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Wikipedia

CKPG-TV

CKPG-TV (analogue channel 2) is a television station in Prince George, British Columbia, Canada, affiliated with Citytv. The station is owned by the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group, and maintains studios on 3rd Avenue (near Winnipeg Street) in Prince George; its transmitter is located atop Pilot Mountain.

CKPG-TV
Channels
BrandingCKPG TV
Programming
AffiliationsCitytv (2009–present)
Ownership
Owner
CKKN-FM, CKDV-FM
History
First air date
August 20, 1961 (62 years ago) (1961-08-20)
CBC (1961–2008)
E! (2008–2009)
Call sign meaning
CK Prince George
Technical information
Licensing authority
CRTC
ERP8.3 kW
HAAT329.7 m (1,082 ft)
Transmitter coordinates54°2′47″N 122°53′37″W / 54.04639°N 122.89361°W / 54.04639; -122.89361
Translator(s)See below
Links
WebsiteCKPG Today

CKPG also operates rebroadcasters in Hixon (CKPG-TV-1, channel 10), Mackenzie (CKPG-TV-4, channel 6), and Quesnel (CKPG-TV-5, channel 13).

History edit

The station first signed on the air on August 20, 1961, originally operated as a CBC affiliate. It was founded by the owner of local radio station CKPG (1230 AM, now CKDV-FM on 99.3 FM), broadcasting at a transmitter power output of 8,300 watts. The station's president and general manager, Bob Harkins, was one of the first people to appear on-air. In 1965, the station signed on a rebroadcaster in Quesnel on VHF channel 13. In April 1969, both the radio and television stations were purchased by Vancouver-based Q Broadcasting Ltd., owners of CHQM in Vancouver.

On December 12, 1970, Brian "Spinner" Spencer, a rookie hockey player for the Toronto Maple Leafs from Fort St. James, was called up to play with the Leafs in what would be his first NHL game on television. He called back home to his father, Roy Spencer, to tell him to watch the game that night on Hockey Night in Canada. Spencer was to be interviewed between periods during the game. However, CKPG-TV instead aired a game between the Vancouver Canucks and the California Golden Seals in place of the Maple Leafs-Chicago Black Hawks matchup. Infuriated, Roy Spencer drove 135 kilometres (84 mi) to CKPG-TV's Prince George studios and ordered the technicians at gunpoint to broadcast the Maple Leafs game instead. The station complied, but as Roy Spencer left the station, he was confronted by RCMP officers. After a brief stand-off, Roy Spencer was shot and killed. The event was later depicted in the 1993 Atom Egoyan-directed made-for-TV movie Gross Misconduct.[2][3]

In 1973, Gord Leighton was appointed general manager of CKPG-TV and CKPG radio. By 1985, the station had operated six rebroadcasting stations, including three that were owned by the CBC, operating in Hixon, Mackenzie, Quesnel, Vanderhoof, Fort Fraser and Fort St. James. On November 2, 1986, Harkins was awarded the Jeanne Clarke Memorial Local History Award for his contributions to local history and the community. He also served two terms as an alderman, and was involved with the station's operations until he accepted a position at rival radio station CJCI (97.3 FM). Harkins would return to CKPG-TV in the early 1990s, being seen regularly on the programme Community Close-up, on news segments Harkins Comment and Harkins History, and on a station-produced video, Portraits: Bob Harkins.

 
Logo used during its "PGTV" branding.

In 1988, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) renewed the network licence for CKPG-TV and Terrace station CFTK-TV, which allowed the two CBC affiliates to use the corporation's microwave equipment to transfer syndicated programming, when it was not being used for transmitting CBC programs. In 1990, Q Broadcasting Ltd. sold Radio Station CKPG Ltd., and its CKPG Television Ltd. subsidiary, to Monarch Broadcasting. Harkins died at the age of 69 on November 28, 2000. Nearly one month later, on December 21, the CRTC approved the buyout of Monarch Broadcasting by the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group, a division of the Jim Pattison Group, which included CKPG-TV and its retransmitter stations.

