Are we losing all local news broadcasts

Frankiedoodle

Electoral Member
Aug 21, 2015
660
0
16
Saskatchewan
I just found out that we are losing yet another local news broadcast.Instead of having a local hour long broadcast for our earlier late night broadcast we are losing our Global broadcast and it will now come out of Toronto with some local reporters.We don'tGlobal keeps cutting back on news.CBC is going to.That will leave CTV.That's right. No competition.
 

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,850
3,569
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I just found out that we are losing yet another local news broadcast.Instead of having a local hour long broadcast for our earlier late night broadcast we are losing our Global broadcast and it will now come out of Toronto with some local reporters.We don'tGlobal keeps cutting back on news.CBC is going to.That will leave CTV.That's right. No competition.
could the tv provider have switched affiliates?
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
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It's a wide open market with less competition.


Bell and Rogers are buying Radio and TV.


Soon all of your news will come from their respective headquarters and that is all you will hear, which will be what they want you to hear, unless you search out alternatives.
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
60,312
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Washington DC
It's a wide open market with less competition.


Bell and Rogers are buying Radio and TV.


Soon all of your news will come from their respective headquarters and that is all you will hear, which will be what they want you to hear, unless you search out alternatives.
So. . . you'll hear Bell and Rogers unless you listen to something else?

Wow, it really is a revolution.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,888
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I like Bell, it contributes mightily to my dividend fun.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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Bell Media Layoffs To Affect 380 Employees, Will Hit Local News Hard

It's the latest round of layoffs at the broadcaster which has been pulling back on its TV staff over the past year and a half.

"We're bare to the bone as it is, and of course it impacts our coverage, and we're absolutely worried,'' said Susan Lea, the president of Unifor Local 614M in Montreal, on Friday.

In Montreal, 110 jobs will be cut: 70 in production and editorial, 45 in sales and marketing and five in administration.

In Toronto, 270 jobs will be cut: 220 in production and editorial, 45 in sales and marketing and five in administration, Unifor said.

A spokesman for Bell Media, which is owned by parent company BCE Inc., declined to comment on details of the notifications except to confirm that more than 50 positions will be eliminated in each city.

Bell Media Layoffs To Affect 380 Employees, Will Hit Local News Hard: Union
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,340
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Vancouver Island
The market for real news is quite small. The market doe Etainment is huge. Most people are more interested in what their favorite actor or jock is doing than what is happening outside their window. All about money.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
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Last month, CTV Barrie announced it would lay off a dozen employees as part of a corporate downsizing.

Christopher Waddell, Carleton University’s associate professor at the School of Journalism and Communication, said there are two problems facing television and media in general.

“Television has survived almost 100 per cent on advertising. The problem is, advertising is disappearing from (traditional) media.”
Advertising dollars are increasingly going online because it’s cheaper and it gives businesses a way to target a specific audience or to track how many users click on their ad.

“The sharp and steady decline of advertising with no sign that it’s going to reverse is a big problem for over-the-air television,” Waddell said.
The second problem is the new generation doesn’t watch a lot of television.

Many students can’t afford both cable or satellite and Internet service, so they decide to watch their programming online.

“Very few of my journalism students have cable television in their home,” he said. “They think Internet is more important and they can see a lot of the things they need to see on the Internet anyway.”

Waddell added as they age, nothing will persuade them to go back to television as older adults.

However, he said the format of video storytelling is far from obsolete.

“In fact, it’s more alive than before. You can see so many things and you can see all different quality of things that people shot at different events through their cellphones.”

He said the issue is television is no longer the predominant format.

And local television will take another hit in March when cable and satellite services must allow consumers to pick-and-pay for individual channels instead of forcing them to purchase specialty channels they don’t want as part of a bundle.

“Specialty channels rely on subscribers. The secret is they can make money — even if nobody watches their channel — providing your subscriber revenue is higher than their production costs.”

The problem is when pick-and-pay is introduced, those specialty channels will cost more individually, Waddell said.

“What the Bell Media layoffs are is, in part, a response to the decline in advertising, but in part, a response to what they anticipate is something of a bloodbath when we move to pick-and-play,” he said.

When asked for comment on how customers can support their local television program, Bell Media spokesperson Matthew Garrow declined.

“We are not in a position to comment on that matter at this time,” he said.


‘Bloodbath’ on the way for local TV, professor warns
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,340
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Vancouver Island
Maybe if the tv stations had real new programing instead of some pablum, sports and what the glitterati are up to people would watch it.