Corus Entertainment, Inc. | |
Logo Alt: | The logo depicts the word "Corus" but in lowercase letters, with the "o" in "corus" in green, while the green dot seen next to the letter "s". |
Type: | Public |
Former Name: | Shaw Radio Ltd. (1987–1999) |
Predecessors: | Alliance Atlantis (Broadcasting assets) Canwest Shaw Media Western International Communications |
Industry: | Mass media, broadcasting |
Revenue: | $1.647 billion CAD (2018) |
Num Employees: | 3,500 (2021)[1] |
Subsid: | Corus Sales Inc. Corus Media Inc. Nelvana Kids Can Press Corus Studios Teletoon Canada Inc. YTV Canada, Inc. HGTV Canada Inc. (80.24%) |
Foundation: | (Shaw Radio) (Corus Entertainment) |
Location: | Corus Quay Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Corus Entertainment, Inc. (often simply known as Corus) is a Canadian mass media company. The company was founded in 1987 as Shaw Radio, Ltd. as a subsidiary of Shaw Communications and was spun-off from Shaw in 1999. It has prominent holdings in the radio, publishing, and television industries. Corus is headquartered at Corus Quay in Toronto, Ontario.
Corus has a large presence in Canadian broadcasting as owner of the national Global network (15 conventional stations), 39 radio stations, and a portfolio of 33 specialty television services; the company's domestic specialty brands include Showcase, SériesPlus, Slice, Télétoon, W Network, and YTV. It also operates services under brand licensing agreements with A&E Networks (History and Lifetime), Paramount Global (CMT and Nickelodeon), The Walt Disney Company (Freeform via ABC Spark, and National Geographic units), and Warner Bros. Discovery (Cartoon Network, Boomerang, Adult Swim, and lifestyle brands).
Corus owns the animation studio Nelvana, and children's publisher Kids Can Press. The second incarnation of Shaw's media division—formed from the properties of the bankrupt Canwest Global—was subsumed by Corus on April 1, 2016, giving it control of the over-the-air Global network and 19 additional specialty channels. In May 2019, Shaw announced that it would sell its shares in Corus for roughly $500 million.
Shaw Communications, founded in 1966, has entered a foray into conventional broadcasting.[2] Founded by JR Shaw as Shaw Radio on August 27, 1987, it acquired two Red Deer radio stations, CIZZ-FM and CKGY-FM. Further acquisitions by Shaw during this period included CISN-FM Edmonton (1988), CHAY-FM Barrie (1990), CKDK-FM Woodstock (1991), and CFOX-FM and CKLG-AM Vancouver (1992).[2]
The company in 1995 had acquired CUC Broadcasting's 34% stake of YTV. Shaw acquired Rogers' remaining shares of YTV in 1998.[3]
In September 1998, JR Shaw and Shaw Media CEO John Cassaday announced plans for Shaw Communications to spin out its media properties, including radio stations and television specialty channels, into a company which would be known as Corus Entertainment. The spin-out would leave Shaw as a "pure play" telecommunications company.[4] The decision to spin out the properties was meant to comply with current Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) recommendations, which discouraged vertical integration by cable companies that also owned media properties. Corus would be a separate, publicly traded company, first listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange in September 1999, but it would still be primarily controlled by the Shaw family.[5] [6]
In September 1999, Corus acquired the broadcasting assets of the Power Corporation of Canada, which included four television stations and sixteen radio stations.[7] One of these stations, CHAU-TV, was later re-sold to Télé Inter-Rives.[8] [9] In October 1999, it was announced that as part of the break-up of Western International Communications (WIC), Corus would acquire the company's 12 radio stations and most of its specialty channels, including stakes in Family Channel, SuperChannel and MovieMax!.[5]
In September 2000, after negotiations and rumoured offers by other studios, Corus announced that it would acquire the Toronto-based animation studio Nelvana for $540 million; the deal was considered to be a complement to its children's television networks (which had often acquired programming from Nelvana), including YTV, Treehouse, and its stakes in Family Channel, Teletoon, and its French counterpart Télétoon. Corus also stated that it planned to use the purchase to help launch a preschool-oriented cable network in the U.S.[10]
