Top Banner
Geography of Canadian Media
30

Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Myra Tyler
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Geography of Canadian Media

Page 2: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Canadian Media

• Print Media– Newspapers, Magazines

• Broadcast Media– Radio, TV

• New Media– Internet

Page 3: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

The Media

• Term coined by Marshall McLuhan

Page 4: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Creating Canada

• Canada a product of imperialism, pragmatism– communications vital to this

• Its sense of nation emerges after Confederation

Page 5: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

One View

• The Media is a powerful producer of a distinct Canadian culture

Page 6: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Another View

• The Media is a powerful means of Canada’s assimilation into US culture

Page 7: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Mass Media

• First mass media:– The urban daily newspaper

Page 8: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Victorian Newspapers

• numerous, local, small circulation

• short (4 pages)

• weekly

• small businesses

Page 9: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Later C19th, early C20th

• development of mass readership– widespread literacy– cheap paper– cheap graphic printing– advertising

Page 10: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Circulation Growth

Montreal Star• 1880: 15,000• 1890: 30,000• 1900: 57,000• 1920: 106,000

Toronto Telegram• 1878: 5,000• 1889: 25,000• 1920: 94,000

Page 11: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Early C20th Urban Newspaper

• Multiple daily papers in each city

• 30-40 pages, two sections

• Full of graphics, cartoons, photos

• Specialty reporters, departments

• Vital for marketing campaigns of stores

Page 12: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

1910-1920

• Mergers, closures and the creation of newspaper chains– Southam

• Creation of national print advertising media

• Creation of national wire service– standardized coverage

Page 13: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Newspapers & geography

• Strong local traditions– small towns lose out to big cities

• Difficult to create a “national newspaper”

Page 14: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

National Newspapers

• Globe & Mail goes national from 1980 with satellite system– branch printing, regional bureaux

• National Post launched– required creation of national media giant– flops after being on long-term life support

• Nationalism of national newspapers is questionable

Page 15: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Magazines

• Cheap mass-marketed national magazines emerge in USA in 1890s

• Develop large circulation in Canada– Saturday Evening Post 1907 60,000 copies in

Canada– Mid 1920s: US magazines outsell Canadian

magazines 8:1 in Canada

Page 16: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Canadian Magazines

• Successful trade publications– Canadian Grocer

• McLeans remodelled in 1911

• Chatelaine 1927

• Saturday Night 1925

Page 17: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Canadian Magazines

• Achieved mass audience 1930-35 under tariff protection

• US magazines dominant otherwise– even with postal subsidies

Page 18: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Radio

• Broadcasting begins 1910s-1920s

• End of 1920s: stations in all cities

Page 19: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Radio

• Early national radio hook-ups via US phone lines

• Canadians listen to CBS and NBC mostly in 1920s– NBC, CBS buy Canadian stations

• Newspapers shut Canadian radio stations out of news wire services

• Newspapers acquire radio stations

Page 20: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Radio

• CNR begins broadcasts 1923– First national network broadcasts– Cultural content– Connected to tourism promotion– Takes TSO national in 1929

Page 21: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Radio

• Grass-roots movement to control Canadian radio in 1920s– exclude US programming– regulate religious broadcasters

Page 22: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Aird Commission 1928

• Recommends creation of a Crown Corporation to operate national radio broadcasting– supported by user fees, advertising

Page 23: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Opposition

• Private radio broadcasters

• Major industrial corporations

Page 24: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Creation of CRBC 1932

• Forerunner of CBC

• Establish high-power transmitters, national network

• national phone link 1932 means all-Canada route for broadcasts

• By 1933 2.5 hours of national network broadcasting each day

Page 25: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

CBC

• Created 1936

• Main medium forging a national consciousness

Page 26: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

TV

• American imports from 1948

• CBC enters the field from 1949– broadcasts from 1952– National network from 1959 (microwave links)

Page 27: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

TV

• Very rapid take-up of TV in Canada– twice as fast as in USA

• Very rapid take-up of Cable TV in Canada

Page 28: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

TV

• Strong audience preference for US dramas, entertainment– Canadian sports and news

• US multinationals purchase much of the advertising

• Canadian TV networks flourish on US content

Page 29: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Internet

• From 1990 fibre-optic phone trunk Vancouver to Halifax

• Satellite links

• Deregulation of telecoms means that Canadian internet access is largely run out of the USA

Page 30: Geography of Canadian Media. Canadian Media Print Media –Newspapers, Magazines Broadcast Media –Radio, TV New Media –Internet.

Geography

• Canadian media characterised by – the importance of local urban markets– the dominance of American media images

• National Media in Canada– Weakly developed outside of the CBC