YTV’s Carlos Bustamante and CMT’s Paul McGuire will host the star interviews pre-taped in front of a live studio-audience at Corus Quay in Toronto.
Besides the true crime doc series, principals Robyn Hutt (left) and Rachel Low are producing the one hour doc special The Gay Revolution: From Pride to Power for the CBC.
As well as adding more U.S. game shows such as Family Feud (pictured), GameTV is in the market for new Canadian programming.
The week-long special programming is set to include musical performances by the likes of Glass Tiger and Blue Rodeo and appearances by former hosts and anchors, including Sandie Rinaldo (pictured).
The broadcaster’s iPad-friendly app lets NFL Sunday Ticket subscribers view 14 games, and includes player stats, instant replay, and play-by-play features.
The 11-game run is set to begin Saturday and extends into December, when additional games may be announced.
However Quebecor president Pierre Karl Peladeau emphasized in a keynote the domestic funding system needs updating to make Canadian TV prodcos more export-driven.
The regulator rejected Rogers’ bid to replace U.S. stations in New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador with Citytv Toronto.
The Montreal-based metrics firm says the feature of its new TV Dashboard precisely pinpoints social media location clusters of program audiences.
The change sees Tomik (pictured) become Rogers’ chief sales officer as Alan Dark takes over his position at the pubcaster.
The Corus-owned company’s content acquisition and merchandising rep deal for China with the country’s Ciwen Media Group includes animated series such as Babar.
Kevin Dewalt’s production shingle will work with Georgeville Television on Crossbones, a period pirate drama for NBC, and an untitled pandemic thriller for ABC.