In March 2001, in response to complaints by the CRTC over its near-monopoly on ownership of children's specialty channels in Canada, Corus sold its stake in Family Channel to Astral Media for $126.9 million, making it a sister channel to The Movie Network and giving them full ownership. Corus also sold its stake in the Western Canadian pay-per-view service Viewers Choice to Shaw Communications for $22.6 million, and acquired the Women's Television Network (WTN) from Shaw (which had bought its parent, Moffat Communications, for its cablesystem assets) for $132.6 million.[11] In August 2002, Corus sold CKDO and CKGE-FM to Durham Radio.[12]
In May 2002, Corus announced that it had acquired a 50% stake in Locomotion, a Latin American Spanish-language channel focusing primarily of animated television series targeting teens and young adults. Hearst Corporation owned the other half.[13]
In 2003, Doug Murphy replaced John Cassaday as CEO.[14]
In March 2004, Corus and Astral announced that it would acquire and swap radio stations in Quebec; Corus acquired the Radiomédia network (including CKAC) and Quebec City's CFOM, while Astral acquired CFVM-FM Amqui, CJOI-FM and CIKI-FM Rimouski, CFZZ-FM Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, and CJDM-FM Drummondville. Corus also sold its Red Deer, Alberta stations CKGY-FM and CIZZ-FM to Newcap Radio.[15] [16] [17]
In July 2007, Corus acquired CKBT-FM and CJZZ-FM from Canwest.[18] In June 2008, CHRC was sold to the ownership group of the Quebec Remparts hockey team.[19]
Also in August 2007, Corus Entertainment announced a partnership with Hearst Corporation to launch Cosmopolitan TV.[20] In March 2008, CTVglobemedia sold Canadian Learning Television to Corus for $73 million[21]
Corus launched a Canadian version of Nickelodeon on November 2, 2009,[22] replacing the localized version of Discovery Kids. In 2010, Corus's sister company Shaw Communications re-entered the broadcasting industry through its acquisition of the media assets of the bankrupt Canwest, which re-formed the Shaw Media division.[23]
On April 30, 2010, Corus announced that it would sell its Québec radio stations, with the exception of CKRS, to Cogeco for $80 million, pending CRTC approval. Corus cited their low profitability in comparison to their stations elsewhere as reasoning for the sale.[24] [25] On June 25, it was reported that Corus had agreed to sell CKRS to Radio Saguenay, a local business group.[26] The sale of the Corus Québec stations was approved by the CRTC on December 17, 2010, on the condition that Cogeco-owned CJEC-FM and Corus-owned CFEL-FM and CKOY-FM be sold to another party by December 2011.[27] On January 13, 2011, competing broadcaster Astral Media announced that they would seek legal action to stop the sale of these stations to Cogeco, citing the fact that it would own more stations than Astral in the Montreal market, making the competition unfair.[28]
On September 28, 2010, the company relocated its broadcasting headquarters from 64 Jefferson Avenue to the newly built Corus Quay.
On November 9, 2010, Hasbro Studios signed an agreement with Corus to broadcast their productions on its networks.[29]
In March 2012, Corus and Shaw launched ABC Spark, a localized version of U.S. cable network ABC Family, with Shaw owning 49%.[30] [31] In July 2012, the Teletoon Canada venture (50% with Astral Media) similarly launched a Canadian version of Cartoon Network and Adult Swim.[32]
In March 2013, as part of Bell Media's proposed acquisition of Astral Media, Corus reached a deal to acquire Astral's stakes in Historia, Séries+, and TELETOON Canada Inc., as well as the Ottawa radio stations CJOT-FM and CKQB-FM, for $400.6 million. This aspect of the deal, intended to quell concerns from the CRTC regarding Bell's total market share after the merger, was approved by the Competition Bureau on March 18, 2013.[33] [34] In an unrelated deal, Corus also announced that it would acquire Shaw Media's stakes in ABC Spark, Historia, and Séries+ in exchange for cash and its minority stake in Food Network Canada (quickly ended in April 2013).[31] Corus indicated that these purchases were meant to help the company expand its television holdings in the competitive Quebec market. Corus also planned to open a new office in Montreal following the sale.[31] On January 1, 2014, the acquisition was completed.
