YTV (
Youth
Tele
vision) is a Canadian programming network targeted at children. If it had to be compared to an American equivalent, it would be
Nickelodeon, from which YTV takes a large amount of programming (and indeed, YTV has aired at least one episode of every Nicktoon there is). Incidentally, a Nickelodeon Canada channel, owned by YTV's parent company Corus, now exists alongside YTV. YTV has had several programming blocks hosted by PJs, or
Program
Jockeys, who would come in
during the credits and do various things such as answering e-mails while introducing the next show.
A staple of any TV watching Canadian kid in
The Nineties. The mornings featured an array of programming for younger viewers with tons of interaction from the PJs and many puppet characters who visited or lived in their lavish, treehouse-themed sets. YTV split off another network from its morning-midday programming,
Treehouse TV, to cater to toddlers and preschoolers. Come afternoon, YTV was the go-to source for everything from
ReBoot and
Beasties to
Sailor Moon,
Pokémon,
The Secret World of Alex Mack and
The New Addams Family, hosted by a duo of wiseass male PJs and their gum-covered alien television creature Snit, whose screen was a giant mouth. Evenings shifted to a darker note with programming such as
Animorphs,
Cyber Six,
Are You Afraid of the Dark?, and
Goosebumps. Between shows throughout the day, animated shorts dubbed "Short Circuitz" would air, ranging from funny and lighthearted ones earlier in the day to darker and surprisingly wistful ones at night {
"Windows"
, for example). It was also responsible for original and often low-budget shows as well, such as
PJ Katie's Farm and
Radio Active. These days, most of this material is famed for its massive nostalgia factor among natives of the 1990s and late 1980s. Late at night during this period,
BritComs such as
Yes Minister and
Are You Being Served? were run.
Come the new millenium, YTV gradually shifted its programming. It was once, the primary source of
anime for Canadians, which reached its peak with
InuYasha and the
Bionix block, that brought several anime series (mostly dubbed by
The Ocean Group for CanCon, or Canadian content, reasons) to viewers, and threw in Canadian-produced CGI favorites by
Mainframe Entertainment, such as
Beasties,
ReBoot and
Shadow Raiders.
The Bionix block was moved to late Saturday nights to make room for reality shows and sitcoms. Before, in 2007, YTV acquired approval from the CRTC
to launch an anime-focused channel to be called the Anime Channel. The license expired in January of 2010 and it wasn't even launched.
Although YTV has had live-action shows before, they seem to be more on the rise as of late, with an emphasis on reality shows like
The Next Star,
Ghost Trackers and
The Adrenaline Project. Unfortunately, it appears that they have
removed most of their anime lineup to make room for it; some time ago they shortened their Bionix block to an hour of
Naruto and an hour of
Bleach, but removed the block altogether during reruns. They still show other anime series, however, but mainly ones aimed more at children (
Pokémon,
Beyblade Metal Fusion). Hopefully they'll acquire the rights to some new anime series soon.
Not to be confused with
Yomiuri TV
, a Japanese TV network sharing the same initials (albeit in lowercase). Though considering this site's demographic, it's highly unlikely that you will confound them. Incidentally, the Japanese ytv was the original channel for
InuYasha, which was a big hit on the Canadian YTV. Also not to be confused with Yorkshire Television, an
ITV franchise commonly referred to as YTV.