It's the Master Control operator powering down the transmitter. The transmitter's control system listens for the number code on the audio carrier.. when it hears it, the transmitter is powered down for the night.
DTMF tones would still be a risk in accidently powering down the transmitter if a show happened to have these same tones. I hope that the tones wouldn't activate unless other criteria was met such as length of tones, or having these tones also play on the secondary audio program but offset in time from ones on the main audio channel and only activating if the offset and the main are as they are supposed to be.
@@plateshutoverlock I can't think of a single plausible situation where a television program would play the exact series of DTMF codes that would shut down transmitters. I think you're looking for long-extinct problems that don't exist.
When I was growing up in Washington, Pa., I listened to CBC's Toronto (740), Montreal (940) and Windsor (1550) stations until they signed off at 1am, and they played O Canada. Now CBL Toronto is now 99.1 FM (while Moses Znaimer has taken over AM 740), CBM is no longer and I don't know if there's CBC Radio in Windsor. So much for progress....With CBC radio I still remember Booktime, Mostly Music and Variety Tonight with Vicki Gabbareau. Thx to RU-vid and the 'net, I can learn more about the CBC!
The national anthem in this is actually very cool-sounding, and more epic than most. If this orchestral piece was the official version, I would definitely call it one of the best. In my opinion, the regular version already is one, but this piece would place it closer to the top near the Soviet/Russian anthem
This kind of '3D' hand drawn animation was also used in the movie "The Snowman". I've seen this kind of animation used in other films too. I wonder if there is a name for it.
You are correct. It is the end credits for Kindergarten Cop. That is Randy Edelmen's score to the film that can be heard. What's interesting is that the end credits for this TV airing removes the Kindergarten Cop logo shown at the very end of the credits. Also, Randy Edelman's score was slightly edited as a result of the removal of the logo.
When I lived in Maine about a decade ago, CKSH from Sherbrooke was available on my cable and they tended to sign off between 12 AM & 1 AM from what I recall. I remember taping the sign-off a couple of times but I think it alternated between this version and the filmed version seen elsewhere. I should probably comb through my tapes if but to have that station's version of either available on RU-vid.
Wow. I remember this quite well. And funny as this might sound, the one image that I still remember most about it was the man smoking a pipe at the beginning.
At a time when CBET's budgets were cut terribly low (or simply not having someone on staff at nights to do their sign-ons), they would simply play CBLT's feed using this sign-off and also the sign-off sequence. Always sorta puzzled me not to see Windsor listed in the province map but now I see why.
@@donroy6503CBET is the CBC O/O serving Windsor Ontario and Detroit Michigan (CBC Essex County Television) CBLT is the CBC’s next biggest station after CBMT In Montreal. The station is licensed to Toronto, and the call sign stands for CBC (Great) Lakes Television. The station does have cable pull as far as, Buffalo? I mean can you receive CBC TV in Buffalo NY? or does the signal die out before you hit The US Border?
Ident CBC yang satu ini yang berdurasinya panjang dulu pernah dipakai dan ditayangkan di Seluruh Stasiun Afiliasi CBC pada saat Closing/Opening Siaran CBC Sejak 1992-Oktober 2006. Pada Oktober 2006 Siarannya 24 Jam. This one long CBC Identity ID was used and aired on all CBC Affiliation Stations during Closing / Opening of CBC Broadcasts from 1992 to October 2006. In October 2006 it was 24 Hours.
The F stands for French. I think that cblt stands for Canadian Broadcasting Local Television, and that cblft stands for Canadian Broadcasting Local French Television.
Actually, it's not Canadian broadcasting local television, but CBC Great Lakes Television, and cblft stands for CBC Great Lakes French Television. My bad; I checked Wikipedia before, and my first guess was incorrect.
I can't find my comment anymore but I had mentioned being an American visitor to Toronto and my family wanting to take a tour of the CBC and not being let in... it wasn't because we were foreigners but because apparently there was a union strike that year (this was Spring Break of 1999) and they decided to refuse public tours. Oh well!
I totally remember the flying bird and the waterpainting at the end, i think i purposely would stay up just to watch that, and i swear the still used this in early 2000 too.
Yeah, it's surprising how powerful CHROs transmitter is. In Belleville, WWNY Watertown's transmitter shutdown was usually followed by whatever was on WKBW Buffalo or CIII-TV-7 Midland (the latter only in the summer). WKBW would usually have a movie, or infomercials. As for CIII-TV-7 Midland.....well sometimes Global had a comedy show or movie.
@Oldkt I remember one from the 80's that had guards raising the Canadian flag up the pole for the sign-on which also showed shots of the main offices while the usual tech. info is heard.
@@sneffels It was really just a transmitter site and nothing else, relaying CBLT from Toronto. Most of these places listed were basically repeater transmitters set up to relay "CBC Ontario" throughout the province.
@gladfan1989 Yes, for us Canadians, the Gemini Awards are like our equivalent the Emmys, gladfan1989. But I recall that last year's ceremony was hosted by an American, Cory Monteith, the guy who is currently Finn on "Glee".
This Canadian broadcast has shown forth the animated version of signing off. Just before going off the air. It shows forth Canadian wildlife refuge. It's just that I've never been in Canada before. They do things differently. I've never even been to Italy either. They do things differently as well. 🇮🇹 🇨🇦 😕 🙃 😐 😪 🇨🇦 🍁
@Christopher Sobieniak A Test Pattern dial in sounds different. It's a tapper being programmed to put the test card on along with the tone. HBO did that a LOT from the early 80's. They tapped in the card fired it at the screen before locking up for the night letting it run until the start of work the next day.
Particularly the one from the late 80's depicting Windsor at night (with a light electronic keyboard instrumental) and ending with a shot of the illuminated Ambassador Bridge before "O Canada" was heard? I especially thought it was funny when the announcer said: "And now we bid you a pleasant good night" (i.e. his inflections). You'd have to hear it to know what I'm talking about.
yes i totally agree there about that o canada there on radio canada international on high frequecy there.. really kewl stuff but it the requirement that i dont like at all staying in canda for like 3-4yrs there to get citizenship the people in ottawa and else where should change that there .
@foamer4269 1. What tíme does R-C close transmission? 2. I don't understand it when you said that the SRC is more "artistic" and the CBC is more "American style".