| Company type | Public |
|---|---|
| TSX: BAMI | |
| Industry | Mass media |
| Founded | December 21, 2011; 13 years ago (December 21, 2011) |
| Founders | Michael MacMillan |
| Headquarters | Toronto,Ontario, Canada |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Michael MacMillan (CEO) |
| Products | Broadcasting,television production,publishing |
| Divisions |
|
| Website | blueantmedia |
Blue Ant Media Corporation is a Canadian multinational media company. Founded in 2011 by formerAlliance Atlantis executiveMichael MacMillan, the company has interests in domestic and internationaltelevision production, broadcasting (including multiple Canadianspecialty channels), streaming, and publishing, with most of its properties being focused primarily onfactual content.
The company has expanded primarily via acquisitions, with its earliest investments including includingGlassbox Television andHigh Fidelity HDTV. In 2025, Blue Ant acquired multiple studios fromBoat Rocker Media and went public as part of areverse takeover.
Headquartered inToronto, the company has offices in Los Angeles, New York, Miami, Sydney, Halifax, and Ottawa.
Blue Ant Media was formed in 2011 by formerAlliance Atlantis executiveMichael MacMillan; the company's first investment was the acquisition of a 29.9% minority stake in specialty broadcasterGlassbox Television—owner of specialty networks such asAUX,Bite TV andTravel + Escape—with the option to increase this to a 75% controlling stake pendingCRTC approval.[1] The company was named in reference to the"Blue Ant" trilogy by American-Canadian sci-fi writerWilliam Gibson, as Blue Ant was portrayed in the novels as being "the company of the future".[2]
MacMillan explained that his goal for the company was to be a producer and distributor of content across multiple platforms, and "not just have individual pieces of content" but be "deep experts" inniche markets with advertiser appeal (such as music, comedy, and travel).[1][2] Glassbox founder Jeffery Elliott was retained as Blue Ant's head of television and digital, joined by former Glassbox CEO Raja Khanna.[3]
On December 21, 2011, Blue Ant Media announced that it had entered into an agreement to purchase specialty broadcasterHigh Fidelity HDTV;[4] the company subsequently announced a 25% investment byTorstar.[5] Blue Ant initially purchased 29.9% of the company, with the remaining 70.1% acquired following CRTC approval. The acquisition was completed on August 1, 2012.[6][7] At this time, Jeffrey Elliott departed the company, and was succeeded by former Glassbox CEO Raja Khanna as head of television and digital.[3]
On August 17, 2012, Blue Ant Media announced that it would be purchasing the specialty channelBold from theCanadian Broadcasting Corporation for an undisclosed amount, conditional on government approval.[8] After initially purchasing a 15% minority stake in Canadian publishing company Quarto Communications in the summer of 2011,[9] Blue Ant Media purchased the remaining shares in the company in December 2012, which had been renamedCottage Life Media.[10]
In April 2014, the company purchased a minority stake in the digital media company andmulti-channel network Omnia Media.[11] In November 2014, the company bought a majority stake inChoice TV, marking their first international expansion.[12][13][14] In December 2015, Blue Ant Media andSmithsonian Networks teamed to launch Blue Skye Entertainment, a new UK-based company exclusively focused on 4K content.[15]
In December 2016, Blue Ant partnered withBBC Worldwide to relaunch radX asBBC Earth.[16]
In May 2017, Blue Ant Media bought the Asia-Pacific broadcaster Racat Group, including factual producerNHNZ, Singapore-based studio Beach House Pictures, Sydney-basedNorthern Pictures, developer Runaway Play, and a majority stake inZooMoo. The purchase was considered to be complementary to the Blue Ant's factual and nature-oriented programming.[17][18][19]
