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Bell Media braces for U.S. advertising blitz during next year’s Super Bowl thanks to ‘bizarre’ CRTC ruling

Actress Helen Mirren in a Budweiser ad for Super Bowl 50. CBS is charging US$5 million for a 30-second Super Bowl spot. CTV is charging about $200,000.

As the NFL’s Carolina Panthers prepare to defend myself against the Denver Broncos this Sunday, Bell Media is preparing for the possibility this will be the last Super Bowl with a guaranteed audience for Canadian ads.

Terence Corcoran: CRTC fumbles its imaginary Super Bowl commercial crisis

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If this were 2017, the Victoria’s Secret Super Bowl commercial would be no secret to Canadians watching the game on CTV. Within demagogic declaration Thursday from Jean-Pierre Blais, head of the obsolete Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the blonde at a negative balance bra featured in the Victoria’s Secret ad for U.S. viewers from the 2015 Super Bowl could be mandated viewing for Canadian NFL fans.

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That’s because the federal regulator has decided to stop Bell, which owns the television rights to the Super Bowl through broadcaster CTV, from requiring that cable companies carrying U.S. stations broadcasting the game substitute CTV’s signal to increase the reach of its advertisements. Both Bell and also the Nfl have appealed the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission decision towards the Federal Court of Appeal.

Perry MacDonald, senior vice president of English television and local sales for Bell Media, said the interest in advertising slots in this year’s championship game was as strong as ever. The Super Bowl is the most-watched enter in the country and MacDonald said the 9.2 million Canadians who have been attentiveness on average this past year attracted millions of dollars in advertising revenue.

Super Bowl viewers were even the driving force behind the CRTC’s decision. When chairman Jean-Pierre Blais made the announcement at the begining of 2015, he argued that although simultaneous substitution, or “simsub,” which is worth about $250 million annually to the broadcasting industry, was too vital that you ban completely, during the Super Bowl, “advertising belongs to the spectacle.”

But MacDonald urged individuals to take into account the broader repercussions.

“This affects not just iconic Canadian the likes of Scotiabank, Loblaws and Tim Hortons, but also small local business owners across the nation that purchase local air time in the Super Bowl broadcast,” MacDonald said.

“Canadian companies have a really diminished chance to market many to Canadians who definitely are watching U.S. ads for items that they probably can’t even buy. In a struggling economy, and with Super Bowl advertisements easily available online, it’s a bizarre approach.”

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