Saturday 28 January 2012

Will you buy the suite?

In November a new wave of movie channels became available to Canadian viewers. An all HD television service called "Hollywood Suite" hit the air. If you haven't seen the stations, it is a four channel HD movie service. The four channels are known as "Hollywood Storm" "MGM Channel" "WB Films" and "Hollywood Festival". The stations have been a very rich library of movies in high defenition.

On this day I was channel surfing between the four channels between the "Mask of Zorro", "Blazing Sadles" and Michale Keaton / Genna Davis groan fest "Speechless". While the library of films of these stations are mostly older movies, there are some newer festival films that are aired.

What I enjoy about the service is that films are commerical free and uneditied. The films have a consistantly high picture and sound quality as good as watching a DVD. There are some theme night like marathons of Rocky, John Lennon, or Martial Arts films. There are some docuemtnary pieces in the intervals between films. Movies are repeated during the day, meaning if you missed it or caught it halfway at 3pm, you'll see it again at 10pm.

The drawback is that the movies on the Suite have been aired reguarly in the past, or easily available on DVD. On it's own merrits that is not a detraction, however in comparison to it's competitiors it is a huge drawback. Shaw's Movietime channel airs a lot of recent releases, often making their non Pay TV premier. Encore Avenue, another Shaw channel airs a lot of obscure and festival films, not as easily availble on DVD.  The fact that the stations are competing with Shaw for viewers has caused some problems.

The stations are currently not carried by Shaw or Rogers, but are available on the telecom company systems including Bell and Telus. With the support of the telecom companys Hollywood Suite is launching an advertising campaign in anticipation of it's February 19th switch to a pay service. However Shaw's affiliation hasn't effected the carriadge of Encore Avenue and Movetime.

Would you pay extra for Hollywood Suite? Are you paying extra to get channels like Encore Avenue, Movietime, Super Channel, HBO, TMC, and AMC?

Thursday 26 January 2012

The Continue Fall of KVOS

In spite of it's location thirty miles sout hof the Canadian border KVOS-TV has been main stain of the Vancouver television market since the begining. However as the competition has increased in the lower mainland the Bellingham, Washington based station has been marginalized to a point where it relevance is now questioned especially after the station was serious devalued in it's recent sale.

On January 24th the FCC aproved the sale of the station from Newport broadcasting to OTA holdings out of San Francisco. OTA paid $2.8 million for the station which Newport bought in 2007 for $28 million in conjunction with a station in Santa Rosa, California. No matter how you look at it Newport suffered on their investment. The bargain price for the station which has gone through four ownership changes since 2003 is reflective of a entity that has suffered through some poor managementhere and the reality that it's initial purpose was out dated.

When the station was founded in 1953 there was only one TV station in Seattle and none in Vancouver. When KVOS signed on in June of 1953 with the corination or Queen Elizabeth the second it instantly connected with viewers in Vancouver hungry for television. While KVOS initally had it's sight set on attracting viewers from Seattle, it's signal could be recived clearly in Vancouver, while in Seattle it was fuzzy. With an affiliation to CBS, KVOS would dominate the Vancouver market for decades. The advent of cable did mean conflict with KIRO for CBS programing, but soon KVOS would become an indipendent carried on both Vancouver and Seattle cable systems given the station a powerful northwest presence.

The demise of KVOS started off slow. In the ninties the station the station was removed from many cable systems in the Seattle-Tacoma market when it program schedule conflicted with KCPQ at a time when KVOS started to air FOX shows. The trouble really started in 1997 when more cimpetition came to Vancouver starting with CIVT (now CTV), to later be followed by CHNU (Joy TV), CHMN (Omni) and CIVI (now CTV Two). The increased competition combined with KVOS's ownership woes meant that the station could no longer keep up with quality programing or hang on to viwers advertisers in the Vancouver market. It also meant that becuase it was not based in Vancouver KVOS lost it's place on channel 12 in the Vancouver and Victoria cable market and is now no longer a part of Shaw's basic package. The station is a part of Novus and Telus systems, but is not seen on Bell or Shaw Direct.

It can be argued now that KVOS clearly belongs to the city it broadcasts from, Bellingham, Washingotn. However Bellingham and it's surounding communities are still a small population which on it's own have never generated enough money to keep the station on the air. Over the years as popularity has declined, so has it's amount of local programming. Even though "local" shows meant the Vancouver market with icons such as Reb Robinson and Jack Cullen. The last Bellingham based newscast was News View which aired at 6:30am daily. It was canceled in 2007. Last April the station affiliated with Chicago based MeTV airing a steady stream of re-runs with mostly 60's and 70's programing with local programing basically reduced to community callender announcements.

As KVOS becomes more reliant on Bellingham to stay on the air, the less relevant to Bellingham it becomes. At the same token it has become quite irrelevant to Vancouver. While it still makes some effort to attract lower mainland viewers it's community presence has dwindeled significantly. When I was a kid it was the palce for after school television with shows like the Flintstones and Scooby Doo. It had the Canucks Kids Fan Club which gave away thosuands of hockey tickets to youngsters like myself back in the days were the Canucks were emerging from the basement of the NHL.


The MeTV lineup includes many shows made popular on CBS such as Mary Tyler Moore, Dick Van Dyke, and Bob Newhart which aired during the time KVOS was a CBS affiliate. It is a reminder of the stations former glory. It is a reminder of what the station was, and has to think in the environment of increasing competition and move towards high defenition television whether this could be a last hurah for old Channel 12 before fading to black.