In 2001, CKPG-TV and its sister radio stations were a part of the 24-hour Relay for a Friend, held on May 5 and 6 of that year. This event raised $260,000 for cancer research and services. In July 2002, Ken Kilcullen was appointed general manager of CKPG-TV, along with its sister stations CKKN-FM and CKDV-FM. In the fall of 2003, the station was added to Bell ExpressVu's basic tier; competing satellite provider Star Choice later began carrying the station in February 2004. In May 2004, CKPG-TV received the Special Program of the Year award from the BC Association of Broadcasters for its special Crossing the Line, which looked at softwood lumber. On August 27 that year, the CRTC renewed CKPG-TV's licence, recognizing the station's commitment to local news (it carried over ten hours of local programming per week) and extended its CBC affiliation through August 31, 2008. In September 2004, the operations of CKPG-TV and its sister radio stations moved into new studio facilities at 1810 3rd Avenue.

 
CKPG's logo used from 2008 to 2012 and is the basis of the current logo.

When CBC Television went to a 24-hour schedule in October 2006, CKPG-TV increased the amount of CBC programming in its schedule. Along with the increase in overall hours of programming, the station increased its local programming to over 12 hours a week, including additions of its daily news and information programming.

In September 2007, CKPG announced plans to disaffiliate from the CBC after its affiliation term ended on August 31, 2008. Documents filed with the CRTC indicate the station would begin receiving programming from Canwest.[4] As Global station CHAN already broadcasts over-the-air in Prince George (via a rebroadcast transmitter), CKPG became an E! affiliate, as did Kamloops station CFJC. It was announced that CKPG's retransmitters would not be replaced by the CBC; following the switch to E!, CBC's Vancouver station CBUT became the market's default affiliate through its availability on cable and satellite in Prince George (CBUT's existing rebroadcasters would later shut down in 2012, as part of austerity measures imposed by the network).

It was later announced that the rebroadcast transmitters of another former CBC affiliate that switched to E!, CHAT-TV in Medicine Hat, would not be replaced by the CBC. All three areas became served by other television networks, including the E! system. However, despite the light Francophone population in the absence of an Anglophone network, Radio-Canada station CBUFT out of Vancouver is still available over-the-air in Prince George and Kamloops, and CBUFT's Edmonton sister station CBXFT is still available in Medicine Hat.

 
CKPG News logo starting on September 1, 2008.

On July 14, 2009, the Jim Pattison Group announced that CKPG and its other E! stations would affiliate with Rogers Media's Citytv system starting September 1; despite this, the stations did not incorporate any form of "Citytv" branding. CKPG and CFJC would also become part of a new regional sales initiative known as "inTV".[5] Canwest had previously announced it would either sell or close its E! stations, leaving the Pattison stations without a programming source. On May 3, 2012, Rogers announced the renewal of the Citytv affiliation agreement with Jim Pattison Group, originally slated to expire that August. Beginning September 1, 2012, CKPG began carrying 90% of Citytv's prime time schedule and the majority of its morning and daytime lineup in pattern with Vancouver's CKVU-DT (including a simulcast of the Vancouver edition of Breakfast Television), opting out for local midday and evening newscasts.[6]

Historically, CKPG aired Hockey Night in Canada dated back to the days of CBC affiliation. However, when Rogers bought the national rights to the NHL in November 2013, the Pattison affiliates began to air Hockey Night once again in October 2014.

News operation edit

CKPG-TV presently broadcasts 15 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with three hours each weekday); the station does not produce any newscasts on weekends. CKPG-TV's local newscasts are titled CKPG News; the station carries a 30-minute lunch hour newscast at noon, an hour-long early evening newscast from 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. and again from 6:00 to 7:00 p.m. along with a 30-minute newscast at 11:00 p.m. on weekdays only. Recorded versions of the 11:00 p.m. newscast are re-aired during overnight hours, until 7am the following morning. The station also produces CKPG News Week in Review, a half-hour recap of the week's top local news stories that airs on Saturdays at Noon and 6:00 p.m., with repeat broadcasts at Noon and 6:00 p.m. on Sunday along with Monday mornings at 6:00 a.m.

