Craig Wireless

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Craig Wireless Systems, Ltd. (formerly Western Manitoba Broadcasters Ltd., Craig Broadcast Systems, Inc., & Craig Media, Inc.) was a Canadian company which offered Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service in Manitoba and British Columbia.

In 2004, the company's media assets were acquired by CHUM Limited.[1]

History[]

The company has its roots in Western Manitoba Broadcasters, a company John Craig founded alongside Dr. H.O. McDiarmid, Alexander Boyd, Edmund, Fotheringham, Harold Smith, James Rust and M.W. Kerr in 1948.

In the mid-1940s, Craig had bought radio station CKX-FM from the Manitoba Government Telephone System upon its relinquishment of its two licenses for CKX & CKY-FM.

By 1955, John's son, Stuart Craig, had succeeded his father as President and General Manager of CKX-TV (which brought television to Brandon, Manitoba) & CKX-FM (which followed in 1963). Craig took it upon himself to expand the operations of both CKX stations; those expansion operations resulted in the launch of the broadcast company.

The company was based in Brandon, Manitoba, then later in Calgary, Alberta with Drew Craig, John's grandson & Stuart's son, as its CEO.

In 1991, Western Manitoba Broadcasters changed its name to Craig Broadcast Systems.

Craig Broadcast Systems was the owner of the original A-Channel system; CKX, a CBC affiliate, in Brandon, Manitoba; Toronto One, local television station in located in Toronto; and three digital television specialty channels: MTV Canada (now MTV2), MTV2 (now Juicebox) and TV Land Canada (later replaced by Comedy Gold, now decommissioned). For a time in the 1980s and 1990s, the company also produced a local newscast in Dauphin, Manitoba; however, the company did not operate a full television station in that city, but had a contract with CBC Television to run the newscast as a local insertion on the city's CBWT retransmitter.[2]

Eventually, the company was also operating in the telecommunications industry, offering wireless cable television and high-speed Internet services.

In 2003, after securing financing in the area of $145 million ($110 million from Providence Equity Partners & a $35 million line of credit from RBC Capital Markets and BMO Nesbitt Burns), the company reorganized its conventional and specialty television operations under the Craig Media branding, with the specialty television channels being placed within Craig Media under Craig Specialty.

In 2004, the company was acquired by CHUM Limited[1] for CA$265 million ($197.8 million) in cash.[3] CHUM did not acquire the company's telecommunications operations, which remain in operation under the Craig Wireless name, which the company took on after CHUM's acquisition of its television broadcasting assets. Upon the name change, another of John's grandsons, Boyd, took over the company.

Former assets[]

Local stations[]

  • A-Channel (now Citytv)
    • CKAL - Calgary, Alberta
    • CKEM - Edmonton, Alberta
    • CHMI - Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • CKX - Brandon, Manitoba (ceased operations on October 2, 2009)
  • CKXT - Toronto, Ontario (ceased operations as of November 2011)

Digital television stations under Craig Specialty[]

  • MTV Canada, now MTV2 Canada - originally conceived as "Connect" (youth lifestyle programming)
  • MTV2 Canada, now Juicebox - originally conceived as "Music 5" (a service consisting of 5 separate music video channels: Pop, Dance, Urban, R&B, and "Hot Hits")
  • TV Land Canada, replaced by Comedy Gold in 2010 (ceased operations as of September 2019) - originally conceived as "Retro" (classic television programming)

Proposed, but never launched[]

  • A-Channel News Now (24 hr. news)
  • Action Channel (action-oriented programming)
  • Jazz & Blues TV
  • PATV (Pets & Animals)
  • The MET (special events held at the Metropolitan Entertainment Centre in Winnipeg)
  • Stampede (western-themed programming)

References[]

  1. ^ a b "CHUM purchases Craig Media, adds to western TV holdings". Retrieved 2020-09-08.
  2. ^ "CRTC Decision 89-114". April 6, 1989.
  3. ^ "Canada's CHUM To Acquire Broadcaster Craig Media". Billboard. 2004-04-12. Retrieved 2020-09-08.

External links[]

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