CUC (Conway Upper Canada) Broadcasting was a Canadian media company, active from 1968 to 1995. Active primarily as a cable television distributor, the company also had some holdings in broadcast media and publishing.
The company was founded in 1968 by chairman Geoffrey Conway,[1] with shareholders including Jerry Grafstein, Michael Koerner and Ken Lefolii.[2]
CUC's broadcasting holdings included radio stations CKLW and CKEZ in Windsor,[7] and a 25 per cent founding stake in YTV,[1] which had increased to 34 per cent by the company's dissolution in 1995. Through its share in Northern Cable, it also held a stake in that company's radio and television subsidiary Mid-Canada Communications[1] until its share of that company was bought out by local shareholder Norman Bradley in 1989.[8]
In addition, the company held a significant minority stake in the magazine Toronto Life.[1]
Acquisition
Conway's death in 1988 made the company a strong takeover target,[1] and by 1989 an active struggle for the controlling share of the company was under way.[4] Control was ultimately maintained by Julia Conway, Geoffrey's widow.[6]
CUC was acquired by Shaw Cable in the 1990s, for a purchase price of $645 million.[9] First announced in April 1994,[10] the deal was reached as part of a bidding war which also saw a competing offer from Cogeco.[11] The purchase received CRTC approval in February 1995.[12]
The merger of CUC's 420,000 subscribers with Shaw's, along with an additional 102,000 subscribers added from Shaw's simultaneous purchase of Classicomm, made Shaw the second largest cable company in Canada.[13]
Shortly after the takeover was approved, Shaw cut 251 jobs from Trillium in the engineering, customer service and finance departments,[3] due to operational redundancies with Shaw's existing staff.[9]
Following an exchange transaction between Shaw and Rogers Cable in 2001,[14] most of Trillium's and UMG's former markets are now served by Cogeco, with Scarborough and Barrie now being served by Rogers Cable.