Transmitters edit

CKPG-TV's programming was originally repeated on CBC-owned transmitters in Vanderhoof (CBCB-TV-1, channel 18), Fort Fraser (CBCB-TV-2, channel 13) and Fort St. James (CBCB-TV-3, channel 7); these transmitters switched to CBUT following CKPG-TV's disaffiliation from the CBC.

Digital television and high definition edit

As of September 2008, CKPG has not yet begun broadcasting a digital signal. According to a 2009 CRTC decision, CKPG-TV is not required to activate its digital signal, as Prince George is not a mandatory market for digital conversion,[7] which took place in most other markets on August 31, 2011.[8] When CKPG-DT signs on its digital signal, it will broadcast on UHF channel 34. However, through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers will display CKPG-DT's virtual channel as its analogue-era VHF channel 2.

References edit

  1. ^ Ownership Chart 97 - JIM PATTISON - Radio & TV
  2. ^ Los Angeles Times: "Fabulous Forum: Sports Legend Revealed: A father of an NHL player held up a TV station to force them to show his son's game", June 1, 2010.
  3. ^ Hockey's Tough Guys: Brian "Spinner" Spencer
  4. ^ http://www.crtc.gc.ca/eng/archive/2007/pb2007-117.htm Broadcasting Public Notice CRTC 2007-117, October 18, 2007
  5. ^ (Press release). Jim Pattison Broadcast Group. 2009-07-14. Archived from the original on 2009-08-31. Retrieved 2009-07-19.
  6. ^ Citytv and Pattison Group Sign Affiliate Agreement 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine, Broadcaster Magazine, May 3, 2012.
  7. ^ "Broadcasting Regulatory Policy CRTC 2009-406". Retrieved 2011-03-14.
  8. ^ Digital Television - Office of Consumer Affairs (OCA) 2008-09-16 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

