Cbut

align="center" bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|CBUT (CBC)
lign="center" colspan="3" style="padding:10px;"|
lign="center" bgcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|Vancouver, British Columbia
lign="center" colspan="3"|Channel 2 / Cable 3
lign="left" valign="top"|Owner colspan="2" valign="top"|CBC
lign="left" valign="top"|Founded colspan="2" valign="top"|1953
lign="left" valign="top"|Signal Radius colspan="2" valign="top"|100 kW (total)
lign="left" valign="top"|Callsign Meaning colspan="2" valign="top"|C B C
Vancouver
Television
gcolor="#66FFCC" colspan="3"|CBC Network
align="top" width="33%"|CBUT
(Vancouver)
valign="top" width="34%"|CBRT
(Calgary)
valign="top" width="33%"|CBXT
(Edmonton)
CBUT is the CBC's television station in Vancouver, British Columbia, and the flagship CBC-TV station for the Pacific Time zone. CBUT is the oldest television station in Western Canada, first going on the air on December 16, 1953. From the station's launch until 1976, CBUT had broadcast mainly in English, with French-language shows aired on Sunday mornings; CBUT switched exclusively to English with the launch of CBUFT in 1976. CBUT currently produces a number of CBC Television programs. The supperhour national newscast Canada Now, hosted by Ian Hanomansing broadcasts out of CBUT, as does the local portion hosted by Gloria Macarenko, who is also a substitute anchor on the national newscast. The late-night independent film program ZeD is also produced at CBUT, as are portions of Marketplace and the program Hemispheres. In recent years, CBUT, as with all CBC-owned stations, has de-emphasized local programming in favor of network programming out of Toronto. As of 2002, the station only airs sporadic local programming and has dropped all use of local station IDs in favor of using only network IDs; and in recent budget cuts, has integrated its master control (as have all other owned stations) into Toronto's master control. See also List of CBC television stations.

External Link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
lawrence hall of science
w. f. grimes
velke svatonovice
wrthersee
william r. pogue
jabesh
scott e. parazynski
pohatcong creek
kosovoy
bad company (movie)
morumbi
philippine general election, 2004
john l. phillips
paul guimard
saffron hill
presov region
kosovskoye lake
page's trend test
group of soviet forces in germany
mark l. polansky
cfyk
mazdaspeed
shephelah
charles j. precourt
philippe perrin
echo (tom petty album)
kosov, ukraine
william a. pailes
dave keon
spyder
kosovskiy rayon
strategic hamlet program
cbxt
ronald a. parise
kosovo, vologda oblast
wigan (borough)
kosovo, novgorod oblast
cbrt
bolton (borough)
kosovo, tver oblast
kosovo, kaluga oblast
james a. pawelczyk
pohatcong mountain
kosovka river