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| |
|---|---|
| Channels | |
| Branding | CTV Kitchener |
| Programming | |
| Affiliations | 13.1:CTV |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | Bell Media Inc. |
| History | |
First air date | March 1, 1954 (1954-03-01) |
Former call signs | CKCO-TV (1954–2011) |
Former channel numbers | Analog: 13 (VHF, 1954–2011) |
| CBC (1954–1963) | |
Call sign meaning | Covering Kitchener & Central Ontario |
| Technical information | |
Licensing authority | CRTC |
| ERP | 12kW |
| HAAT | 291.9 m (958 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 43°24′17″N80°38′5″W / 43.40472°N 80.63472°W /43.40472; -80.63472 |
| Links | |
| Website | CTV Kitchener |
CKCO-DT (channel 13) is atelevision station inKitchener, Ontario, Canada,owned and operated by theCTV Television Network, a division ofBell Media. It issister toLondon-basedCTV2 outletCFPL-DT (channel 10), although the two stations maintain separate operations. CKCO-DT's studios are located on King Street East on the south side of Kitchener, and its transmitter is located at Baden Tower between Snyders Road East andHighway 7 inBaden, just west of the Kitchener city limits.

The station first signed on the air at 6 p.m. on March 1, 1954.[2] Its signal transmitted from the Baden Tower (a transmitter onBaden Hill), nearBaden, just west of Kitchener.[3] The transmitter has become one of the most identifiable landmarks in the area. Originally, like all privately owned television stations in Canada from 1953 to 1959, CKCO was an affiliate of theCBC; it became an affiliate ofCTV in 1963. The station increased its transmitter power in the early 1960s to reachLondon, from which Kitchener then received CBC affiliate programs onCFPL-TV.
CKCO was originally owned by Central Ontario Television, a consortium that included the Famous Players theatre chain (now owned byCineplex Entertainment) and businessmanCarl Arthur Pollock, president of the family-owned television manufacturerElectrohome, although his broadcast holdings – which also included radio stationsCFCA-FM andCKKW – were operated by a separate company. At one time, CKCO was owned by CAP Communications, whose name was taken from Pollock's initials; a corporate reorganization in 1970 placed the stations directly under the ownership of Electrohome, which also acquired control of CKCO when Canadian broadcasting laws required domestic ownership of stations, ending the involvement of American-owned Famous Players, which at the time was owned byParamount Pictures' parent company Gulf + Western (the latter was acquired by theoriginal Viacom). CKCO would become the first station in Canada to provideclosed captioning for all of its local newscasts, in 1988.
In the 1990s, Baton Broadcasting had owned competing local stations in southwestern Ontario (CFPL-TV in London,CHWI-TV in Windsor,CKNX-TV inWingham). A deal between Electrohome and Baton in 1996 resulted in each company owning 50% of these stations, as well as CKCO-TV, among other Canadian stations. The following year, another deal gave Baton control over CKCO-TV, whileCHUM Limited took control over the other southwestern Ontario stations (which presently operate as owned-and-operated stations of theCTV Twotelevision system). CTVglobemedia reacquired CFPL, CHWI, and CKNX in 2007 as a result of a takeover of CHUM Limited.
In 1998, Baton changed its name to CTV Inc. after becoming the sole owner of CTV, ending the decades of cooperative ownership of the network. In 2000, BCE purchased CTV Inc. and combined it with NetStar Communications andThe Globe and Mail into Bell Globemedia. The company changed its name in 2007 to CTVglobemedia after BCE reduced its ownership interest. In September 2010, BCE re-acquired full ownership of CTV Inc., which changed its name once again to Bell Media in 2011 when the acquisition was finalized.
On October 3, 2005, CKCO ceased identifying by its call letters, adopting the local brand "CTV Southwestern Ontario", with its newscasts rebranding fromCKCO News toCTV News. The local brand reflected the fact that, at that time, the station provided some coverage of news in areas southwest ofWaterloo Region. While it remains the CTV main-network station for all of Southwestern Ontario, CKCO has since refocused its news-gathering resources exclusively on Waterloo Region and theGuelph area, avoiding direct competition with its sister CTV Two stations in other parts of southwestern Ontario for local news coverage. In early April 2012, presumably to end any confusion about its mandate, the station changed its on-air branding to "CTV Kitchener".[4][5][6]
Before CKCO was a CTV owned-and-operated station, the station produced considerably more local non-news programming:
The station continues to produce a limited amount of local programming in addition to its local newscasts. CKCO presently broadcasts church services each Sunday morning at 10 a.m. from two Kitchener area churches: St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church and St. Peters Lutheran Church, which are alternated each week. CKCO serves as theflagship station for CTV's broadcasts of theKitchener-Waterloo Oktoberfest parade, which is held eachThanksgiving Day in the Twin Cities.
CKCO-DT presently broadcasts 15 hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with three hours each weekday). Prior to 1998, when Baton Broadcasting rebranded all the CTV stations identically, CKCO's newscast was calledCKCOAction News. In the past, the station's newscasts were branded asScan NewsHour andOntario Report.
The station operates a news bureau inChatham, Ontario, and also had a bureau in Windsor at the corner of Park Street and Victoria Avenue, on the ground floor of theVictoria Park Place apartments. This bureau was shut down in 1994, shortly after the launch ofindependent station/semi-BBS affiliate CHWI. The spot was abandoned for several years, still showing the faded "CKCO-TV 42" banners atop its storefront for a few years (it is now home to aconvenience store).