ckpg, analogue, channel, television, station, prince, george, british, columbia, canada, affiliated, with, citytv, station, owned, pattison, broadcast, group, maintains, studios, avenue, near, winnipeg, street, prince, george, transmitter, located, atop, pilot. CKPG TV analogue channel 2 is a television station in Prince George British Columbia Canada affiliated with Citytv The station is owned by the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group and maintains studios on 3rd Avenue near Winnipeg Street in Prince George its transmitter is located atop Pilot Mountain CKPG TVPrince George British ColumbiaCanadaChannelsAnalog 2 VHF Digital allocated 34 UHF BrandingCKPG TVProgrammingAffiliationsCitytv 2009 present OwnershipOwnerJim Pattison Group Jim Pattison Broadcast Group Limited Partnership 1 Sister stationsCKKN FM CKDV FMHistoryFirst air dateAugust 20 1961 62 years ago 1961 08 20 Former affiliationsCBC 1961 2008 E 2008 2009 Call sign meaningCK Prince GeorgeTechnical informationLicensing authorityCRTCERP8 3 kWHAAT329 7 m 1 082 ft Transmitter coordinates54 2 47 N 122 53 37 W 54 04639 N 122 89361 W 54 04639 122 89361Translator s See belowLinksWebsiteCKPG TodayCKPG also operates rebroadcasters in Hixon CKPG TV 1 channel 10 Mackenzie CKPG TV 4 channel 6 and Quesnel CKPG TV 5 channel 13 Contents 1 History 2 News operation 3 Transmitters 4 Digital television and high definition 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe station first signed on the air on August 20 1961 originally operated as a CBC affiliate It was founded by the owner of local radio station CKPG 1230 AM now CKDV FM on 99 3 FM broadcasting at a transmitter power output of 8 300 watts The station s president and general manager Bob Harkins was one of the first people to appear on air In 1965 the station signed on a rebroadcaster in Quesnel on VHF channel 13 In April 1969 both the radio and television stations were purchased by Vancouver based Q Broadcasting Ltd owners of CHQM in Vancouver On December 12 1970 Brian Spinner Spencer a rookie hockey player for the Toronto Maple Leafs from Fort St James was called up to play with the Leafs in what would be his first NHL game on television He called back home to his father Roy Spencer to tell him to watch the game that night on Hockey Night in Canada Spencer was to be interviewed between periods during the game However CKPG TV instead aired a game between the Vancouver Canucks and the California Golden Seals in place of the Maple Leafs Chicago Black Hawks matchup Infuriated Roy Spencer drove 135 kilometres 84 mi to CKPG TV s Prince George studios and ordered the technicians at gunpoint to broadcast the Maple Leafs game instead The station complied but as Roy Spencer left the station he was confronted by RCMP officers After a brief stand off Roy Spencer was shot and killed The event was later depicted in the 1993 Atom Egoyan directed made for TV movie Gross Misconduct 2 3 In 1973 Gord Leighton was appointed general manager of CKPG TV and CKPG radio By 1985 the station had operated six rebroadcasting stations including three that were owned by the CBC operating in Hixon Mackenzie Quesnel Vanderhoof Fort Fraser and Fort St James On November 2 1986 Harkins was awarded the Jeanne Clarke Memorial Local History Award for his contributions to local history and the community He also served two terms as an alderman and was involved with the station s operations until he accepted a position at rival radio station CJCI 97 3 FM Harkins would return to CKPG TV in the early 1990s being seen regularly on the programme Community Close up on news segments Harkins Comment and Harkins History and on a station produced video Portraits Bob Harkins nbsp Logo used during its PGTV branding In 1988 the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC renewed the network licence for CKPG TV and Terrace station CFTK TV which allowed the two CBC affiliates to use the corporation s microwave equipment to transfer syndicated programming when it was not being used for transmitting CBC programs In 1990 Q Broadcasting Ltd sold Radio Station CKPG Ltd and its CKPG Television Ltd subsidiary to Monarch Broadcasting Harkins died at the age of 69 on November 28 2000 Nearly one month later on December 21 the CRTC approved the buyout of Monarch Broadcasting by the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group a division of the Jim Pattison Group which included CKPG TV and its retransmitter stations In 2001 CKPG TV and its sister radio stations were a part of the 24 hour Relay for a Friend held on May 5 and 6 of that year This event raised 260 000 for cancer research and services In July 2002 Ken Kilcullen was appointed general manager of CKPG TV along with its sister stations CKKN FM and CKDV FM In the fall of 2003 the station was added to Bell ExpressVu s basic tier competing satellite provider Star Choice later began carrying the station in February 2004 In May 2004 CKPG TV received the Special Program of the Year award from the BC Association of Broadcasters for its special Crossing the Line which looked at softwood lumber On August 27 that year the CRTC renewed CKPG TV s licence recognizing the station s commitment to local news it carried over ten hours of local programming per week and extended its CBC affiliation through August 31 2008 In September 2004 the operations of CKPG TV and its sister radio stations moved into new studio facilities at 1810 3rd Avenue nbsp CKPG s logo used from 2008 to 2012 and is the basis of the current logo When CBC Television went to a 24 hour schedule in October 2006 CKPG TV increased the amount of CBC programming in its schedule Along with the increase in overall hours of programming the station increased its local programming to over 12 hours a week including additions