TikTok‘s sponsorship of the Toronto Film Festival, the Junos and other marquee Canadian cultural events has been suspended as TikTok’s Canadian operations face a pending shut down by the federal government over national security concerns.
“The termination of TikTok Canada’s funding for cultural organizations like the Junos, TIFF and Adsiq is entirely due to the federal government’s order to shutdown TikTok Canada’s local operations. This harmful and misguided order not only eliminates funding for investments in Canadian culture and content creators — including programs like the TikTok Accelerator for Indigenous Creators — it also requires us to terminate hundreds of local jobs,” Steve de Eyre, director of public policy and government affairs, TikTok Canada, said in a statement obtained by The Hollywood Reporter on Tuesday.
Canadians will still be able to access the social media giant via the TikTok app. The federal government is instead targeting the local operations of TikTok’s Chinese parent, ByteDance, over national security concerns.
It’s understood TikTok Canada, faced with a shutdown of its local offices and workforce, has begun notifying Canadian cultural events it has sponsored that that support is being withdrawn.
Representatives at the federal Ministry of Innovation, Science and Industry in Ottawa, which ordered the TikTok Canada operations shutdown, were not available for direct comment.
In 2022, TikTok Canada began sponsoring TIFF’s Short Cuts Program to showcase short films, and two years later upgraded its support to becoming the official platform partner and presenting partner for the festival’s Special Presentations sidebar.
And for five years running, TikTok Canada served as the lead sponsor of the Juno Awards, Canada’s Grammys, and the title sponsor of its Juno Fan Choice Award, where ordinary Canadian music fans vote on a winner.
“TikTok has become an indispensable platform for both the Juno Awards and MusiCounts (national music education charity). It has played a vital role in spotlighting emerging Canadian talent, often serving as a launchpad for artists before they are nominated for or win a Juno Award,” The Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, organizers of the Juno Awards and MusiCounts, said in a statement about its formal ties to TikTok Canada ending.
“This change will be especially challenging for independent Canadian artists—who make up the vast majority of Juno nominees annually — as platforms like TikTok are essential for building fan communities and gaining exposure,” CARAS added.
In November 2024, the federal government in Ottawa first ordered TikTok Canada to wind up its Canadian operations following a security review. