Media_in_Toronto

Media in Toronto

Media in Toronto

Television, radio and media outlets in Toronto, Canada.


The media in Toronto encompasses a wide range of television and radio stations, as well as digital and print media outlets. These media platforms either service the entire city or are cater to a specific neighbourhood or community within Toronto. Additionally, several media outlets from Toronto extend their services to cover the Greater Toronto Area and the Golden Horseshoe region. While most media outlets in Toronto cater to local or regional audiences, there are also several national media outlets based in the city that distribute their services across Canada and caters to a national audience.

A production control room in Toronto's Rogers Studios for City and Omni Television. Both are subsidiaries of Rogers Media.

Toronto is largest mass media market in Canada, and the fourth-largest market in North America, behind New York City, Los Angeles and Chicago. As a result, several Canadian media companies and conglomerates are based in Toronto.

TV stations

More information OTA virtual channel (PSIP), OTA channel ...
The Canadian Broadcasting Centre in Toronto is the English-language broadcasting headquarters for the CBC's radio and television service.

The incumbent cable provider in the Toronto area is Rogers Cable, which originally secured the cable franchise for most of the pre-amalgamation city of Toronto, and later purchased the systems in surrounding areas. Since 2010, Bell Fibe TV (an IPTV terrestrial service operated by Rogers' rival Bell Canada) has been available in most neighbourhoods in the Greater Toronto Area. Independent IPTV television services such as Vmedia and Zazeen have also become available.

American network affiliates on Toronto cable are piped in from Buffalo, New York, including WGRZ (NBC), WIVB-TV (CBS), WKBW-TV (ABC), WUTV (Fox), and WNED-TV (PBS). For additional fees cable subscribers can also watch WNYO-TV (MyNetworkTV) and WNLO (The CW). Many of these stations can be seen over the air throughout the Greater Toronto Area.

Toronto has seven times the population of the Buffalo market. In particular, WUTV and WNED rely heavily on viewership from Toronto; both have long identified as serving "Buffalo/Toronto," and also have sales offices in the city. More than half of WNED's members live in Toronto.

Most of Canada's over-the-air and cable television networks also have national operations based in Toronto; for more information, see List of Canadian television channels.

Radio

Toronto stations

AM

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FM

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Other stations

Numerous radio stations licensed to communities outside the City of Toronto are also marketed to the City of Toronto proper, as well as the rest of the Greater Toronto Area. This includes one American station.

AM

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FM

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Former stations

Please see former City of Toronto radio stations at the Canadian Communications Foundation.[2]

Print

Newspapers

National dailies

Headquarters of The Globe and Mail at the Globe and Mail Centre (left), and former HQ of the National Post (right). The two national dailies are both based in Toronto.

Local dailies

One Yonge Street from the Toronto Harbour. The building serves as the headquarters for the Toronto Star, the highest-circulating local newspaper in Canada.

Alternative

Community and weekly newspapers

Metroland Media Group is a subsidiary of Torstar Corporation which publishes the Toronto Star. Metroland publishes a series of weekly neighbourhood papers, some of which previously printed two or three times a week. They are distributed free of charge and have captured a large portion of the neighbourhood advertising flyer market. These newspapers are: Bloor West Villager, City Centre Mirror, East York/Beach Mirror, Etobicoke Guardian, North York Mirror, Parkdale-Liberty Villager, Scarborough Mirror and York Guardian.

Several independent community newspapers include the Town Crier and the Post City Magazines chain of monthly neighbourhood magazines, Beach Metro News, the Annex Gleaner, the Liberty Gleaner, West End Phoenix and the Marklander in the far west of Toronto.

Monthly broadsheet The Bulletin converted into an online-only outlet, now defunct.

L'Express and Le Métropolitain are French-language weekly newspapers.

