Defunct Cable Speciality Channels
- AIM Pay-Tv Corp. (February 1983 - unknown)
- Breakaway PPV (unknown - 2010)
- Canucks TV
- Flames PPV
- Oilers PPV
- CBC Parliamentary Television Network (September 1979 - October 1992)
- C Channel (February 1983 - June 1983)
- CoolTV (September 2003 - July 2008)
- Discovery Kids (September 2001 - November 2009)
- Dusk (September 2001 - March 2012)
- Edge TV (September 2001 - July 2003)
- Fine Living (September 2004 - October 2009)
- Fox Sports World Canada (September 2001 - May 2012)
- Global Reality Channel (July 2010 - November 2012)
- HSTN (August 2002 - October 2002)
- Leonardo World (June 2005 - September 2007)
- Max Trax (unknown - October 2009)
- MEGA Cosmos (2007 - 2012) Channel owned by Ethnic Channels Group (unaffiliated with the existing MEGA Cosmos channel in Canada)
- MSNBC Canada (September 2001 - December 2004)
- Niagara News TV (February 2011 - April 2011)
- Persian Vision (unknown - January 2011)
- RTVi+ (November 2004 - November 2009)
- Sens TV (pay-per-view service) (unknown - 2008)
- Shopping TVA (1998 - 2012)
- TATV (1982 - September 2008)
- The Ecology Channel
- The Life Channel (October 1985 - November 1986)
- Tonis (June 16, 2004 - February 2009)
- TVFQ 99 (September 1979 - August 1988), replaced by TV5
- TXT-TV (March 2010 - December 2011)
- Video Italia (June 2005 - September 2007)
- WTSN (September 2001 - September 2003)
- X-Treme Sports (September 2001 - October 2008)
Read more about this topic: List Of Canadian Television Channels
Famous quotes containing the words defunct, cable and/or channels:
“The consciousness of being deemed dead, is next to the presumable unpleasantness of being so in reality. One feels like his own ghost unlawfully tenanting a defunct carcass.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)
“To be where little cable cars climb halfway to the stars.”
—Douglass Cross (b. 1920)
“Not too many years ago, a childs experience was limited by how far he or she could ride a bicycle or by the physical boundaries that parents set. Today ... the real boundaries of a childs life are set more by the number of available cable channels and videotapes, by the simulated reality of videogames, by the number of megabytes of memory in the home computer. Now kids can go anywhere, as long as they stay inside the electronic bubble.”
—Richard Louv (20th century)