One thing that I think goes unappreciated about Canadian broadcasting is that its big group owners are all also telcos with cable and wireless footprints.
Here, the marriage of telco and media has often not gone so great in the U.S.. Verizon struck out with Oath go90. AT&T struck out with WarnerMedia. Why? They are fundamentally different industries with different kinds of investment needs (AT&T sold WarnerMedia in part because it needed to shovel billions into 5G and fast). But in Canada, the telcos run the media right down to AM radio. Canadian cell phone service is famously among the world's most expensive. The Shaw-Rogers deal has impacts on broadcasting because, well, telcos run Canadian media.
There's also one more thing, and this is particularly the case with TV. US television broadcasters have two huge revenue sources their Canadian counterparts cannot claim: retransmission consent and political advertising.
Retrans consent has become a de facto hidden license fee (of which the networks get a substantial cut) on anyone that has a traditional MVPD. The problem is that fewer people do, and vMVPDs do not yet pay that full freight. The broadcasters want them to. The providers don't want to because it would send their rates soaring, probably $15 to $20 per month just to cover the fees of the major broadcasters. It's the same problem faced by things like a gas tax; a secular decline drains the usage pool from which once drew a mighty fund source.
The other is political advertising. It serves as, essentially, a tax on our divisive, swing-state-concentrated politics that makes hotly contested races highly profitable for broadcasters. The question is how much more campaign funding in 2024 and coming cycles goes into connected television and cheaper social-flavored digital and if it supplants less targeted linear avails. The other point about it is that it benefits broadcasters unevenly by geographic footprint. Gray Television, for example, feasts because it has stations in Las Vegas, Phoenix, and Atlanta—and the other major cities in each of the same states. Seattle is about the size of Phoenix, but it's so safe politically that a station there doesn't have nearly the same political draw.
Newspapers don't have that. Digital sites don't have that and have faced other problems from traffic source changes driven by the social networks, who don't want to handle the live wire known as news. Non-American broadcasters, such as those in Canada or Televisa's regional stations (a bunch of which were axed) or CNN Philippines (now closed) or Channel 4 (250 job cuts), don't have that. What they have is a soft ad market hurt by end-of-ZIRP adjustments.