Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 42. Chapters: Canadian broadcasting stubs, Canadian radio, Public broadcasting in Canada, Television in Canada, Digital television in Canada, Canadian content, Tele-Quebec, Canadian sovereignty, Effects of time on North American broadcasting, Anik, Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission, North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement, CKUA Radio Network, TSN Radio, CJRT-FM, Saskatchewan Communications Network, Knowledge, FM broadcasting in Canada, CFTU-TV, Broadcasting Corporation of Newfoundland, List of broadcasting licences held by Ethnic Channels Group, New Talent Singing Awards Calgary Audition, Beaver hour, Local programming, List of broadcasting licences held by Asian Television Network International Limited, The Americans, List of Toronto Blue Jays broadcasters, Canadian allocations changes under NARBA, Canadian Radio League, Canadian Media Guild, Riding Mountain Broadcasting, BBM Canada, Canadian Forces Radio and Television, Ryan Tower, Broadcasting Act, 2nd Spacey Awards, WorldBand Media, 3rd Spacey Awards, 1st Spacey Awards, 4th Spacey Awards, ACTRA Award, 5th Spacey Awards, Playback, TVNB, Royal Commission on Radio Broadcasting, Prix Gemeaux, Atlantic Association of Broadcasters, National Institute of Broadcasting, Music Waves. Excerpt: Television in Canada officially began with the opening of the nation's first television stations in Montreal and Toronto in 1952. As with most media in Canada, the television industry, and the television programming available in that country, are strongly influenced by the American media, perhaps to an extent not seen in any other major industrialized nation outside the US itself. Customers have come to expect the wide variety of choices available in the US, but in the eyes of many this has come at the expense of the high-quality indigenous programming available elsewhere, even in compara...