Canal M

Canadian television service
Television channel
Canal M
Canal M logo
CountryCanada
Broadcast areaNational
HeadquartersMontreal, Quebec
Ownership
OwnerVues & Voix
History
Launched1985
Former namesRadio de la Magnétothèque (1985 - 2011)
Links
WebsiteCanal M (in French)

Canal M is a Canadian 24-hour French language non-profit audio broadcast television service. Canal M is an audio-only service that broadcasts readings of news articles from newspapers and magazines. It is owned by Vues & Voix. Canal M is a volunteer-based service, where individuals perform voice recordings at recording centres in Quebec.

History

La Magnétothèque logo

The channel originally launched in 1985 as Radio de la Magnétothèque (more commonly referred to as La Magnétothèque, the name of its parent company). The channel was originally operating without a Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) granted broadcast licence. However, in October 1990, the CRTC officially approved the licence for the service.[1]

Later, in August 2009, the CRTC approved another application by La Magnétothèque that would grant the service mandatory carriage on the basic package of television service providers' systems in Quebec.[2]

original Canal M logo

In March 2011, Radio de la Magnétothèque was renamed Canal M to coincide with the rebranding of its parent company, from La Magnétothèque to Vues & Voix.[3]

See also

  • AMI-audio, a similar service for anglophone listeners, operated by an organisation unrelated to Canal M

References

  1. ^ Decision CRTC 90-1060 CRTC 1990-10-16
  2. ^ Broadcasting Order CRTC 2009-542 CRTC 2009-08-31
  3. ^ La Magnétothèque devient Vues et Voix Radio-Canada 2011-03-30 (in French)

External links

  • Canal M (in French)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Television news in Canada
Broadcast
news divisions
Specialty
channels
National
Regional
English
CP24 (Greater Toronto Area)
Global News: BC 1 (British Columbia)
Audio and/or
text only
Defunct
Foreign
  • v
  • t
  • e
Television
National
English-language
French-language
Provincial
English-language
French-language
Territorial
Inuit-language
Radio
Non-profit
Former
Proposed
  • 1Foreign broadcaster.
  • 2Partially privately owned.
  • 3Partially foreign-owned.
  • 4No terrestrial broadcasting.
  • 5Fully privatized
  • 6Private successor continues airing some educational programming as a license requirement