CBUT-DT
CBUT-DT, virtual channel 2, is a CBC Television owned-and-operated station licensed to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, serving as the network's West Coast flagship outlet. The station is owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, as part of a twinstick with Ici Radio-Canada Télé station CBUFT-DT. The two stations share studios at the CBC Regional Broadcast Centre on Hamilton Street in downtown Vancouver; CBUT-DT's transmitter is located atop Mount Seymour.
On cable, the station is available on Shaw Cable channels 3 and 209 in the Vancouver area. On satellite, it is carried on Bell TV channel 1150 and Shaw Direct channel 213.
History
The station first signed on the air on December 16, 1953; as such, CBUT is the oldest television station in Western Canada. The station's original studio facilities were located inside a converted automotive dealership at 1200 West Georgia Street in downtown Vancouver. However, CBUT was not the first television station to serve Vancouverites; KVOS-TV, across the border in Bellingham, Washington, had signed on months earlier as a CBS affiliate. CBUT has broadcast exclusively in English for most of its existence, except for a period from 1964 to 1976 when French-language programs from Télévision de Radio-Canada aired on weekend mornings; this secondary affiliation ended when CBUFT signed on in September 1976. CBUT was known mainly as "Channel 2" from its inception until 1976.During the station's early years until 1976, CBUT's station IDs consisted of slides of local Vancouver landmarks with the CBUT logo overlaid, accompanied by the announcement "This is CBUT, Channel 2 in Vancouver"; the ID slide used at the end of local programs on CBUT featured a larger version of the station's logo on a navy blue background, accompanied by the announcement "This is CBC Television, Vancouver". Beginning with the introduction of CBC's "gem" logo in December 1974, CBUT began using the "gem" network ID at the end of all programming, both network-distributed and locally produced.
In 1975, the CBC consolidated its Vancouver radio and television operations into one building. Prior to this, CBC's Vancouver radio properties – CBU, CBU-FM and CBUF-FM – had operated from a separate studio facility at 701 Hornby Street, within the basement of the Hotel Vancouver. Together, those stations formed the basis of the Regional Broadcast Centre at 700 Hamilton Street, a few blocks east of its previous radio and television facilities.
The station's IDs were changed in 1976 when CBUT changed its on-air branding to "CBC British Columbia," with the initial IDs featuring a totem pole superimposed over local landmarks, after which the totem pole zoomed out and turned into the letter "T" in the station brand.
In recent years, CBUT, as with all CBC-owned stations, has de-emphasized local programming in favour of national network programming distributed out of Toronto. As of 2002, the station only aired sporadic local non-news programming and dropped all use of local station identifications in favour of using only network IDs; in addition, due to budget cuts, the CBC integrated CBUT's master control operations into the master control facility at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre in downtown Toronto. Recently, however, CBUT has increased its local programming with the introduction of a locally themed lifestyle program, Living Vancouver, as well as the addition of several new local newscasts.
Transmitters
Spectrum re-packing
In April 2017, Industry Canada posted new channel assignments for stations as a result of spectrum repacking due to the US 600 MHz spectrum auction. CBUT-DT will move to channel 35 on May 1, 2020. As of April 2017, channel 35 is occupied by KVOS-TV.Former rebroadcasters
CBUT's over 85 analogue rebroadcast transmitters were located on the Lower Mainland, Vancouver Island, the Okanagan, and areas not previously occupied by a private CBC affiliate.Due to federal funding reductions to the CBC, in April 2012, the CBC responded with substantial budget cuts, which included shutting down CBC's and Radio-Canada's remaining analogue transmitters on July 31, 2012. None of CBC or Radio-Canada's television rebroadcasters were converted to digital; CHAN-DT is the last major network station in Vancouver to operate rebroadcasters throughout the province.
