1992 in Canadian television
This is a list of Canadian television related events from 1992.
  | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Events
    
| Date | Event | 
|---|---|
| January 26 | 13th Genie Awards. | 
| 1992 Gemini Awards. | |
| The documentary miniseries The Valour and the Horror airs on CBC. Canadian veterans' groups criticize it, and an inquiry is launched by the Senate of Canada. | |
| March 26 | Well respected television journalist Barbara Frum dies after a battle with leukemia. Many media outlets would pay tribute to her in the days following her death. | 
| March 29 | Juno Awards of 1994. | 
| October 5 | CPAC replaces CBC Parliamentary Television Network as Canada's political channel. | 
| December 7 | The controversial docudrama The Boys of St. Vincent airs on CBC Television. The film caused such a scandal it was temporarily banned from airing in Ontario by the court of appeals, fearing it would prejudice a similar trial. | 
Debuts
    
| Show | Station | Premiere Date | 
|---|---|---|
| The Big Comfy Couch | YTV | January 3 | 
| The Odyssey | CBC Television | March 3 | 
| Witness | June 8 | |
| Bob in a Bottle | YTV | September 4 | 
| Fourth Reading | TVOntario | October | 
| Catwalk | YTV | October 1 | 
| CBC Prime Time News | CBC Television | November 2 | 
| North of 60 | December 3 | 
Ending this year
    
| Show | Station | Cancelled | 
|---|---|---|
| The Raccoons | CBC Television | April 11 | 
| The Tommy Hunter Show | ||
| The Journal | October 30 | |
| CODCO | Unknown | |
| Acting Crazy | Global | Unknown (returned in 1994) | 
| Kidstreet | Global | Unknown | 
| The Next Line | Global | Unknown | 
| Super Dave | Global | Unknown | 
Changes of network affiliation
    
| Show | Moved From | Moved To | 
|---|---|---|
| Neon Rider | CTV | YTV | 
Television shows
    
    1950s
    
- Country Canada (1954–2007)
 - Hockey Night in Canada (1952–present)
 - The National (1954–present).
 - Front Page Challenge (1957–1995)
 
1960s
    
- CTV National News (1961–present)
 - Land and Sea (1964–present)
 - Man Alive (1967–2000)
 - Mr. Dressup (1967–1996)
 - The Nature of Things (1960–present, scientific documentary series)
 - Question Period (1967–present, news program)
 - W-FIVE (1966–present, newsmagazine program)
 
1970s
    
- Canada AM (1972–present, news program)
 - the fifth estate (1975–present, newsmagazine program)
 - Marketplace (1972–present, newsmagazine program)
 - 100 Huntley Street (1977–present, religious program)
 
1980s
    
- Adrienne Clarkson Presents (1988–1999)
 - CityLine (1987–present, news program)
 - CODCO (1987–1993)
 - Fashion File (1989–2009)
 - Fred Penner's Place (1985–1997)
 - Good Rockin' Tonite (1989–1992)
 - Katts and Dog (1988–1993)
 - The Kids in the Hall (1989–1994)
 - Just For Laughs (1988–present)
 - Midday (1985–2000)
 - On the Road Again (1987–2007)
 - Road to Avonlea (1989–1996)
 - Street Legal (1987–1994)
 - Under the Umbrella Tree (1986–1993)
 - Venture (1985–2007)
 - Video Hits (1984–1993)
 
1990s
    
- African Skies (1991–1994)
 - Are You Afraid of the Dark? (1990–1996)
 - E.N.G. (1990–1994)
 - Material World (1990–1993)
 - Northwood (1991–1994)
 - Neon Rider (1990–1995)
 - The Red Green Show (1991–2006)
 
TV movies
    
    
Networks and services
    
    Network launches
    
| Network | Type | Launch date | Notes | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Television Northern Canada | Over-the-air (Northern Canada)  | 
January 21 | Headquartered in Winnipeg, Manitoba, TVNC (now the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, APTN) provides programming by and targeting Indigeonus peoples in Canada. The network is primarily available over-the-air in the territories of northern Canada, Labrador, and far northern Quebec via four full-power stations (CHTY, CHTG, CKCA, and CHWT), plus a series of low-powered rebroadcasters, but would adopt their current name, and become available nationwide on Cable and satellite television seven years later. | 
Television stations
    
    Debuts
     
| Date | Market | Station | Channel | Affiliation | Notes/References | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January 12 | Chateh, Alberta | CKCA-TV | 13 | Television Northern Canada | [1] | 
| Goose Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador | CHTG-TV | 12 | [2] | ||
| Whitehorse, Yukon | CHWT-TV | 11 | [3] | ||
| Yellowknife, Northwest Territories | CHTY-TV | 11 | [4] | ||
| Unknown | Oshawa, Ontario | CHEX-TV-2 | 22 | CBC Television | Began as a rebroadcaster of CHEX-TV/Peterborough, Ontario | 
References
    
- “CKCA-DT Station History”. Canadian Communications Foundation. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
 - “CHTG-DT Station History”. Canadian Communications Foundation. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
 - “CHWT-DT Station History”. Canadian Communications Foundation. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
 - “CHTY-DT Station History”. Canadian Communications Foundation. Retrieved February 12, 2019.
 
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