Showing posts with label Corus Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corus Entertainment. Show all posts

Corus Entertainment Planning To Close Several Kids Channels In Canada By September

Corus is preparing to pull the plug on a handful of children’s services come September 1, Cartt has learned, amid the company’s pursuit to cut down on costs and as the CRTC weighs what to do about such at-risk programming.

Corus has told distributors that Disney XD, Disney Jr., Disney French (La Chaine Disney), Nickelodeon, and ABC Spark will be pulled at the start of the new broadcast year, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told us, which was then confirmed by Corus.

“Corus regularly reviews its portfolio of channels to ensure we are meeting the evolving needs of our audiences and distribution partners,” a Corus spokesperson told us. “Following a comprehensive review we have decided to cease distribution of the ABC Spark, Nickelodeon, Disney French (La Chaine Disney), Disney XD and Disney Jr. channels. These channels will no longer be available as of September 1, 2025 at 12:01 a.m. ET.”

The media company still operates Disney Channel, Teletoon, Nelvana, Boomerang, YTV, Treehouse, and the Cartoon Network.

The news comes on the heels of the upfront period, which gives media companies an opportunity to showcase their programs to advertisers for the next broadcast season.

It also comes after Corus CEO John Gossling said on a quarterly earnings conference call late last month that the company “will do things that will manage the content cost line better as we go forward,” adding the company has been “trying to stabilize things.”

He noted that Corus has been hurt by its reliance on linear, despite having digital options like Stack TV. “We’re absolutely feeling it,” he said. The company, which has been trimming costs, reported lower advertising and subscriber revenues last quarter compared to the same period last year.

The news also comes against the backdrop of a broader conversation about the viability of children’s programming on traditional television as more audiences seek online options. Last spring an MTM survey found that, while traditional TV remains popular among Canadian children, they are more likely to watch video content on other sources such as YouTube and SVOD services like Netflix and Disney+.

In May, broadcasters told the commission that CBC/Radio-Canada could be made to step up on carrying such at-risk programs. The public broadcaster, however, said floating this kind of programming must be a whole-of-system effort.

For nearly two years, Corus has been in a regulatory standstill with Rogers, which has been seeking to remove some of its services, including what it says are underperforming children’s channels. Rogers has maintained that the decline in viewership on children’s programming has significantly outpaced overall television viewership.

Rogers is now in active litigation against the imposition of the standstill rule forcing it to continue to carry some of Corus’s services.

Last month, Corus told the commission during a hearing on the dynamics between programmers and distributors that the regulator must factor in how distributors package their services when determining performance.

“When considering whether there are valid commercial reasons for a request to remove, consider the commercial agreement,” Matt Thompson, Corus’s vice president and associate general counsel, told the regulator at the time.

“Are there mitigants in the commercial agreement for channel performance that the BDU might be able to realize? I think the reality of termination requests for programmers is that loss of carriage … can be very, very harmful, more harmful in fact for the programmer, to our mind, than the continued carriage in the case of BDUs.”

Corus executives did, however, say that it is not in the business of continuing to maintain channels that are underperforming.

Corus isn’t the only children’s programmer that has been feeling the heat. WildBrain said this spring that it had been unable to renegotiate a new carriage agreement with Bell for its Family Channel, Family Jr., WildBrainTV, and Télémagino services after the CRTC ruled that Bell was not unduly disadvantaging those services.

The failure to get that affiliation deal meant it had to renegotiate certain commercial aspects of its previously announced agreement whereby IoM Media Ventures would acquire a majority stake in its TV broadcast business.

Reminder: Cyrus Entertainment Inc. Current Agreement With Warner Bros. Discovery Set To Expire By 31 December 2024


Corus Entertainment Inc. (TSX: CJR.B) (“Corus” or “the Company”) is providing an update today that it has been informed by Warner Bros. Discovery, Inc. that some of its programming and trademark output arrangements will not be renewed upon their expiry on December 31, 2024. This affects content on certain Corus-operated specialty channels. Corus does not currently expect changes to the programming of the channels until 2025.

“I want to reinforce Corus’ intent to continue operating the country’s largest and most widely distributed lifestyle channels based on the strength of top-rated Canadian programs and alternate foreign content supply,” said Troy Reeb, EVP, Networks and Content of Corus. “We have an exceptional fall schedule coming in September and a vast amount of Canadian and U.S. content to carry us into the future.”

“This is an unfortunate example of inequitable structural relationships in the Canadian media and telecom industries, particularly affecting independent broadcasters like Corus,” added Doug Murphy, President and Chief Executive Officer of Corus. “It highlights the urgent need for regulatory reform, including to rules affecting how market-dominant players interact with suppliers and competitors. Corus intends to explore all potential remedies. We look forward to adapting and advancing our strategies while we pursue new opportunities through our other content suppliers.”

Corus is Canada’s largest independent media company, delivering diverse entertainment options and award-winning news across its 15 Global television stations, 33 specialty channels, 39 radio stations, and streaming services including STACKTV and the Global TV app.

Rumour: Treehouse TV In Canada Is Becoming Cartoonito From April 24

During the month, Canada’s most popular children’s cartoon channel, Teletoon, was rebranded as Cartoon Network.

The channel, which is a subsidiary of Corus Entertainment, launched 25 years ago in October 1997. Since then, it has aired original cartoon programs, while also playing TV shows from its sister channel Cartoon Network which had since then rebranded to Boomerang.

All that was left of the Corus brand on linear platforms was Treehouse TV. Following the demise of Teletoon, they were rumours swirling around for sometime that the channel will fold under Cartoonito as they've licenced shows like Batwheels and Bugs Bunny Builders.

Through a promo by Twitter user @TayvenSmittenTV, it was announced that Treehouse TV would rebrand into Cartoonito from April 24 featuring shows like Caillou, Bugs Bunny Builders, Thomas And Friends basically all the shows from Treehouse TV.

The news of Treehouse TV's demise doesn't come as a shocker. As seen during the month, Teletoon was phased out for Cartoon Network and Boomerang entered the market so it only seemed logical for them to align these brands with Cartoonito.

Boing will join the latter as they to will be replaced by Cartoonito in France and just like UK, Italy and as seen Canada retain Boomerang as opposed to folding all their content under the Cartoonito banner as seen across EMEA.

For those who aren't unfamiliar with the Treehouse brand, it's basically home to shows once licenced by Boomerang and JimJam including Agent Binky: Pets Of The Universe, Caillou and Harry and His Bucket Full of Dinosaurs.