- Jean Pouliot
Infobox Person
name = Jean Adélard Pouliot
caption =
birth_date = Birth date|1923|6|6
birth_place =Quebec City ,Quebec ,Canada
death_date = Death date and age|2004|8|8|1923|6|6
death_place =Montreal ,Quebec ,Canada
known_for = Canadian broadcasting pioneer
occupation = Broadcaster
parents =Adrien Pouliot , Laure ClarkJean Adélard Pouliot, O.C., was a Canadian broadcasting pioneer who helped establish television stations in Kitchener,
Ontario , andQuebec City ,Quebec . Pouliot was the President and CEO for the first publicly-traded Quebec broadcasting company, Télé-Capitale, and started two French language networks: TVA (co-founded withRoland Giguère ofTélé-Métropole in 1971), and TQS (Télévision Quatre Saisons) (launched in 1986).Citation
author = Canadian Press
title = He was the channel changer of Quebec broadcasting
newspaper = The Globe and Mail
pages = R.11
year = 2004
date =2004-08-13 ] cite web
author = Canadian Newswire
title = Canada loses one of its broadcasting pioneers
publisher = Channel Canada
date = 2004-08
url = http://www.channelcanada.com/Article528.html
format = HTML
accessdate = 2007-12-02 ]Pouliot founded CFCF Inc. in 1979 with his purchase of
CFCF-TV , CFCF-AM, andCFQR-FM from theBronfman family . CFCF Inc. went public in 1985, at which time it also included CF Cable TV, purchased by Pouliot in 1982. Pouliot was the Chairman and CEO of CFCF Inc. from 1979 to 1993, and remained Chairman until the company was sold toVidéotron in 1997.Early career
Pouliot was born on June 6, 1923 in
Quebec City to mathematicianAdrien Pouliot and Laure Clark.Citation
last = Francoeur
first = Gary
title = Broadcast executive Jean Pouliot founded TVA, TQS networks
newspaper = Montreal Gazette
pages = A.8
year = 2004
date =2004-08-10 ] Pouliot studied atUniversité Laval , graduating in 1945 with a degree in electrical engineering, specializing in electronics. He subsequently served as the superintendent of the Canadian Navy Laboratories until 1952. Prime Minister Louis St.-Laurent, impressed on hearing from his son that Pouliot had built Ottawa's only television receiver, recommended to the president of Famous Players Canadian Corporation that Pouliot be be enlisted to aid the company in launching television stations in Canada. In 1952, Pouliot's broadcasting career began, as the executive engineer for Famous Players Canadian Corporation. With Famous Players, he studied the feasibility of operating cable TV systems across Canada,cite web
last = Chouinard
first = Yvon
title = Biographies: Pouliot, Jean Adelard (1923-2004)
publisher = Canadian Communications Foundation
date = 2004-08
url = http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/personalities/personalities.php?id=336
format = HTML
accessdate = 2007-12-02 ] and, in 1954, he oversaw the design and launch of television stationsCKCO-TV in Kitchener,Ontario , andCFCM-TV in Quebec City. CFCM-TV was Quebec's first private television station, owned by Télévision de Québec, a consortium of Famous Players and two AM radio stations, CHRC and CKCV. CFCM-TV broadcast both CBC and SRC programming.First publicly-traded Quebec broadcaster
In 1957, Pouliot became the general manager of Télévision de Québec, and launched
CKMI-TV , Quebec's second private television station. CKMI-TV became Quebec City's CBC affiliate, and CFCM-TV converted to French language-only broadcasts. The new station was profitable in under a year.While at Télévision de Québec, Pouliot served from 1961 to 1965 as Vice-President, Television, of theCanadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB), and as its first francophone president from 1965 to 1967.In 1971, Télévision de Québec expanded into radio, acquiring CHRC Limitée (CHRC-AM and
CHOI-FM ) and CKLM Montréal, as well as into movie production, with the purchase of Ciné-Capitale Ltée. In addition, together withRoland Giguère ofTélé-Métropole , Pouliot co-founded the French language network TVA. The company, renamed Télé-Capitale, became the first publicly-traded Quebec broadcaster in 1972, with Jean Pouliot at its head as president, CEO, and major shareholder. From 1971 to 1977, Pouliot was also the president of Broadcast News.CFCF Inc.
In 1978, Pouliot was forced out of Télé-Capitale, and in the following year, purchased Montreal radio stations CFCF-AM and
CFQR-FM , television stationCFCF-TV , and production company Champlain Productions from theBronfman family , forming CFCF Inc. In 1982, CFCF Inc. purchased CF Cable TV, which served primarily the western half of the island of Montreal, from the McConnell family. CF Cable acquired other cable systems, such as theNorthern Cable system inNortheastern Ontario , becoming Canada's fourth-largest cable company at the time.After having tripled CFCF-TV's advertising sales and increased profitability by a factor of ten, in 1985, CFCF Inc. went public, and CFCF launched a new French language network, TQS (Télévision Quatre Saisons), designed to be a "glitzy, high-tech 'metropolitan station'". TQS began broadcasting on September 7, 1986, from CFCF-TV's new Montreal sister station
CFJP-TV ("JP" standing for "Jean Pouliot"). The TQS network would later addCFAP-TV in Quebec City, affiliates in Hull,Jonquière , Sherbrooke,Trois-Rivières , Rouyn-Noranda and Rivière-du-Loup, and a retransmitting station in Rimouski, reaching nearly 90% of the Quebec population.Télévision Quatre Saisons faced a great deal of growing pains, however, with a Canadian recession depressing advertising revenue, and a difficult task winning viewers from the existing French language networks. By 1990, TQS was the only non-profitable division of CFCF.
In 1993, Pouliot stepped down as CEO, handing over control to his son, Adrien Pouliot, who had been able to stabilize CFCF's financial situation. Jean remained chairman of the board, and continued to work mornings.
With the
Global Television Network planning to enter the Montreal market, in 1997, Pouliot decided to sell CFCF Inc. toVidéotron .Jean Pouliot died on
August 8 ,2004 .Honours and legacy
Jean Pouliot received the Communications Award in the category of Communications Entrepreneurship from the Quebec government in 1988. Pouliot became an Officer of the
Order of Canada in 1990. In 1992, Pouliot was inducted into the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame, and in 1997, Concordia University granted him a Doctorate of Laws "Honoris Causa".Pouliot supported a number of philanthropic causes, most notably the "Telethon of Stars", first broadcast in English and French on CFCF-TV in 1977, benefiting research into children diseases. After the creation of TQS, the Telethon of Stars was simulcast on CFCF-TV and the TQS network.cite web
author = Foundation for Research into Children Diseases
title = Origins
url = http://www.telethon.qc.ca/en/origins.php
format = HTML
accessdate = 2007-12-02 ] Following the sale of CFCF Inc. and the subsequent divestiture of CFCF-TV to a separate owner, although both TQS and CFCF-TV continue to hold the telethon on the first weekend of December, the two broadcasters produce separate telecasts.References
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