Maclean-Hunter

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Maclean-Hunter was a Canadian communications company, which had diversified holdings in radio, television, magazines, newspapers and cable television distribution.

The company began in 1887, when brothers John Bayne Maclean and Hugh Cameron Maclean launched their first trade publication, Canadian Grocer & General Storekeeper. The company subsequently expanded into other areas of publishing, launching the general interest magazine Maclean's in 1905, the business newspaper Financial Post in 1907 and the women's magazine Chatelaine in 1928.

Horace Talmadge Hunter joined Maclean Publishing in 1903, moving up the management ranks to succeed John Bayne Maclean as president in 1933; in 1945 the company's name was changed to Maclean-Hunter.

In 1961, the company began to diversify, adding its first broadcasting asset, radio station CFCO in Chatham, Ontario. In 1982, the company acquired a controlling interest in Sun Media; ownership of the Financial Post was transferred to Sun Media in 1987 to facilitate the publication's expansion from a weekly to a daily newspaper.

By the early 1990s, Maclean-Hunter's assets also included cable television services in 35 Ontario markets, 21 radio stations, television station CFCN in Calgary and a significant minority share in CTV.

Maclean-Hunter was acquired in 1994 by Rogers Communications. The CRTC approved the transaction, but required Rogers to divest itself of some of Maclean-Hunter's individual assets to alleviate concerns around concentration of media ownership. Shaw Communications acquired some of the cable holdings and radio stations, Telemedia and Blackburn Radio acquired other radio stations, and the consortium of Baton Broadcasting and Electrohome acquired CFCN and the CTV shares. Sun Media was sold in an employee buyout in 1996.

Maclean-Hunter also had cable holdings in the United States, which were acquired by Comcast in 1994.

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