On September 1, 2013, Corus's television business was reorganized into five divisions; Corus Kids, Corus Women and Family, Corus Content Distribution and Pay TV, Corus Airtime Sales and Corus Média (for French-language assets).[35] The Corus Kids division was subdivided into operations for their eight TV channels, Nelvana, and Kids Can Press.[36]
On April 16, 2015, Corus Entertainment announced that it had reached an agreement with the Disney–ABC Television Group to acquire long-term, Canadian multi-platform rights to distribute Disney Channel's programming library and associated brands. As a result, Canadian versions of Disney Channel in both languages: English and French. Launched on September 1, 2015. Further re-alignment occurred the same day, with the discontinuation of the Teletoon Retro brand: the English version assumed the intellectual property of Cartoon Network (which widened its carriage), and the French version being replaced by the aforementioned Disney La Chaîne.[37] [38] [39] [40] [41]
On November 20, 2015, Corus announced, as a result of a strategic review, it would shut down its premium Movie Central and Encore Avenue services on March 1, 2016 to focus more on its national specialty channels. Subscribers to the networks were migrated to Bell Media's The Movie Network and TMN Encore—ending the regional monopolies that TMN and Movie Central held in eastern and western Canada respectively. Bell Media made a payment of $211 million to Corus for assistance in coordinating this migration.[42] [43]
On January 13, 2016, Corus Entertainment announced that it would acquire Shaw Media for $2.65 billion, with Shaw Communications taking a 39% share of Corus stock. The division consisted primarily of the broadcasting assets of the former Canwest, including the over-the-air Global Television Network and 19 other specialty channels, such as Food Network, HGTV, Showcase, History, and Slice. The transaction was being used to fund Shaw Communications' purchase of wireless carrier Wind Mobile. Corus' CEO, Doug Murphy, described the transaction as being a "transformational acquisition that redefines Corus and Canada's media landscape".[44] [45]
As the Shaw family's assets are considered a single entity for regulatory purposes by the CRTC, the CRTC officially considered the acquisition to be a reorganization of their assets, and thus exempted it from its concentration of media ownership and tangible benefits rules.[46] The reorganization was approved on March 23, 2016,[47] and completed on April 1, 2016. At the same time, multiple Shaw Media executives joined Corus (including its former CEO Barbara Williams, as its new executive VP and COO), and the company adopted a new logo.[45]
On October 17, 2017, Bell Media announced its intent to acquire Historia and Séries+ from Corus for $200 million, which would have reunited them with the former Astral Media channels Canal D, Canal Vie, Vrak, and Z. Corus stated that the two channels were not part of its "strategic priorities" at this time.[48] On May 28, 2018, the sale was blocked and rejected by the Competition Bureau, for violating conditions imposed on Bell that prohibits the company from regaining ownership of divested Astral properties for 10 years.[49] [50]
On June 13, 2018, The Globe and Mail reported that the Shaw family was exploring the sale of its shares in Corus, in order to fund future expansion of the Freedom Mobile business.[51] In its third-quarter financial report, Corus reported a year-over-year loss of $91 million, in comparison to a profit of $133 million in 2017. Corus also took a $1.013 billion write-down on its broadcasting businesses, resulting in a quarterly loss of $935.9 million, and cut its dividend to 24 cents. Doug Murphy acknowledged changes to the market climate for television, and stated that the company would have a larger focus on automated and "microtargeted" advertising sales going forward (in particular, using artificial intelligence to analyse information from set-top boxes to determine the best advertising strategies).[52] [53] [54]
On March 4, 2019, it was announced that a full-time Canadian version of Adult Swim would be launched. The block was shut down on that same day, and Action was relaunched as Adult Swim on April 1, 2019.
