Corus launches new lifestyle channels Home, Flavour

The new brands will take the place of HGTV Canada and Food Network Canada.

Corus Entertainment has raised the curtain on its two new lifestyle channels.

Home Network and Flavour Network will launch on Dec. 30, replacing the HGTV and Food Network brands, respectively, after Corus’s agreement with Warner Bros. Discovery ends.

The 2025 winter/spring schedule includes 460 hours of content, with more than 110 hours of original Canadian programming, according to a news release.

In 2025, the new networks will have more Canadian originals compared to what it was offering on HGTV Canada and Food Network Canada in 2024 or 2023, Corus co-CEO Troy Reeb tells MiC’s sister publication, Playback Daily.

He says Corus has been able to invest more of its Canadian programming dollars into lifestyle, diverting some of its production dollars from kids content.

“We know the kids space is more challenged, and that’s taken a lot of our traditional Canadian investment,” says Reeb, adding that Corus is not “abandoning kids, but moving with the market.”

He says the increased spend in lifestyle leans into what “advertisers respond best to,” noting that the company has already heard positive feedback from media agencies about the partnership opportunities with the Home and Flavour networks.

“We have full control over these brands, we don’t pay trademark fees,” says Reeb. “We set what the brand parameters are, what kind of integrations we’re able to do, and how we can engage with the advertising community.”

Beyond Canadian originals, Reeb says the channels will also include competitive acquired content, featuring recognizable talents such as Gordan Ramsay (Gordon Ramsay’s Food Stars and Gordon Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares), Jessica Alba (Honest Renovations), Carla Hall (Chasing Flavor with Carla Hall) and Joanna Teplin and Clea Shearer (Extreme Makeover: Home Edition).

Home and Flavour will be competing with their predecessors, with Rogers announcing last month that it will launch linear channels under the HGTV and Food Network brands in January.

The channel brand announcement comes less than one month ahead of a looming deadline for Corus to resolve its current debt problem. The company received a six-week extension from lenders to maintain its current debt levels at 4.75 times its operating income. As of Oct. 15, that ratio will be reduced to 4.25.

Corus has slashed costs over the summer, including hundreds of layoffs and selling off its majority stake in Aircraft Pictures. Quebecor has also reportedly proposed to acquire Corus, according to The Globe and Mail, though Reeb declined to comment on the possibility of a sale.

When asked about the financial stability of the company beyond Oct. 15, Reeb said it’s “a matter for ongoing discussion, but the goodwill is there on the part of every single player connected to this conversation.”

“One thing we hear from every stakeholder, whether they be a financial stakeholder in the company, an advertiser, or our production partners and talent, is everyone sees the value in what we do,” he says. “Canada is a better place with Corus channels in it and I don’t think there’s any doubt around that.”

This story was originally published on Playbackonline.