stationless listener said:Toronto has to be one the most unique situations in the broadcasting world, other than some European countries, where not only do they get their own local broadcast fare but stations from another country. From what I can read, signals from Buffalo can reach that city without much difficulty, save for the Batavia ION station. In some areas, people have trouble receiving the local NBC and FOX stations. With tropo, Torontonians could receive stations from Erie, Cleveland, Syracuse, Rochester and even from places like Pittsburgh, Youngstown and Detroit. Compared with them, Montreal and Vancouver don't enjoy nearly as much access to American stations because of topography and signal strength.
This is what I see as the Toronto OTA lineup:
WGRZ (NBC) Buffalo - 2.1, 2.2 (Universal Sports) and 2.3 (RTN)
WIVB (CBS) Buffalo - 4.1, no subchannels, obviously
CBLT (CBC) Toronto - 5.1, also has analog 5 until 8/2011
WKBW (ABC) Buffalo - 7.1, no subchannels
CFTO (CTV) Toronto - 9.1, analog 9 until 8/2011
CHCH Hamilton - 11.1, analog 11 until 8/2011
WNED (PBS) Buffalo - 17.1, 17.2 (PBS-SD), 17.3 (Thinkbright)
CICA (TVO) Toronto - 19 analog, will switch to digital in 2011
WNLO (CW) Buffalo - 23.1, no subchannels
CBLFT (SRC) Toronto - 25.1, analog 25 until 8/2011
WNYB (TCT) Jamestown - 26.1, 26.2 (TCT-HD)
WUTV (Fox) Buffalo - 29.1, supposedly TheCoolTV will be on 29.2 soon
CIII-TV-41 (Global) Toronto - 41.1, 41 analog until 8/2011
CFMT (Omni) Toronto - 47.1, 47 analog until 8/2011
WNYO (MNTV) Buffalo - 49.1, 49.2 (MNTV-SD)
CKXT (Sun TV) Toronto - 52.1, 52 analog until 8/2011
CITY (CityTV) Toronto - 57.1, 57 analog until 8/2011
CJMT (Omni-2) Toronto - 69.1, 69 analog until 8/2011
I'm not including the ION station in Batavia, which is Tropo-only for Toronto, the low-power stations nor WNGS, which is still in the middle of sorting itself out.
Some Canadians even prefer watching American stations over the air because of the programming choices and no simsubbing.
Windsor is even in more of a weird situation because all the stations from Detroit and Toledo blast into the area and there are only a few Canadian stations available.
Someone from Windsor or who knows about the area please correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe at one time cable in that area offered stations from Detroit, Toledo and Cleveland in addition to Windsor locals. The last time I looked, they had all Windsor and Detroit stations and a lot of the U.S. stations Canadians get across the board (i.e. the local WGN, Peachtree TV) but I don't remember seeing much from Toledo or Cleveland.
I think the Toledo and Cleveland stations are carried in other areas along the north shore of Lake Erie. Especially from Windsor, it's not a long hop ... Toledo's towers are only about 40 miles across the Lake and Cleveland's are maybe 110?