MuchMusic
Bell Media announced today it is teaming up with TikTok for the relaunch of the MuchMusic brand.
The company said MuchMusic will return on July 7 with a “new generation” of personalities and creators at the helm and revive the “classic” series
Video on Trial.
“With hosts and creators that speak directly to Gen Z and younger Millennials, the all-new multiplatform MuchMusic stays true to its spirit as a seminal brand with an authentic voice,” said Stewart Johnston, Senior Vice President, Sales & Sports, Bell Media. “Tailor-made for today’s always on youth audience, MuchMusic doubles down as the essential destination for music and pop culture content.”
Barnstaple North
Nicholas John Agnew – Labour Party
We live in such a beautiful part of the world, yet Barnstaple suffers some remarkable inequalities.
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TORONTO, April 28, 2021 /CNW/ - Bell, Canada s largest communications company, today announced a strategic alliance with advanced advertising technology company Xandr, to leverage its world-leading platform to deliver a proprietary omni-channel demand-side platform (DSP) for advertisers.
The new Bell Media product, branded SAM DSP and powered by Xandr s buying platform, Xandr Invest, will enable Canadian advertisers to easily plan, run and measure scaled, targeted campaigns using premium inventory over multiple platforms and channels. We are building a best-in-class self-serve platform for our advertising partners that brings together industry-leading data assets and technology, said Nauby Jacob, Senior VP, Product Platforms for Bell Media. Combined with our SAM platform, Xandr s end-to-end technology offers critical benefits and capabilities to advertisers. Employing machine learning and our privacy-compliant data insights, it s an innov
The normally staid Tim Hortons Brier broadcast on TSN was rocked by a curler s F-bomb last month just as the traditional curling background music started after a commercial break. It wasn t clear what caused the frustration.
Another F-bomb was dropped this week in preliminary play at the Princess Auto s Players Championship. The profanity, with a description of poop thrown in for good measure, could be heard on the Sportsnet broadcast after a player s microphone pack became dislodged during some heavy sweeping.
Unlike most sports, curlers wear microphones on the ice during top-flight competitions. Sometimes the heat of battle can trump language control.
Gregory Strong
Curling rocks rest in the rings at the Brier in Calgary, Alta., Saturday, March 6, 2021.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh April 22, 2021 - 11:13 AM
A seemingly innocuous round-robin game was given such a profanity jolt during the recent Canadian men s curling championship that you could excuse unsuspecting viewers for spitting out their morning coffee in surprise.
A sport known for its soothing repetition, sportsmanship and athlete-next-door vibe can certainly bring the intensity when needed. Factor in hot microphones and the absence of tape delay and you have a recipe for salty language to occasionally make it on air.
The normally staid Tim Hortons Brier broadcast on TSN was rocked by a curler s F-bomb last month just as the traditional curling background music started after a commercial break. It wasn t clear what caused the frustration.