Ethnic and multicultural newspapers

  • Ajit Weekly - Punjabi language
  • CanIndia News - English language weekly
  • The Contact Weekly - English language
  • Correio da Manhã Canadá - Portuguese language twice-weekly
  • Culture Magazin - Vietnamese and English language
  • das Journal - German language, every two weeks
  • Gazeta - Polish language weekly
  • Gujarat Abroad - Canada's oldest and largest newspaper for the Gujarati community; weekly; published Fridays since 2002; caters to over 250K population mainly in the greater Toronto area through print and online e-paper; mainly distributed to major Indian grocery stores and religious places
  • India Journal - English language
  • Kanadai-Amerikai Magyars - Hungarian language weekly
  • Kanadan Sanomat - Finnish language weekly
  • Milénio Stadium - Portuguese language, weekly
  • Pakistan Post - Canada's largest and oldest Pakistani newspaper; weekly covering community news relevant to the South Asian community, mainly those from Pakistan; includes entertainment, news from abroad, regular columns, fashion and special features
  • Russian Express - Russian language
  • Salam Toronto - Persian-English weekly paper
  • Sol Português/Portuguese Sun - Portuguese language, weekly
  • StarBuzz Weekly- entertainment and lifestyle weekly for South Asians; published in English from Toronto CLOSED
  • Sunday Times - Urdu language weekly
  • Thangatheepam - Tamil language weekly
  • The Weekly Voice - Punjabi and Hindi news
  • Thời Báo - Vietnamese language
  • Thời Mới - Vietnamese language
  • Urdu Khabarnama - Urdu language weekly
  • Weekly Hankook - Korean language
  • Wiadomości - Polish language weekly
Caribbean media
  • Toronto Caribbean Newspaper - Toronto's Largest Caribbean Newspaper
  • The Caribbean Camera - Canada's largest newspaper on Caribbean affairs
  • Caribbean Weekly - Canada's only Caribbean Entertainment newspaper
  • Pride News Magazine - Canada's African and Caribbean Canadian newspaper
  • Share - weekly community newspaper which has served the Black and Caribbean community in the greater Toronto area since April 9, 1978
  • Vision Newspaper Canada - the double award-winning Caribbean community newspaper
Chinese media
Latin media
  • Latinos Multicultural Magazine - Bilingual (English/Spanish) Monthly Printed publication
  • El Centro - Spanish weekly
  • Toronto Hispano

Student newspapers

Copies for the Excalibur, a student newspaper for York University.

Former newspapers

The Mail Building in Toronto c. 1870. It headquartered The Toronto Mail newspaper, which operated from 1872 to 1895, when it merged with Toronto Empire to form The Mail and Empire.
  • The Globe - 1844 to 1936; merged with The Mail and Empire to form The Globe and Mail
  • Grip - 1873 to 1894; satirical newsweekly
  • The Leader - 1852 to 1878
  • The Mail and Empire - 1895 to 1936; merged with The Globe to form The Globe and Mail
  • The News - 1881 to 1919; changed name to The Times in March 1919, which lasted until September of that year
  • The Sentinel - 1877 to 1896; newspaper of the Orange Order
  • The Star Weekly - 1910 to 1973; Sunday edition of the Toronto Star, later a weekend supplement in the Saturday Toronto Star
  • The Telegraph - 1866 to 1872
  • The Toronto World - 1880 to 1921; final weekday edition 9 April 1921; assets acquired by The Mail and Empire[3]
  • Toronto Empire - 1887 to 1895; merged with The Mail to form The Mail and Empire
  • The Toronto Mail - 1872 to 1895; merged with The Empire to form The Mail and Empire
  • Toronto Telegram - 1876 to 1971; much of the staff then formed the Toronto Sun
  • Eye Weekly / The Grid - defunct
  • Toronto Special - appears defunct
  • Xtra! - last print edition February 2015
  • 24 Hours — ceased publishing November 27, 2017

Magazines

Online-only

  • BlogTO
  • Curiocity
  • Narcity Media
  • View the Vibe - also syndicated onto the TTC media portal "Tconnect".[5]
  • TRNTO - formerly known as Post City Magazines
  • Dailyhive
  • Best of Toronto
  • Toronto.com
  • Flare - formerly in print.
  • WanderEater magazine
  • Gent's Post

Book publishers


References

  1. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2021-142, New specialty (Christian music) FM radio station in Scarborough, CRTC, April 28, 2021
  2. Former radio stations in the City of Toronto Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Canadian Communications Foundation
  3. Jamie Bradburn (17 March 2012). "The World of William Findlay Maclean". Torontoist. Retrieved 11 December 2014.
  4. Chris Powell (15 March 2016). "Foodism Toronto Launching Print Edition in September". Marketing magazine. Retrieved 9 November 2021.

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