Yellowknife - Media

Media

The Yellowknifer, published by Northern News Services, is the major newspaper serving Yellowknife, published twice weekly on Wednesday and Friday. Northern News Services also publishes Northwest Territories News/North every Monday, which serves the entire NWT. As well, there is L'Aquilon, a French language newspaper published weekly.

The major radio stations based in Yellowknife are: CFYK 1340, which broadcasts CBC Radio One network programs and locally produced programs; CFYK-FM 95.3, which broadcasts the programming of the CBC Radio 2 network from CBU-FM in Vancouver; CJCD-FM 100.1, which plays largely adult contemporary music; CKLB-FM 101.9, a community radio station; and CIVR-FM 103.5, a French-language community radio station.

Local broadcast television stations include: CFYK-DT digital channel 8 cable 10, which is the flagship station for CBC North, the northern feed of CBC Television; CHTY-TV analogue channel 11 cable 9, is the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network; CH4127 analogue channel 13 cable 4, is a community-owned repeater of the French feed of CBC, Télévision de Radio-Canada, owned by L'Association Franco-Culturelle de Yellowknife. No part of the Northwest Territories is designated as a mandatory market for digital television conversion; only CFYK-DT converted its main transmitter in Yellowknife to digital.

Two magazines are based in Yellowknife: Above & Beyond - Canada's Arctic Journal and Up Here Magazine, both offering northern-related news and lifestyle articles.

On August 10, 2012, NASA announced that the section of Mars where the Curiosity rover of the Mars Science Laboratory mission landed would be re-named Yellowknife, in recognition of the city of Yellowknife. Yellowknife is usually where scientists start geological mapping expeditions when researching the oldest known rocks in North America.

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