Programming
CBUT currently produces a number of programs for CBC Television. Portions of Marketplace are produced at CBUT, as were portions of the program Hemispheres, the now-cancelled national version of Canada Now and the late-night independent film program ZeD.Sports programming
CBUT presents Vancouver Canucks hockey games when Canucks games are featured on CBC Television's Hockey Night in Canada NHL package produced by Sportsnet, the regional TV and radio rightsholder for the Canucks. Additionally, CBUT presents the Winter and Summer Olympics as part of CBC's rights deal with the International Olympic Committee.Locally produced programs formerly aired on CBUT
Some of these programs were also seen on the CBC network, either regionally or nationally.- The Beachcombers
- Canada Now
- Cariboo Country
- Celebrity Cooks
- Good Rockin' Tonite
- Living Vancouver
- Northwood
- Reach for the Top
- Rich Little's Christmas Carol
- Switchback
- Talk About
- The Urban Peasant
- The Wolfman Jack Show
- ZeD
Digital television
Digital channel
Analogue-to-digital conversion
CBUT shut down its analogue signal, over VHF channel 2, on August 31, 2011, the official date in which Canadian television stations in CRTC-designated mandatory markets transitioned from analogue to digital broadcasts. The station's digital signal was relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 58, which was among the high band UHF channels that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition, to post-transition channel 43. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display CBUT-DT's virtual channel as its analogue-era VHF channel 2.Post-transition, CBUT's downconverted the high definition video resolution for its digital signal from 1080i to 720p.
News operation
CBUT-DT presently broadcasts 8½ hours of locally produced newscasts each week ; in regards to the number of hours devoted to news programming, it is the highest local newscast output among CBC Television's stations, although it now has the lowest newscast output among the Vancouver–Victoria market's television stations – its weekly news total is far behind CTV O&O CIVT-DT and Global O&O CHAN-DT .In years past, the supper hour newscast was known as Hourglass, Newscentre, CBC Evening News, Broadcast One and CBC News: Vancouver. On February 19, 2007, CBUT restored an hour-long local newscast to its schedule with the debut of a local edition of CBC News at Six, which retained the Canada Now name and was originally anchored by former national Canada Now anchors Ian Hanomansing and Gloria Macarenko. In September 2009, the early evening newscast expanded to 90 minutes, with the addition of an hour-long block at 5:00 p.m. and the removal of the 6:30 p.m. half-hour of the program.
In April 2010, CBC Television entered into a news share agreement with CHEK, in which both stations share news story content and resources. Tony Parsons also joined the CBC to anchor both CBUT's early evening news block and CHEK's 10:00 p.m. newscast, remaining with both stations until his retirement in 2013. In addition, CHEK formerly carried a simulcast of CBC News: Vancouver at 6 and Vancouver at 11 while CBUT also produced a weekend 6:00 p.m. newscast for that station. As of April 10, 2016, CHEK no longer carries CBUT's newscasts; on October 5, 2015, CHEK replaced the 6:00 p.m. airing of CBC News: Vancouver with its own half-hour 6:00 p.m. newscast, hosted by former CTV and Global TV reporter Ben O'Hara-Byrne, while on April 10, 2016, CHEK dropped the 11:00 p.m. airing of CBC Vancouver News in favor of an encore presentation of the 10:00 p.m. CHEK newscast on weeknights and various programming on Sundays.
As of June 2013, weather segments seen on CBUT's newscasts are broadcast in HD, while video from other studio and field cameras are transmitted in standard definition and are upconverted to a widescreen format.
On July 30, 2014, CBUT announced that Andrew Chang would begin anchoring the early evening newscasts starting September 1, succeeding Gloria Macarenko, who announced on her last day of her newscasts that she would become host of CBC Radio's The Story from Here. However, Macarenko will remain host of Our Vancouver while producing interview segments during CBUT's evening newscasts.
Notable current on-air staff
- Gloria Macarenko – host of BC Almanac on CBC Radio One; Our Vancouver host; also special assignment reporter
- Andrew Chang – anchor
Notable former on-air staff
- Adrienne Arsenault – reporter
- Gillian Findlay – reporter
- Dawna Friesen – reporter
- Bill Good – anchor
- Ian Hanomansing – anchor/reporter
- Anton Koschany – reporter
- Claire Martin – meteorologist
- Tony Parsons – 5:00, 5:30 and 6:00 p.m. anchor
- Jack Webster – reporter, Hourglass
Out-of-market cable coverage