of its daily news and information programming In September 2007 CKPG announced plans to disaffiliate from the CBC after its affiliation term ended on August 31 2008 Documents filed with the CRTC indicate the station would begin receiving programming from Canwest 4 As Global station CHAN already broadcasts over the air in Prince George via a rebroadcast transmitter CKPG became an E affiliate as did Kamloops station CFJC It was announced that CKPG s retransmitters would not be replaced by the CBC following the switch to E CBC s Vancouver station CBUT became the market s default affiliate through its availability on cable and satellite in Prince George CBUT s existing rebroadcasters would later shut down in 2012 as part of austerity measures imposed by the network It was later announced that the rebroadcast transmitters of another former CBC affiliate that switched to E CHAT TV in Medicine Hat would not be replaced by the CBC All three areas became served by other television networks including the E system However despite the light Francophone population in the absence of an Anglophone network Radio Canada station CBUFT out of Vancouver is still available over the air in Prince George and Kamloops and CBUFT s Edmonton sister station CBXFT is still available in Medicine Hat nbsp CKPG News logo starting on September 1 2008 On July 14 2009 the Jim Pattison Group announced that CKPG and its other E stations would affiliate with Rogers Media s Citytv system starting September 1 despite this the stations did not incorporate any form of Citytv branding CKPG and CFJC would also become part of a new regional sales initiative known as inTV 5 Canwest had previously announced it would either sell or close its E stations leaving the Pattison stations without a programming source On May 3 2012 Rogers announced the renewal of the Citytv affiliation agreement with Jim Pattison Group originally slated to expire that August Beginning September 1 2012 CKPG began carrying 90 of Citytv s prime time schedule and the majority of its morning and daytime lineup in pattern with Vancouver s CKVU DT including a simulcast of the Vancouver edition of Breakfast Television opting out for local midday and evening newscasts 6 Historically CKPG aired Hockey Night in Canada dated back to the days of CBC affiliation However when Rogers bought the national rights to the NHL in November 2013 the Pattison affiliates began to air Hockey Night once again in October 2014 News operation editCKPG TV presently broadcasts 15 hours of locally produced newscasts each week with three hours each weekday the station does not produce any newscasts on weekends CKPG TV s local newscasts are titled CKPG News the station carries a 30 minute lunch hour newscast at noon an hour long early evening newscast from 5 00 to 6 00 p m and again from 6 00 to 7 00 p m along with a 30 minute newscast at 11 00 p m on weekdays only Recorded versions of the 11 00 p m newscast are re aired during overnight hours until 7am the following morning The station also produces CKPG News Week in Review a half hour recap of the week s top local news stories that airs on Saturdays at Noon and 6 00 p m with repeat broadcasts at Noon and 6 00 p m on Sunday along with Monday mornings at 6 00 a m Transmitters editMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Station City of licence Channel ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinatesCKPG TV 1 Hixon 10 VHF 0 009 kW NA 53 28 43 N 122 38 5 W 53 47861 N 122 63472 W 53 47861 122 63472 CKPG TV 1 CKPG TV 4 Mackenzie 6 VHF 0 008 kW NA 55 1 52 N 122 53 44 W 55 03111 N 122 89556 W 55 03111 122 89556 CKPG TV 4 CKPG TV 5 Quesnel 13 VHF 0 008 kW NA 52 53 0 N 122 20 10 W 52 88333 N 122 33611 W 52 88333 122 33611 CKPG TV 5 CKPG TV s programming was originally repeated on CBC owned transmitters in Vanderhoof CBCB TV 1 channel 18 Fort Fraser CBCB TV 2 channel 13 and Fort St James CBCB TV 3 channel 7 these transmitters switched to CBUT following CKPG TV s disaffiliation from the CBC Digital television and high definition editAs of September 2008 CKPG has not yet begun broadcasting a digital signal According to a 2009 CRTC decision CKPG TV is not required to activate its digital signal as Prince George is not a mandatory market for digital conversion 7 which took place in most other markets on August 31 2011 8 When CKPG DT signs on its digital signal it will broadcast on UHF channel 34 However through the use of PSIP digital television receivers will display CKPG DT s virtual channel as its analogue era VHF channel 2 References edit Ownership Chart 97 JIM PATTISON Radio amp TV Los Angeles Times Fabulous Forum Sports Legend Revealed A father of an NHL player held up a TV station to force them to show his son s game June 1 2010 Hockey s Tough Guys Brian Spinner Spencer http www crtc gc ca eng archive 2007 pb2007 117 htm Broadcasting Public Notice CRTC 2007 117 October 18 2007 Jim Pattison Broadcast Group solidifies Program Supply agreement for three independent stations serving BC and Alberta Press release Jim Pattison Broadcast Group 2009 07 14 Archived from the original on 2009 08 31 Retrieved 2009 07 19 Citytv and Pattison Group Sign Affiliate Agreement Archived 2015 12 08 at the Wayback Machine Broadcaster Magazine May 3 2012 Broadcasting Regulatory Policy CRTC 2009 406 Retrieved 2011 03 14 Digital Television Office of Consumer Affairs OCA Archived 2008 09 16 at the Wayback MachineExternal links editCKPG TV official website CKPG TV at The History of Canadian Broadcasting by the Canadian Communications Foundation CKPG TV in the REC Canadian station database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title CKPG TV amp oldid 1198989888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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