Difference between revisions of "User:Jon Preddle"

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==CANADIAN AIRDATES==
 
==CANADIAN AIRDATES==
===Stories bought and broadcast===
 
===Transmission===
 
===TV listings===
 
  
 
Screening details are covered on separate pages for each of these (known) broadcasters:
 
Screening details are covered on separate pages for each of these (known) broadcasters:

Revision as of 01:06, 22 April 2011

CANADA is of the North American continent, and is bordered with the United States.

Profile

Country Number (3) 1965 FIRST and SECOND WAVE
Region North America Commonwealth
Television commenced 1946
Colour System 1966 NTSC
Population 1966 19.9 million
TV Sets 1966 5.1 million
Population 1976 22.659 million
TV Sets 1976 9.39 million
Language/s English also dubbed into French


Television Stations / Channels

Canada has a number of major television networks providing broadcasts across the country. It also has several hundred small privately owned commercial stations.

During its regular run on Canadian television, Doctor Who was screened by these six broadcasters:

  • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) in 1965
  • CKVU in Vancouver from 1976 to 1982
  • TV Ontario from 1976 to 1989
  • Saskatchewan from 1978 to 1979
  • Youth Television (YTV) from 1989 to 1994
  • CITV-TV in 1996

(There may well have been others, but we have only details of these five.)


DOCTOR WHO IN CANADA

Canada was the third country to screen Doctor Who (see Selling Doctor Who). On 9 December 1964, a 16mm film print of the first episode was evaluated by technical quality advisers.


BBC Records

The Seventies records a sale of "(6)" stories by 28 February 1977. The Handbook identifies five of these to be: A, B, C, D and E. The sixth story is the Pertwee serial UUU.

The Eighties - THE LOST CHAPTERS records a sale of "(64)" stories (by 10 February 1987).

As far as we can determine, this total is made up of 14 Pertwee, 37 Tom Baker and 13 Davison serials.

In DWM, Canada is identified in 57 story Archives: five Hartnells (the same as above); no Troughtons; 16 Pertwees; 27 Tom Bakers; seven Davisons; no Colin Bakers; and two McCoys.

CANADIAN AIRDATES

Screening details are covered on separate pages for each of these (known) broadcasters:


Novelisations

The Target novelisations were readily available in Canada – the back covers of many but not all of the books bear a price in Canadian dollars. (From 1983 to 1989, the books name Cancoast Books in Toronto, Ontario, as the local distributor.) New books published in 1976, 1977, 1981, 1982 and 1992 do not have Canadian prices.

  • 1973: 95c
  • 1974: 95c; $1.25; $1.35
  • 1975: $1.35
  • 1976: none
  • 1977: none
  • 1978: $1.50
  • 1979: $1.50; $1.75; $1.95
  • 1980: $1.95; $2.25; $2.50
  • 1981: none
  • 1982: none
  • 1983: $3.75
  • 1984: $3.95
  • 1985: $3.95; $4.50
  • 1986: $3.95; $4.95
  • 1987: $4.50; $4.95
  • 1988: $4.95; $6.95
  • 1989: $4.95
  • 1990: $4.95; $6.25; $6.50
  • 1991: $5.95; $6.25
  • 1992: none

The first Doctor Who The New Adventures novel, Timewyrm Genesys was priced $8.75 in 1991, but Canadian prices did not appear again until 1996's Just War ($6.99). The final New Adventures, The Dying Days, was $7.99 in 1997.


Canadian Fandom

The Canadian fan club, Doctor Who Information Network (DWIN) was founded in 1980:


Canada in Doctor Who

In a way, without Canada, Doctor Who wouldn't exist!

  • [[wikipedia:Sydney Newman|SYDNEY NEWMAN], the man who devised the series, was born in Toronto in 1917


Several Canadian-born actors appeared in the series:



Links