The Comedy Network

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The Comedy Network
Launched October 17, 1997
Owned by CTV Television Inc.
(CTVglobemedia)
Slogan Time Well Wasted
Country Flag of Canada Canada
Broadcast area National
Headquarters Vancouver, British Columbia
Website www.thecomedynetwork.ca
Availability
Satellite
Bell ExpressVu Channel 625 (East)
Channel 626 (West)
Star Choice Channel 547 (West)
Channel 548 (East)
Cable
Available on most Canadian cable systems Check local listings

The Comedy Network is a Canadian English language cable television specialty channel owned by CTV Television Inc., a division of CTVglobemedia specializing in comedy programming.

Contents

Licensed in 1996, The Comedy Network launched on October 17, 1997. It is available in more than 4.8 million homes in Canada and 44 percent of the channel's revenues are reportedly reinvested back into Canadian programming.

CTVglobemedia also owns the CTV Television Network along with A-Channel, and the two networks occasionally run series simultaneously, such as Corner Gas and Robson Arms, with these shows for the most part being produced by CTV and re-broadcast by The Comedy Network.

As of June 27, 2007, CTV and TCN have exclusive Canadian rights to the entire Comedy Central library of past and current programs on all electronic platforms, under a multi-year agreement with Viacom, expanding on past programming agreements between the two channels. Canadian users attempting to visit Comedy Central websites will also be redirected to TCN's website. The Canadian channel will keep its own brand name, but the agreement is otherwise very similar to the earlier CTV/Viacom deal for MTV in Canada.[1]

The network's longtime slogan is Time Well Wasted, a variation of A&E's slogan at the time of Comedy's launch, Time Well Spent. The channel operates two time shifted feeds, East (Eastern Time) and West (Pacific Time).

Further information: List of programs broadcast by The Comedy Network

Primetime 7:00 PM 7:30 PM 8:00 PM 8:30 PM 9:00 PM 9:30 PM
Sunday Winnipeg Comedy Festival Just For Laughs Gags Rick Mercer Report The Simpsons Odd Job Jack
Monday Air Farce 22 Minutes Just For Laughs Corner Gas The Simpsons South Park
Tuesday Air Farce 22 Minutes Just For Laughs Corner Gas The Simpsons South Park
Wednesday Air Farce 22 Minutes Just For Laughs Corner Gas The Simpsons South Park
Thursday Air Farce 22 Minutes Just For Laughs Rick Mercer Report The Simpsons South Park
Friday Air Farce 22 Minutes Corner Gas Good Morning World The Simpsons South Park
Saturday Just for Laughs Corner Gas Blue Collar TV The Simpsons South Park

Since its inception in 1997 The Comedy Network has been widely criticized by members of the television and comedy communities as well as by viewers in general.

  • Some believe the network's logo and slogan, both in use since it went on the air in 1997, are out of date.
  • The Comedy Network's website was widely criticized, but in 2006 TCN answered with a major overhaul, relaunching a new, slick website in an aggressive campaign with the tongue-in-cheek slogan "Our Website Doesn't Suck Anymore".
    • One criticism still made of www.thecomedynetwork.ca is that they have not brought back their message boards or viewer forums, which previously had been flooded with complaints about their shows.
    • A failing newly discovered by many is the lack of support for web users without Microsoft or Apple operating systems. Under a deal with the American Comedy Central, www.thecomedynetwork.ca now blocks Linux users in Canada from viewing videos clips from many shows including The Colbert Report.
  • The quality of the network's original programming is also widely criticized. Almost every TCN production has dismal viewer ratings on IMDb, including its flagship shows Open Mike with Mike Bullard (1.1/10) and Popcultured (1.0/10). Some of their most attacked shows have even spawned "hate" pages on the internet, as well as petitions demanding their cancellation.
  • A general attack of the network is that they are allegedly less concerned with quality of programming than they are with their bottom line. This can be derived from the network's choice of re-broadcasting some shows from the 1980s and 1990s such as Comedy at Club 54, Just for Laughs, Air Farce and Comedy Now!. All have been re-aired many times each, and for several years.
  • The network and its shows are the "victims" of an annual "Statelessness of the Industry" roast as part of the Canadian Comedy Awards.

Original Comedy Network shows Puppets Who Kill and Kevin Spencer developed cult followings, with loyal fan bases.

Puppets Who Kill, Comedy Now! and The Gavin Crawford Show have each won two Canadian Comedy Awards.

Several shows produced by (or in partnership with) the CTV parent network have also been quite successful, most notably Corner Gas (possibly the most popular Canadian sitcom ever, with nine Canadian Comedy Award wins, six Gemini Award wins, seven Leo Award wins and an International Emmy nomination).

In 2006 CTV launched The Comedy Network on the CTV Broadband Network, an online network that rebroadcasts select series from The Comedy Network. Some shows on the broadband network include Keys to the VIP, Odd Job Jack and Corner Gas. In 2007, South Park and The Colbert Report were added to the line-up due to a deal reached with Comedy Central.

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