The mystery of Tamara Taggart

Three weeks after the sudden disapered from Vancouver's CTV News At Six Tamarra Taggart has emerged with somer serious personal news. On January 3rd before was due to go the air she tweeted the following...


Wow. At 5:30pm I was hit with a major case of food poisoning. Passed out at work, the rest is too much info! Missed my anniversary show!

The following tweet hours later blamed the food poisioning on Lasanga. This would be the less peep out of Taggart. Tonight three weeks off the air, and off the internet Taggart let her fans know where she has been.

I’m back! Well not quite. It wasn’t food poisoning, the lasagna was wrongly accused. Had emergency surgery. All is well, back in March.



A full blog was posted on CTV's website...
http://www.ctvbc.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20120125/bc_ctv_news_british_columbia_tamara_taggart_update_120125/20120125/?hub=BritishColumbiaHome

While she mentioned the seriousness of her health circumstances she did not elaborate on what exactly she was treated for. Taggart has lived a very open personal life which has discussed in great detail through various local publication like TV Week magazine and in her blog Modern Mommy. Despite the admission of surgery all it does it add more mystery to her sudden disaperence from television.

The day before Taggart fell ill she wrote a blog regarding her aniversary in the anchor's seat. T




It's been exactly one year since I anchored CTV News at 6 for the very first time. Time flies. A year ago today I was freaking out, for a number of reasons. It's always nerve-wracking when you start something new, especially when you know everyone is watching.

2011 was an interesting year. It was exhilarating when it was announced that I would be anchoring the news with Mike Killeen but also quite sad & stressful - I definitely discovered who my real friends were. There's a lot to be said for having grace and some people just didn't have it. I found that people reacted in one of three very different ways: those who were genuinely happy for me and told me, those who were angry that I got the job as they felt I wasn't worthy of it (these people had no problem telling anyone who would listen - but never me) and then there were the people who said nothing and just stopped talking to me.

It's the people that stopped talking to me that I find most interesting as most of them were people I considered friends. Obviously I was mistaken. At first my feelings were hurt and I obsessed about it, wondering what I could do to make it better. Now I don't care. Those people weren't my friends...a tough lesson to learn, but now I know.

The blog ended with a reflection of the year. It reflects a stressful transition over what many would argue was a risky manuvure on CTV's part. Taggart was clearly the station's most popular personality, and was trying to transend her role as a weather presenter. In addition to doing articles on parenting she co-hosted olympic medal ceremonies with Ben Mulrouny and won a audience survey to co-host Live with Regis. Taggart was still on Maternity leave after giving birth to her third child when she was named to replaced 35 year veteran Pamela Martin on CTV Vancouver's flagship newscast. While arguably worthy of a promotion, and a 15 year veteran of doing live television, her absense of experience in reporting on hard news alarmed skeptics. The promotion for the revamped newscast focused heavily of the personalities in the newscast and Taggart sparkeled in the promos. However when she was on camera it was a different issue. It was clear she was uncomforatble at first when dealing with the serious items of the day. However time corrected this inital problem and she seemed more at ease and gave the appropiate cadence to the issues of the day, while still excelling at the "happy talk" format which is the standard of local news. There is a strong chemistry with vertan reporter Mike Killene.

While no names were mentioned in those who estinguished their relationships with Taggart when she was given the anchor's seat. It wouldn't be fair to name names but it is nto surprising that there would be stress. It is a highly unusual for the weather presenter to move into role of news anchor, with no news experience, especailly when there were other anchors who had been at their psotions for years. It is logically to assume that there would be jeleousy and even anger, when Taggart was having issues with early brodacasts. Her on air performance improved but one has to wonder about the costs.

In the next few weeks we are sure to find more details about Taggart's illness along with a lot of gossip about what is happening to her. Questions of stress are bound to be raised. She ceratinly raised in the issue with her blog. Taggart has three children under the age of 5, and her oldest has Downs Syndrome. She has often written about the challeneges and sucesses she has had in being the mother of a special needs child.

The lack of details from this open book person does have me worried as I fill in the blanks with my imagination. My best wishes for her recovery and return to television.

Thursday 19 January 2012

Should Canada graudate educational TV?

On Tuesday Rogers Media announced that it will buying the Educational station SCN from the Saskatchewan government and convert it to a CityTV station. This comes just days after the station began airing CityTV programing during prime-time. The only real change will be elimination of the SCN brand. The move echos the move more than a decade ago by the Alberta government when it sold Access Alberta to CHUM limited. Now under Bell the station still airis educational programing in the daytime it now air the CTV Two network in prime-time.

The damage is already done as educational programing is now gone from prime-time in Saskatchewan and long gone from Alberta. But what do viewers on the praries miss out on? Looking at the lineups of the Knowledge Network and TV Ontario, the only two remaining full time English educational stations, a lot of good if not out dated documentaries and dramas. It use to be the educational stations were hte only outlet for British dramas and documentaries. Now stations such the documentary channel, Bravo, bold, ShowCase and BBC Canada air the types of shows the educational stations use to air usually much earlier than the educational station ever did.

The buying power of TV Ontario and the Knowledge Network is much less even than public teleivsion in the United States. For example PBS has aired the series "Lewis" since 2008, shortly after it hit the air on ITV in the United Kingdom. The Knowledge Network will begin airing the series this Winter. The station still airs the original Inspector Morse on a regular basis, more than ten years after the series ended production.

There is no doubt that the programing on Knoweldge and TV Ontario is still of great quality, but it is no longer unqiue. Sadly the viewers in Alberta and Saskatchewan, along with Manitoba and the Altantic are not missing much since they can find it quite easily elsewhere.