News veterans who had their start at the station includeJeff Hutcheson,Lisa LaFlamme and Ron Johnston. Bill Inkol was a long-time sportscaster not only for the station, but often for CTV's national sports broadcasts. He was also a host ofBowling for Dollars. "Big Al" ("Al" Elwood Jones) was the long-time host of after-schoolBig Al's Ranch Party,Big Al's Talent Showcase,Big Al's Cartoon Capers,Big Al and the Flintstones, as well as other children's programs at the station.
Oopsy the Clown, a children's performer portrayed bySt. Thomas native Bob McNea (1929–2005), moved to CKCO after appearing for several years onDetroit NBC affiliate WWJ-TV (nowWDIV-TV), where he served as Detroit's "Bozo the Clown". During the 1970s, it was found that the cartoons seen onBozo were too violent and WWJ executives offered Bob the opportunity to create a new clown show. During aBozo episode it was announced that Bozo was leaving television to go back and join the circus. He phoned his clown cousin "Oopsy" and during a split screen conversation (with Bob playing both Bozo and Oopsy) Oopsy agreed to replace him.The Oopsy the Clown Show aired for a while on WWJ as McNea decided to move back to Canada and join CKCO-TV.
Gary McLaren worked in the station's news department for 39 years from 1957 to 1996, spending most of that time in an on-air role, and also hostedCanadian Bandstand in the 1960s and the weekend newsmagazine showSunday AM.Daiene Vernile anchored and produced the weekly programProvincewide from 1985 until April 2014, making it the longest continuously running, locally produced newsmagazine program in Canada. Other personalities during the station's history included local daytime show hosts such as Elaine Cole,Betty Thompson andJohnnie Walters. Thompson was also a long-time host ofRomper Room.Bob Bratina hosted Polka Time withWalter Ostanek and replaced "Big Al" as host of Talent Showcase prior to Oopsy the Clown and his talent showBig Top Talent.
CKCO was known for many years for the red jackets worn by news anchors on their newscasts, a practice that began in 1967 with the emergence of colour television and continued until 1989. On August 18, 2012, the Saturday edition ofCTV News at Six was expanded to one hour replacingThe Beat. On April 20, 2014, the Sunday edition ofCTV News at Six was also expanded to an hour replacing the long-running showProvincewide.
From January 2017, local news was presented in 16:9 SD. On September 18, 2017, CTV Kitchener launched its own edition ofCTV News at Five. Bell Media initially announced that high-definition production of CTV News Kitchener would commence on September 25.[9] However, the launch date was delayed to October 2, withCTV News at Noon being the first local newscast to be presented inhigh-definition from the CTV Kitchener studios.[10]
CKCO's noon and weekend newscasts were cancelled on February 8, 2024, as part of nationwide programming cuts by Bell Media.[11]
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | CKCO | CTV |
As part of Canada'stransition to digital television, CKCOflash-cut to digital on August 31, 2011. While originally allocated channel 7 for its digital signal, CKCO-DT was established on channel 13 instead in order to avoid interference with the digital signal ofBuffalo, New York'sWBBZ-TV.[13]
CKCO was also previously seen in theBruce Peninsula andGeorgian Bay region on channel 2 from theCKCO-TV-2 transmitter atWiarton, which began operation in 1971.
CKCO-TV-2 was on a long list of CTV rebroadcasters nationwide that was set to shut down on or before August 31, 2009, as part of a political dispute with Canadian authorities on paidfee-for-carriage requirements forcable television operators.[14] A subsequent change in ownership assigned full control of CTVglobemedia toBell Media; as a result, CKCO-TV-2 remained in normal licensed broadcast operation.[15]
In February 2014, CKCO-TV-2 was shut down as a result of a power failure combined with a property dispute with a neighbouring landowner, which blocked service vans from driving up to the site to make repairs, forcing technicians to walk through fields insnowshoes in cold winter weather. A diesel generator kept the transmitter in operation in the short term, but it would later fail, with the ongoing property dispute blocking efforts to repair that as well. Bell Media applied to surrender its license for CKCO-TV-2 to the CRTC in August 2014, after CKCO received fewer than thirty calls from viewers and advertisers regarding the outage, as well as the fact that the transmitter cost six times more to run than the amount taken in.[16]

In addition to the Baden tower, CKCO was served in theSarnia area by rebroadcasterCKCO-TV-3, on UHF channel 42. This transmitter, actually located atOil Springs, was established on May 16, 1975, and commenced broadcasts on November 5 of that year. The station was available over-the-air and on cable in extreme eastern and southeasternMichigan in such towns asPort Huron andSt. Clair Shores, and appeared in Detroit-area television listings. The station targeted Sarnia, Chatham, and most ofLambton andKent counties. CKCO continues to be carried in these areas, along withWindsor andEssex County onCogeco Cable on channel 13 (SD only; HDTV is provided in these areas by sister station CFTO).
Programming on CKCO-TV-3 was originally the same as the main CKCO signal, except for local inserts during newscasts and local commercials. In 2009, it was announced that CKCO-TV-3 was scheduled to cease producing distinct local programming by August 31 of that year, but expected to continue operations as a rebroadcaster.[17] As of September 2009, CKCO-TV-3 ceased airing alternate local programming for the Sarnia and Chatham area and became a direct simulcast of CKCO-DT.
On July 30, 2019, Bell Media was granted permission to close down CKCO-TV-3 as part of Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2019-268. This transmitter was shut down on May 2, 2020.[18]
Prior to 1999, the station also broadcast on channel 11 toMuskoka andParry Sound from theCKCO-TV-4 transmitter atDwight, nearHuntsville. This transmitter first signed on the air on February 25, 1976.[5] In 1999, that transmitter began relaying the signal ofCKNY-TV inNorth Bay;[19] it has since become a rebroadcaster ofSudbury'sCICI.[20]