In February 2018, Omnia Media was renamed Blue Ant Digital Studios, coinciding with the launch of several new original series onFacebook Watch, and an accompanying expansion beyond video gaming content.[20] In October 2018, Blue Ant acquired the Toronto-based Saloon Media.[21]
In October 2020, Blue Ant Media announced its acquisition of the Canadian technology news websiteMobileSyrup.[22]
In December 2020, Blue Ant entered thefree ad-supported streaming television (FAST) market by launching HauntTV, a channel devoted to horror and supernatural programming, onThe Roku Channel in Canada.[23] It has since launched several additional FAST channels in Canada and the United States; including CrimeTime, TotalCrime, Homeful, and HistoryTime.[24][25][26][27]
In 2020, Blue Ant Media sold its Asian linear networks aside from Love Nature, includingBlue Ant Entertainment,Blue Ant Extreme, andZooMoo, to Rock Entertainment Holdings, a new company led by Blue Ant's then-head of Global Networks & Kids Ward Platt.[28]
In February 2021, Blue Ant Media sold its majority stake in New Zealand factual production company NHNZ to producer Julie Christie. It was rebranded as NHNZ Worldwide, with Blue Ant Media retaining a 45% stake in the rebranded company and continuing to own NHNZ's catalogue.[29]
In March 2021, Blue Ant expanded its partnership withBBC Studios, relaunchingTreasure HD asBBC First. The channel is ade facto successor toCorus Entertainment'sBBC Canada; that channel had originally been founded by Alliance Atlantis, where Blue Ant founder Michael MacMillan had been an executive.[30][31]
In June 2022, Blue Ant Media acquired British distribution company Drive Media Rights and its library, with Blue Ant folding Drive Media Rights into its distribution arm Blue Ant International. Its founders Ben Barrett and Lilla Hurst also joined the company.[32] Two months later in September, Blue Ant Media announced their acquisition of CTV marketplace company Media Pulse, which became a standalone unit within the company.[33] In January 2023, Blue Ant partnered withWorld of Wonder on a U.S. FAST channel devoted to international versions ofRuPaul's Drag Race.[34]
In August 2023, Blue Ant announced its acquisition of Canadian production company MarbleMedia, and plans to merge their studio operations (aside from Blue Ant's Singaporean subsidiary Beach House Pictures) into a single division; the acquisition would increase Blue Ant's involvement in scripted content.[35] Following the completion of the purchase, MarbleMedia's co-founders Mark Bishop and Matthew Hornburg were named the new co-presidents of Blue Ant Studios, leading the non-scripted and scripted units respectively.[36][37]
In February 2024,Fremantle acquired a majority stake in Beach House Pictures, including the entirety of Blue Ant's stake.[38][39] In June 2024, Blue Ant sold MobileSyrup toZoomerMedia.[40] In August 2024, Blue Ant sold its digital brand Animalogic to Toronto-based digital media company UnderKnown.[41]
On March 24, 2025, Blue Ant Media announced that it would acquireJam Filled Entertainment,Insight Productions, and Proper Television fromBoat Rocker Media to expand its children's and unscripted businesses. As part of this acquisition, Blue Ant Media would perform areverse takeover of Boat Rocker and go public on theToronto Stock Exchange as Blue Ant Media Corporation. Boat Rocker shareholders would hold a 26.5% stake in the company's stock. The remainder of Boat Rocker outside of the acquired assets wassold to its management for CA$18 million, becoming a private company held by its lead executive team.[42][43] The transaction was completed on August 1, 2025.[44]
On October 2, 2025, Blue Ant Media announced that it had acquired the documentary-oriented streaming service MagellanTV for $12 million.[45] On November 26, 2025, Blue Ant announced that it would acquire Vancouver-basedThunderbird Entertainment for $63 million.[46]
