was approved on December 7 that year. By February 2005, the station stopped using its call letters in its on-air branding (opting to use the "CTV" name), a branding convention that became official on several CTV stations throughout the country in October 2005. BCE later sold most of its interest in CTV, with the parent company being renamed . BCE Inc. later reacquired 100% control of CTVglobemedia's assets for $1.3 billion in 2011, with the parent company being renamed once again to .


Programming
As CFTO serves as CTV's flagship station, its schedule is virtually identical to the CTV network schedule. A largely identical schedule is used on the other CTV stations in , in and in Kitchener, as CFTO acts as for these stations. Any discrepancies with other stations would generally be limited to local and religious programming on Sunday mornings.


Other station productions
Under CTV's original cooperative structure, CFTO, through Baton's in-house production company Glen-Warren Productions, was one of the network's main contributors of Canadian programming, such as The Littlest Hobo, Circus and The Uncle Bobby Show. Indeed, the amount of programming originating at CFTO was often a source of tension with the network's other major-market affiliates. However, as with most local stations in , such locally produced non-news programming has become increasingly rare.

For much of its history, CFTO's Channel Nine Court studios have also served as the home for network-produced programs such as CTV National News, and W5. The studios are now also used by a number of CTV's specialty channels, for productions such as the cable news channel CTV News Channel, TSN's , and Discovery Channel's Daily Planet.

Over the years, the studio complex has also been rented out for third-party productions, such as the studio scenes in the 1976 film Network. The Lotto 6/49 and Lotto Super 7 (now ) drawings were also held at the CFTO studios until 2008. Since 2010, CFTO and CP24 have been the television broadcasters for the Toronto Santa Claus Parade.


News operation
CFTO-DT presently broadcasts hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with hours each weekday and hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). With the exception of its CP24 simulcasts, the station brands its newscasts as CTV News Toronto, in line with all of CTV's other owned-and-operated stations as well as the CTV 2 stations, using generic CTV News graphics. The station's flagship 6 p.m. newscast is the highest-rated local newscast in Canada. Known beginning in the 1970s as World Beat News (for its early evening newscast), Noon Beat News (for its lunch hour newscast) and Night Beat News (for its late evening newscast), the station's newscasts were rebranded as CFTO News in early 1998, and as CTV News in 2005.

In December 2008, CP24, a 24-hour news channel which primarily focuses on Toronto, began airing a simulcast of CTV News at Six, displacing its simulcast of the 6 p.m. edition of . This change occurred because the long-standing association between (channel 57) and CP24 (which were previously both owned by ) abruptly came to an end after the CRTC announced the approval of their application by , owners of , to launch its own 24-hour local news channel which would be focusing on the Greater Toronto Area, ; CP24 broadcasts Toronto's Number One Local 6pm Newscast What Happened To CityNews On That Cable Channel? like CFTO, CP24 is operated by Bell Media, although the operations between the two remain otherwise separate. The station's late evening newscast, CTV News at 11:30, was later added to the CP24 schedule in May 2009. On May 12, 2009, CFTO began broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition; with the change, the station introduced a renovated studio.

Starting in July 2017, CFTO began simulcasting CP24's Live at 5 and as part of an expansion of local news programming across Bell Media stations. Unlike CP24, these newscasts are broadcast in full screen without any information sidebars.


Notable current on-air staff
  • – weekday co-anchor, CTV News at Six
  • Michelle Dubé – weekday co-anchor, CTV News at Six


Notable former on-air staff
  • Christine Bentley – CTV News at Six anchor and reporter
  • – weather specialist reporter
  • CTV News at Six anchor
  • – reporter (brief stint)
  • – reporter (1985–1989)
  • – weekday co-anchor, CTV News at Six and CTV News at Noon (2001–2020), special reporter
  • – reporter


Technical information

Subchannel
+Subchannel of CFTO-DT ! Channel ! Res. ! Aspect ! Short name ! Programming


Analog-to-digital conversion
The station began providing a digital signal on satellite on November 17, 2003, and on January 30, 2004, CFTO was granted an over-the-air digital television signal, transmitting on UHF channel 40 at an effective radiated power of 17,400 watts. In mid-2005, CFTO upgraded its digital signal to transmit programming in high definition. CFTO shut down its analog signal, over channel 9, on August 31, 2011, the official date on which Canadian television stations in CRTC-designated mandatory transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts. The station's digital signal was relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 40 to its analog-era VHF channel 9 for post-transition operations. Digital Television – Office of Consumer Affairs (OCA) On April 29, 2019, CTV updated broadcast channels for stations in Toronto, Victoria, and Windsor. CFTO moved to VHF channel 8, but retained virtual channel 9.


Transmitters
CFTO-DT-2121 ()
21
207.6 kWota test
CFTO-DT-54Peterborough35 (UHF)
54
38 kW

CFTO-TV-21 and a long list of CTV rebroadcasters nationwide were to shut down on or before August 31, 2009, as part of a political dispute with Canadian authorities on paid requirements for operators. CTV list of transmitters to be shut down A subsequent change in ownership assigned full control of CTVglobemedia to Bell Media; as of 2011, these transmitters continue to be licensed and remain in operation. Just after midnight on June 23, 2019, the Orillia transmitter was converted to digital.


External links
  • CTV Toronto
  • CFTO-DT at The History of Canadian Broadcasting by the Canadian Communications Foundation

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