In May 2019, Shaw announced it would sell its shares in Corus in a secondary offering, at a valuation of $548 million. The sale was expected to be completed by the end of the month.[55] [56]
In June 2019, Corus was announced as a launch partner for Amazon Prime Video Channels in Canada, offering a subscription-based bundle known as StackTV with access to live and on-demand programs from five Global TV stations and eleven Corus specialty services. At the same time, Corus would also launch a separate Nickelodeon SVOD channel known as Nick+.[57] [58]
IFC Canada and CosmoTV ceased operations on September 30, 2019.[59] [60] FYI was also closed on December 31, 2019.[61]
In March 2020, Corus replaced the individual mobile apps for most of its specialty channels with the Global TV app, which featured content from Global, Global News, Food Network, HGTV, History, Showcase, Slice, and W Network on-launch. The app encompasses the TV Everywhere streaming of programming from the networks for their subscribers, and also features free ad-supported streaming television (FAST) content from the networks.[62]
In June and July 2020, Corus reached two content agreements with subsidiaries of Comcast, including Canadian rights to original series produced for its U.S. streaming service Peacock (NBCUniversal) on June 23, 2020,[63] and Canadian rights to original productions from British subsidiary Sky Studios via NBCUniversal Global Distribution (the agreements exclude DreamWorks Animation's television subsidiary, which has a pre-existing output agreement with WildBrain).[64] [65]
BBC Canada was shut down on December 31, 2020;[66]
In October 2021, Corus partnered with Discovery Inc. on Canadian marketing for its Discovery+ streaming service.[67] [68]
DIY Network was rebranded to a Canadian version of Magnolia Network on March 28, 2022.[69]
On September 1, 2022, Nick+ was decommissioned, and was replaced by Teletoon+, which is drawn from the Cartoon Network Studios and Warner Bros. Animation libraries.[70]
In December 2022, Corus partnered with Paramount Global on launching its FAST service Pluto TV in Canada, with Corus handling Canadian marketing, advertising sales, and contributing channels featuring content from its library and Global News.[71]
On February 21, 2023, Corus announced that Teletoon's English channel would be relaunched as Cartoon Network on March 27, 2023, and that the existing Cartoon Network channel in Canada would be relaunched as the first Canadian version of sibling brand Boomerang.[72]
On May 25, 2023, Eastlink revealed that it was in a carriage dispute with Corus, resulting in the removal of 34 Corus-owned specialty channels from its services on June 27, 2023.[73] The dispute ended in June 2024, with all of its channels restored to its services, albeit with subscribers required to obtain them via Corus-specific theme packs.[74]
On July 13, 2023, Corus announced the sale of animation software developer Toon Boom to the private equity firm TPG Inc. for $147.5 million to help pay down its debts.[75] On October 27, 2023, Corus announced the suspension of its dividend and intention to redirect the use of free cash flow from dividends to debt repayment.[76]
On May 13, 2024, the CRTC approved an "exceptional" request from Corus to reduce its mandatory expenditures into programs of national interest (PNI) from 8.5% to 5% of revenue, allowing it to be reallocated to other forms of Canadian content such as local news. The measure was intended primarily to help offset the loss of news funding that occurred as a result of the sale of Shaw Communications to Rogers Communications, who reallocated Shaw's community television expenditures in metropolitan markets (previously allocated to Global stations) to its own Citytv stations.[77] [78] The Canadian Media Producers Association has requested an appeal, citing that Corus is non-compliant with the requirement that 75% of the PNI expenditures must involve independent producers.[79]
On June 6, 2024, Corus disclosed that Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) had declined to renew some of its brand licensing agreements with the company, which expire at the end of 2024. While specific details had yet to be revealed, Murphy made references to it being an "unfortunate example of inequitable structural relationships in the Canadian media and telecom industries, particularly affecting independent broadcasters like Corus".[80] On June 10, 2024, Rogers Sports & Media announced an exclusive licensing agreement with WBD, under which the rights to all WBD factual brands will move to Rogers platforms beginning in 2025.[81] The agreement had a negative impact on Corus's share price, to the point that a TD analyst suggested that losing the rights to these brands would make the company's shares worthless.[82]
