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CNews

CNews (French pronunciation: [senjuz]; stylised as CNEWS, formerly i>Télé) is a French free-to-air news channel launched on 4 November 1999 by Groupe Canal+. It provides 24-hour national and global news coverage. It is the second most watched news network in France, after BFM TV and before LCI and France Info.

For the French daily newspaper, see CNews (newspaper). For the IT magazine from Bangladesh, see CNEWS (magazine).

Country

1080i HDTV
(downscaled to 16:9 576i for the SDTV feed)

4 November 1999 (1999-11-04)

i>Télévision (1999–2002)
i>Télé (2002–2017)

Channel 16

Watch live (in French)

i>Télé was renamed CNews on 27 February 2017. Since this change, it has taken a conservative editorial stance,[1][2][3] and is often compared to the American TV channel Fox News.[4] It has been repeatedly warned by French regulators for its failure to honestly and rigorously report news to the public. Due to these infractions, it was fined €200,000 by the French audiovisual regulatory body in 2021.[5]


The channel is under the control of the media proprietor and business magnate Vincent Bolloré, who has been accused of interfering with the editorial choices of the CNews.[6]

Viewership[edit]

According to an opinion poll conducted by IFOP, in April 2022 during the 2022 French presidential election, 40% of CNEWS's viewers voted for Marine Le Pen (26%) and Éric Zemmour (14%) (nationalist right-wing), 26% for Emmanuel Macron (center) and 16% for Jean-Luc Mélenchon (populist left-wing).[7]

Controversy[edit]

According to satirical and investigative media Le Canard Enchaîné and leftist activist group Sleeping Giants France, CNews, owned by Groupe Bolloré and Vincent Bolloré, clearly supports conservative and far-right journalists, who are promoting hate speech. Éric Zemmour, in particular, was condemned on 17 September 2020 for inciting racial hatred.[8]


CNEWS is also sometimes criticised for lack of viewpoint diversity, as most of the channel's contributors espouse views of the right-wing or are affiliated with the far-right.[9][10][11]


Given its promotion of ideas of the French far right, as well as for broadcasting fake news and conspiracy theories,[12][13][14][15] the channel has been described as a French version of Fox News.[16][17]

Warnings and sanctions[edit]

CNews was warned by the French regulatory body Arcom in May 2022 for its failure to respect its "obligation to honesty and rigor in the presentation and treatment of the news". This warning, due to statements made by Ivan Rioufol, followed a record €200,000 fine levied against the channel the previous year. This fine was the result of recidivism by employee Éric Zemmour whose statements had led to previous warnings.[5]

Julien Nény (since 2016)

Yoan Usaï (since 2013)

Loïc Signor (since 2016)

Hugues Dago (since 2016)

Yann Moix (2014–2015)

Claire-Élisabeth Beaufort

Soizic Boisard

Patrice Boisfer

Virginie Chomicki

Nelly Daynac

Caroline Delage

Romain Desarbres

Laurence Ferrari

Olivier Galzi

Thomas Lequertier

Clélie Mathias

Marc Menant

Isabelle Moreau

Patrick Poivre d'Arvor

Pascal Praud

Audrey Pulvar

Aïda Touihri

Éric Zemmour

1999–2001: "i> l'info se rapproche" (i> news is getting closer)

2001–2002: "Là où ça se passe, 24 h sur 24" (Wherever it's happening, 24/7)

2002–2007: "L'info en +" (News in +)

2007–2008: "Toutes les infos, tout le temps" (All the news, all the time)

2008–2009: "Au cœur de l'actualité" (At the heart of the news)

2009–2010: "L'information avec un grand I" (News with a big I)

2010–2011: "Soyez les premiers à voir les images" (Be the first to see the images)

2011–2013: "Au plus près de l'actualité 24h/24" (Closer to the news 24/7)

2013–2014: "Au cœur de l'événement" (At the heart of the event)

2014–2017: "L'information ne s'arrête jamais" (The news never stops)

February - November 2017: "La chaîne info : décryptage et opinions" (The news channel: decoding and opinions)

November 2017 – 2021: "La chaîne info qui explique l'info" (The news channel that explains the news)

June 2021: "Venez avec vos convictions, vous vous ferez une opinion." (Come with your convictions, you'll form an opinion.)

(in French)

Official website