Tag Archives: CTV

Degrassi new timeslot to Follow American Idol on Wednesdays, Beginning March 28

Academic pressure, arson, internet gambling and even teen-aged stripping ensue as Degrassi: The Next Generation returns to CTV next week with the second act of the series’ sixth season; new episodes air Wednesdays at 9:30 p.m. ET following ratings juggernaut American Idol beginning March 28 on CTV and on CTV HD East/West (visit CTV.ca to confirm local broadcast times).

Picking up the pieces after the shocking murder of J.T. (Ryan Cooley), the season’s final seven episodes delve deeper into the post-secondary world of the characters from Canada’s most addictive homegrown drama series.

Viewers can catch up on all 12 of this season’s previously aired episodes, along with corresponding exclusive online content, all on demand on The CTV Broadband Network at CTV.ca. Following the television broadcast of each of the seven new episodes, the episode itself as well as a scripted webisode (a.k.a. “Degrassi Mini”) and a behind-the-scenes documentary (a.k.a. “Degrassi: On the Set”) for the episode will be available on demand beginning Thursdays at 9 a.m. ET on The CTV Broadband Network at CTV.ca.

In the Spring season premiere, entitled “Free Fallin’ Part 1” (March 28 on CTV), Paige has a spectacular panic attack during a Banting University midterm exam. The course professor offers her one more chance, which comes in the form of work to be completed over the holiday weekend. With a huge family dinner to cook and everyone dying to know how fantastic university life is, something has got to give for Paige…

Corner Gas Draws 2 Million in Record Setting Season Finale

TORONTO, Monday night’s highly anticipated season finale of Corner Gas drew a season-high 2 million viewers, the most successful season finale to date and the second largest audience ever for Canada’s No.1 comedy.

For CTV, the big-buzz-finale capped another memorable year for Corner Gas, which charted an astonishing 67 per cent audience growth since its season premiere last September. The series finishes its 19-episode run with an average audience of 1.52 million viewers, reaching as high as No.16 on Canada’s Top 20 list of most watched programs.

For the fourth consecutive year, Corner Gas remains television’s No.1 comedy (Canadian or American) and the most watched Canadian scripted series (see "The Ratings" below for a complete ratings summary). The memorable finale will encore Saturday at 8 p.m. ET on The Comedy Network and is available on demand on The CTV Broadband Network at CTV.ca.

With another successful season in the record books, CTV today confirmed to series producers a full 19-episode production order for a 5th season of Corner Gas. Production crews are now gearing up for a May, 2007 return to their Saskatchewan-based sets and soundstages. With their return, Corner Gas remains the only network comedy series to be entirely based and shot in Saskatchewan.

Armed with the new production order, Corner Gas executive producers Brent Butt, David Storey and Virginia Thompson today unveiled their Season V story department, a six-person team that now stands as the most formidable creative lineup the series has ever boasted. The newly assembled "dream-team" story

department features:

Brent Butt – star/creator/writer/director/executive producer

Kevin White – supervising producer/writer (showrunner)

Mark Farrell – producer/writer

Norm Hiscock – consulting producer/writer

Gary Pearson – story editor/writer

Andrew Carr – story editor/writer

In addition to signing on the Emmy Award winning Norm Hiscock (Saturday Night Live, King Of The Hill, Kids In The Hall) and the highly acclaimed Gary Pearson (MadTV, This Hour Has 22 Minutes), the executive producing team today appointed Corner Gas veteran Kevin White as series show-runner. Together with star/creator/director/co-executive producer Brent Butt, producer/writer Mark Farrell (The Newsroom, This Hour Has 22 Minutes) and story editor/writer Andrew Carr (Comics), it’s a virtual all-star collection of Canada’s most prolific comedy writers.

New episodes of U.S. cable series ‘Nip/Tuck’ finally reach Canada on CTV

How long can a network leave a series on the shelf and still claim it as a hot show?

Six months, apparently. That’s how long Canadians have had to wait for CTV to show new episodes of "Nip/Tuck" after they began airing in the U.S.

The fourth season, which has already come and gone in the States, premieres this Sunday, March 3 at 10 p.m. (It airs a day earlier, Saturday at 10, in Atlantic Canada and Alberta.)

In announcing the move, CTV programming president Susanne Boyce called the edgy, adult drama, which centres on two morally and ethically challenged plastic surgeons (played by Dylan Walsh and Julian McMahon), "one of those buzz shows that people can’t stop talking about."

If that is true, CTV ignored the buzz for six months.

CTV would still have the series on its shelf if "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" hadn’t tanked. NBC recently yanked that under-performing rookie and replaced it with "The Black Donnellys." Global’s got that show (and simulcasts it Mondays at 10 p.m.), so CTV had to reach farther back on their shelf and plug their Sunday night "Studio 60" slot with "Nip/Tuck."

And that’s how the cream of the U.S. cable crop gets treated in Canada _ as bench-warmers, thrown in when the big U.S. network imports go down.

Fans of "The Shield" (like "Nip/Tuck," an FX series) and "The Closer" (TNT) never know when those series might turn up. "The Shield," starring Emmy-winner Michael Chiklis as an at-any-cost cop, bounced between Global and CH before dropping off schedules in Canada. It begins its sixth U.S. season April 3 on FX. "The Closer," starring Kyra Sedgwick as a get-it-done detective, is also currently unscheduled on CH despite being the most-watched series on ad-supported U.S. cable. (TNT premieres season 3 next summer.)