On June 17, 2024, amid these uncertainties, Murphy announced that he would retire as CEO; he was jointly succeeded by Corus CFO Troy Reeb and executive vice president of networks and content John Gossling.[83] That month, Corus had also begun cuts at Global News,[84] and shut down the all-news/all-traffic formats at its Edmonton and Vancouver AM stations CHQT and CKGO (with the stations becoming interim simulcasts of their parent stations CHED and CKNW pending further developments), and that OWN would be shut down on September 1, 2024.[85] On July 15, citing a "challenging advertising environment", Gossling stated during a third-quarter earnings report that the company planned to cut 300 more positions by the end of August (a total of 800 since September 2022) and "aggressively" cut costs.[86] On July 17, Athena Georgaklis departed Nelvana and halted its development slate for the rest of the year.[87] On August 14, Corus closed another AM station, Hamilton's CHML.[88]
That month, Corus filed a complaint against Rogers with the CRTC, alleging abuse of a dominant position. The company cited Rogers' undue preference of foreign streaming service Disney+ over Corus' licensed Disney Branded Television specialty services, including offering plans for its ad-supported version (whose Canadian advertising sales are handled by Rogers) bundled with television subscriptions, and giving Disney+ greater prominence on the program guide and search tools of its Ignite TV platform. It also alleged that the CRTC had done little to enforce monitoring provisions on Rogers' dealings with independent broadcasters following the Shaw acquisition. Rogers dismissed the accusations, alleging that Corus had failed to adapt its "broken business model" to adapt to changes in viewing habits, and citing the declining viewership and Canadian content investments into the services.[89]
See main article: List of assets owned by Corus Entertainment and Shaw Media. Corus Entertainment was formed from the media assets that had been owned by Shaw Communications in the years before. From 1999 to early 2023, Shaw and Corus operated as independent, publicly traded companies; nonetheless, they had a common majority shareholder in the Shaw family, and some reports indicated that the two companies continued to have a close relationship.[90] For several years, Corus managed advertising operations (such as TV listings channels) for Shaw's cable systems, although this operation has since been discontinued. Executives have also occasionally moved between the two companies, with former Corus Television president Paul Robertson joining Shaw to head Shaw Media (the former Canwest broadcasting operations) in 2010.
Following Shaw's 2010 acquisition of Canwest's TV assets, the two companies incidentally became partners in certain channels including Dusk (later replaced by ABC Spark) and the Canadian version of Food Network; these two partnerships were unwound in April 2013.[91] Otherwise, there was no connection or common programming between Corus's conventional and specialty television operations and those of Shaw Media. For example, Corus owns three over-the-air TV stations which were long-time CBC affiliates, and which agreed in 2015 to switch to Bell Media's CTV network, despite Shaw owning the rival Global network at the time.[92] Following the merger of the Shaw Media properties into Corus, the Corus-operated CTV affiliates began transitioning to Global programming in September 2016 (beginning with CTV News programming being phased out in favour of Global News),[93] [94] and eventually switching to Global full-time after their affiliation expired on August 27, 2018.[95] Shaw also continued to direct a portion of its CRTC-mandated local expression funding to Corus-owned Global stations following the transfer of Shaw Media, amounting to approximately $13 million per year.[96]
As Corus Entertainment and Shaw Communications were both effectively controlled by JR Shaw, the CRTC considered them to be one entity regarding the "Diversity of Voices" policy, and a vertical integration rule which requires television providers to carry three channels owned by unaffiliated parties for each co-owned channel they offer: due to the effective control, Corus networks that are carried by Shaw television services were subject to this rule.
With the closing of the acquisition of Shaw Communications by Rogers Communications in early 2023, there are no meaningful ties between Corus and the combined telecom company, except that the Shaw family is now a significant minority shareholder in Rogers while remaining the majority voting shareholder in Corus. The CRTC decision approving the Rogers-Shaw deal confirms that the regulator considers Corus to "remain unrelated to Rogers" following the transaction, resulting in Corus becoming an independent programmer under the commission's regulations.[97] Rogers withdrew the community television expenditures that had been previously allocated to Corus' Global stations, and moved them to its own Citytv stations.
Corus is an industry sponsor of the University of Waterloo Stratford Campus;[98] Gary Maavara, Corus' Corporate Secretary, sits on the Waterloo campus' advisory board.[99] The company also funds a couple of endowed chair positions, including chair in Women in Management at the Ivey Business School (London, Ontario, Canada) beginning in 2003,[100] and a chair in Communications Strategy at the Rotman School of Management (Toronto) beginning in 2002.[101]