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(Quite right...)
[Via CBSC]
Ottawa, February 3, 2016 – The Canadian Broadcast Standards Council (CBSC) today released its decision concerning two separate broadcasts in which television stations reported on activities of other divisions owned by the same parent company. The CBSC concluded that broadcasters are allowed to cover stories involving their parent companies.
The CBSC received two complaints alleging conflict of interest in reports aired in May and June 2015. The first concerned a Global Ontario report about the online video streaming service shomi. Shaw owns Global and is part owner of shomi, along with Rogers. The report informed viewers that shomi would soon be available to anyone wishing to subscribe to it, rather than only to Shaw and Rogers television service customers as had been the case when shomi first launched. The second complaint was about a report on CTV News Channel about Bell offering faster internet service in Toronto. Bell owns CTV News Channel. In both cases, the viewer felt that the reports inappropriately promoted other services owned by the same parent company. He argued that this constituted a conflict of interest, as the parent company stood to gain financially from the positive news coverage of its services.
Global and Bell explained that the two stories were significant developments in the media and telecommunications industries which were in the public interest. They also explained that the decisions to run the stories had been taken by the news editorial teams with no interference or pressure from upper management of the parent companies. Both reports disclosed that there was a relationship between the television stations and the services which were the subject of the reports.
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Pat Foran on CTV Toronto's Consumer Alert segment could cover a story weekly about Bell screwing someone over or exhibiting horrible customer service...but he won't.