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The new Antichrist (Sun TV News)

Started by viper37, April 19, 2011, 01:51:45 PM

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viper37

http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/story/2011/04/18/sun-tv-launch.html

Quote
The right-wing Sun News Network launched Monday afternoon with a slogan of "hard news and straight talk."
Dubbed "Fox News North" by critics, the TV station features on-air  personalities such as conservative author Ezra Levant and Winnipeg-based  talk-radio host Charles Adler.
One of the driving forces behind the network's agenda is former Tory spokesman Kory Teneycke. A former communications director  for Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Teneycke is vice president of Sun  News. He's derided other news outlets as "lame-stream media."
Though he briefly resigned after lashing out at critics of the venture. He has since quietly returned to the Quebecor fold and is co-ordinating Monday's launch.
Quebecor CEO Pierre Karl Péladeau argues that the other Canadian news  networks are not only left leaning, but also failing to capture the  attention of Canadians. He says viewers are being driven to CNN.
"Years of uninspiring Canadian news... means viewers are fleeing to  American networks to get their fix" is the message at the Sun News  website.However, that doesn't seem to be the case during the current  Canadian federal election. Last Tuesday, immediately following the  federal leaders English debate, CBC News Network ratings soared to an  overnight, estimated 626,000 viewers across Canada compared to 103,000  on CTV News Channel and 27,000 on CNN. After Wednesday's French-language debate, CBCNN drew 363,000, CTVNC  83,000 and CNN 61,000 (all data BBM Canada). Contrary to Péladeau's  claims, Canadians seem to like the established news networks.
The challenge for Sun News will be the weeks and months right after the May 2 vote.
While there are some TV veterans among the Sun News team (journalist David Akin worked at CTV News, Sun Morning  co-anchor Pat Bolland has worked the business beat at CBC, CNBC and  BNN), others are relative TV rookies. Radio pundit Adler and Sun Media  columnists Levant and Brian Lilley all have key, prime-time slots to  fill.
Another prime-time anchor featured prominently in the publicity run up, Mercedes Stephenson, left the station just days before launch after it was determined she was "not a good fit."
Sun News Network is still haggling over attempts to get an airing across the country. Last week, it announced its first major distribution deal with a cable or satellite television provider.
The arrangement with Shaw Communications Inc. puts Sun News in two  million homes in Western Canada and Ontario, starting Monday at 4.30  p.m. ET. While no deal is yet in place with the country's largest cable  distributor, Rogers, many in Ontario will be able to view Sun News on  the old Sun TV channel.
It ain't on Bell TV, yet.  Will have to wait to judge by myself.  Videotron is carrying it in Quebec, of course.
I don't do meditation.  I drink alcohol to relax, like normal people.

If Microsoft Excel decided to stop working overnight, the world would practically end.

MadImmortalMan

Did anyone actually think this would be stopped in the end?
"Stability is destabilizing." --Hyman Minsky

"Complacency can be a self-denying prophecy."
"We have nothing to fear but lack of fear itself." --Larry Summers

KRonn

About time you got some "fair and balanced" reporting up there in the North!   ;)

crazy canuck

Quote from: MadImmortalMan on April 19, 2011, 02:12:18 PM
Did anyone actually think this would be stopped in the end?

The license they tried to obtain was denied.  They are now trying to make a go of it without the guarranteed revenue the license would have given them.  Rather fitting given the ideological bent of the station.  Viewership will decide whether this is stopped in the end.