Articles Tagged ‘Rogers Media’

ICYMI: A tasty new TSN partnership

Plus, a new code of conduct to fight harassment and a Canadian original renewed for City.

Village Media expands Rogers partnership to Ottawa

OttawaMatters.com launches with Rogers overseeing content and ad sales for the hyper-local news site.

People Moves: Sportsnet says goodbye to Jerry Howarth

Plus, Noise Digital adds four and Media IQ hires Simon Tray.

CRTC seeks input from digital giants

The commission told Netflix, CBC, Google and others that it wants their subscriber and Cancon investment info, but promised not to share it.

ICYMI: CBC’s Olympics schedule, Bell’s big Let’s Talk numbers

CBC will broadcast a total of 21 hours of Olympic content per day, 18 of them being live.

Grammy ratings drop on both sides of the border

Overnights show a 16% drop in viewers for City’s ceremony.

Rogers Media revenues drop 4% in Q4

Revenues decreased to $526 million from $550 million a year ago, largely due to a shorter Toronto Blue Jays playoff run.

Media Experts makes its picks for mid-season hits

The IPG agency looks to The Launch, a nameless show and the Olympics as big winners.

Hockey Day in Canada gets an AMA boost

The average audience of the broadcast went up 7% from last year and 21% from 2016.

Rogers and Vice part ways on Viceland

Months after reports said the partnership was ending, Vice is looking for new partners for its specialty TV content.

Rogers testing dynamic ad insertion for digital audio

The company will use first- and third-party data for ads that it says will be better tailored and targeted to audiences.

Clear Sky Radio sells southern Alberta station

Rogers “doubles down” south of Calgary by acquiring a classic hits FM station.

ICYMI: Bell’s Let’s Talk is back with new and familiar faces

Plus, Nike makes the most of a massive TV buy.

City keeps the Grammy Awards

The Rogers Media-owned network will broadcast the music industry’s big night for another three years.

Fall TV strategies carry into mid-season

Our TV checkup shows most of the major networks are sticking to “escapist” programming this winter to draw viewers in.