Radio-Canada n'a pas renouvelé le contrat d'affiliation de CKRT-TV de Rivière-du-Loup.
Il y a des billets sur ce sujet en anglais dont un de Fagstein.
https://cartt.ca/quebec-tv-station-to-shut-down-after-radio-canada-pulls-its-last-affiliation-deal/
https://blog.fagstein.com/2021/05/10/ckrt-closing
Il y a des billets sur ce sujet en anglais dont un de Fagstein.
https://cartt.ca/quebec-tv-station-to-shut-down-after-radio-canada-pulls-its-last-affiliation-deal/
https://blog.fagstein.com/2021/05/10/ckrt-closing
Radio-Canada drops its last private affiliate TV station, forcing it to close
An era is going to end on Aug. 31. One that might not matter much as the nature of television changes.
CKRT-DT, a television station based in Rivière-du-Loup, ends its affiliation with ICI Radio-Canada Télé on that date. The public broadcaster has decided it will not renew the agreement, much like it did for CKRN-DT in Abitibi-Témiscamingue in 2018. And like with CKRN, the owner of CKRT has decided it has no other choice than to shut the station down.
I learned of this through a CRTC application filed by CKRT’s owner Télé Inter-Rives, which also owns a Noovo affiliate and two TVA affiliates serving eastern Quebec and northern New Brunswick. The group wants to redirect the funding CKRT receives from the Independent Local News Fund to the Noovo station, which would see its local news obligations increase as a result.
I talk about that application in this article for Cartt.ca subscribers.
If the CRTC approves the application (it approved a similar one for CKRN), it would mean not that much changes. There would still be local TV news in Rivière-du-Loup, and most people would still be served by Radio-Canada’s station in Rimouski, whose Téléjournal Est-du-Québec covers the region.
There would be a loss of service over the air, though. CKRT has two transmitters in Rivière-du-Loup (the second covers some holes in the downtown signal), and five others in Baie-St-Paul, Dégelis, Cabano, St-Urbain and Trois-Pistoles. All were upgraded to digital by Télé Inter-Rives, though they had no obligation to do so outside of Rivière-du-Loup.
CBC/Radio-Canada decided in 2012 it was no longer interested in operating over-the-air transmitters except for originating local stations. And that policy move is part of the reason for dropping this affiliation. Spokesperson Marc Pichette told me that the industry has shifted to a place where “over-the-air television is no longer considered an adequate and efficient means to offer our content to Canadians.”