When these U.S. cable goodies do get scheduled, Canadian fans often have to wait half a year or more to see them. The Tony Shalhoub whodunit "Monk," originating on the USA Network, finishes its fifth U.S. season Friday night. CHUM’s A-Channel doesn’t pick up season 5 until March 19.

Why the delays and games of hide and seek? Since FX, TNT and USA do not cross the border, Canadian schedulers treat cable imports like free spaces in bingo, slotting them in whenever some high-priced goodie from ABC, CBS, Fox or NBC gets axed.

Meanwhile, Canadians who have seen new seasons of "Nip/Tuck" or "Monk" hyped months ago on shows like "Entertainment Tonight" or in magazines like Entertainment Weekly are left in the dark.

Unless they were able to catch up on the Internet. While access to streaming video on U.S. network websites is "geo-blocked" to Canadians, any determined fan with a reliable search engine can find ways around the barriers. If "Nip/Tuck" really is your must-see show, you’ve probably already downloaded season 4 from a file-share website, watched it on a grey market satellite dish or had your buddy in Michigan burn you an episode or two.

If not, the good news is the new season is worth the wait. Creator Ryan Murphy has put the focus back on the bizarre, with a great line up of guest stars, including Rosie O’Donnell, Alanis Morissette, Kathleen Turner, Larry Hagman, Jacqueline Bisset and Catherine Deneuve.

Deneuve has perhaps the creepiest storyline. She plays a woman who asks to have her dead husband’s ashes embedded in her breast implants. Murphy told TV critics last year that it was "so she can always be close to her husband," but he hinted at an ulterior motive. "When you think Catherine Deneuve, you think French murderess," he said. "At least I do."

Eugene Levy To Host 2007 Canada’s Walk of Fame on CTV

TORONTO, Eugene Levy has been named host of the 2007 Canada’s Walk of Fame broadcast on CTV, it was confirmed today. Also known for his producing, directing and writing talents, the Canadian comedic actor was inducted into Canada’s Walk of Fame in 2006.

It was also announced today that this year’s tenth annual tribute gala will be taped for broadcast on CTV on Saturday, June 9 at Toronto’s Hummingbird Centre. The announcement was made just six days before eight new inductees for Canada’s Walk of Fame are introduced in Toronto on March 6.

From his early days with The Second City, Toronto’s Eugene Levy has proven to be one of Canada’s most-loved comedic exports. His work in the classic comedy series SCTV and in films such as A Mighty Wind, Best in Show, For Your Consideration and American Pie has been honoured with numerous awards. He’s proud to call Canada home and still lives in Toronto with his wife and family.

"It’s such an incredible honour to be hosting the show this year, considering I have absolutely no wrestling experience," said Levy.

"Eugene Levy is beloved by millions of Canadians," said Susanne Boyce, CTV President of Programming and Chair of the CTV Media Group. "He’s a wonderful ambassador for Canada."

"Eugene is a warm and generous person who, through wit and self-deprecating charm will set the right tone for the broadcast," said Peter Soumalias, Founder, CEO and President of Canada’s Walk of Fame.

In addition to his induction last year, Eugene Levy was a presenter for Martin Short’s induction into Canada’s Walk of Fame in 2000.

This year’s gala show marks the third year in a row that CTV will broadcast Canada’s Walk of Fame. The two-hour broadcast joins CTV’s industry-leading line-up of Canadian awards celebrations, including The JUNO

Awards – the most-watched Canadian awards broadcast – and The Giller Prize.

Last year’s broadcast of Canada’s Walk of Fame on CTV peaked at 867,000 viewers, the most-watched broadcast ever for the gala celebration.

CTV Snaps Up Pirate Master

TORONTO, In its second straight deal with Mark Burnett Productions, CTV has snapped up Canadian broadcast rights to Pirate Master: The Adventure Begins, a swashbuckling new reality series set to debut this summer, it was announced today. The deal was initiated at NATPE’s Las Vegas market in January by CTV President of Programming, Susanne Boyce and comes on the heels of CTV’s acquisition of On The Lot, also from Mark Burnett Productions.

Pirate Master: The Adventure Begins is the latest addition to what is shaping up to be a treasure chest of blockbuster summer series on CTV, including On The Lot, Canadian Idol and So You Think You Can Dance? The high-stakes, high-seas adventure will also debut on CBS when the network wraps up Burnett’s Survivor: Fiji, the 14th edition of the series.

"Pirate Master promises to be jolly good summer fun. It’s complete escapism and will make for rollicking summer viewing," said Susanne Boyce, CTV President of Programming and Chair of the CTV Media Group.

"Pirate Master is a very compelling and unique show and I am very happy that it’s going to air on CTV in Canada," said Mark Burnett. "I can’t think of a better place for the next big franchise hit to air."

In Pirate Master: The Adventure Begins, 16 ordinary people living aboard a real pirate ship compete in an extraordinary Caribbean adventure in pursuit of hidden treasure – a bounty with a total value of one million dollars. Each week, one competitor is "set adrift" from the pirate ship that they have called home until only three remain in the hunt for the ultimate treasure of all.

Before that, the 16 contestants will compete to find hidden treasure while uncovering the secrets of a mysterious Caribbean island. Equipped with just a map and compass as their guide, the 16 pirates will embark on intense, physical expeditions as they use their wits to solve clues and riddles to find the treasure.

Casting for the series is currently underway and production will begin soon in the Caribbean. A host for the series will be announced at a later date.

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