Proper Television is a Toronto-based studio focused on non-scripted programming, including reality and documentary-style programs. It was formed in 2004 by Canadian producerGuy O'Sullivan after leaving theBBC; its productions have included adaptations of international realityformats, such asCanada's Worst Driver,Come Dine with Me Canada,The Great Canadian Baking Show, andMasterChef Canada.[47]
In June 2013, Proper Television acquired BuzzTaxi Communications to expand into distribution, with the company renamed Proper Rights.[48][49]
In April 2017, O'Sullivan died at the age of 49.[47] In September 2017, Proper Television was acquired by Boat Rocker Media; its production operations would continue as an independent division, while Proper Rights was folded into Boat Rocker Rights. O'Sullivan was jointly succeeded by Proper's former vice president of production Lesia Capone, and creative director Cathie James.[50][51][48] In 2025, Proper Television was acquired by Blue Ant.[52]
| Title | Years | Network | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada's Worst Driver | 2005–2018 | Discovery Channel Canada | |
| Come Dine with Me Canada | 2010–2014 | W Network | |
| Redemption Inc. | 2012 | CBC | |
| Don't Drive Here | 2013–2015 | Discovery Channel Canada | |
| Storage Wars Canada | 2013–2015 | Bravo | co-production withFremantleMedia |
| Masterchef Canada | 2014–present | CTV | |
| True North Calling[53] | 2017 | CBC | |
| The Great Canadian Baking Show | 2017–present | CBC | co-production withLove Productions |
| Mary Makes It Easy[54] | 2021–present | CTV Life Channel | |
| Lost Car Rescue | 2022–present | History Canada | |
| Listing Large[55] | 2023–present | CTV Life Channel |
| Title | Years | Network | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gary and His Demons[56] | 2018–2022 | CBC Gem[57] VRV/Amazon Prime Video (United States) | inherited from Look Mom! Productions co-production withMondo Media and Solis Animation |
| Blown Away | 2019–2024 | Makeful | inherited from MarbleMedia |
| Detention Adventure | 2019–2022 | CBC Gem | co-production with Loco Motion Pictures and Broken Compass Films |
| Bigfoot | 2019 | VRV/YouTube (United States) | inherited from Look Mom! Productions co-production with Mondo Media and Solis Animation |
| Restaurants on the Edge[58] | 2020 | Cottage Life | via Blue Ant Media co-production with MarbleMedia and OutEast Entertainment |
| The Healing Powers of Dude[59] | 2020 | Netflix | co-production with Meekel Meekel |
| Canada's Drag Race | 2020–present | Crave | A Canadian adaptation ofRuPaul's Drag Race co-production withWorld of Wonder |
| World's Most Scenic River Journeys[60] | 2021–2022 | Smithsonian Channel Canada Channel 5 (United Kingdom) | via Blue Ant Media co-production with Saloon Media andBrightSpark East |
| Epstein's Shadow: Ghislaine Maxwell[61] | 2021 | Peacock Sky Documentaries (United Kingdom) | co-production with Alitar Productions |
| Doomlands[62] | 2022–2024 | The Roku Channel | inherited from Look Mom! Productions |
| Evil by Design: Exposing Peter Nygård | 2022 | CBC Gem | |
| Mysteries from Above | 2022–present | Cottage Life | |
| Killers: Caught on Camera[63] | 2023–present | True Crime | under Blue Ant Rights co-production with Back2Back Productions |
| I Have Nothing[64] | 2023 | Crave | co-production with Catalyst |
| Ghosting with Luke Hutchie and Matthew Finlan[65] | 2024–2025 | CBC Gem | |
| Old Enough![66][67] | 2024–present | TVO | Based on the Japanese format of the same name by Junji Ōuchi andNippon Television |
| Slaycation | Crave | co-production withWorld of Wonder | |
| Murder Has Two Faces[68] | 2025 | Hulu | co-production withABC News Studios and Cortés Filmworks |
| The Great Art Fraud[69] | 2025 | BBC Two | |
| Tralala[70] | TBA | CBC Sky TV (New Zealand) | co-production with Stretchy |
| Wild Science[71] | TBA | Love Nature[72] 3sat (Germany) | co-production withZDF Studios[73] and Big Media |
| Engineering from Above[74] | Cottage Life |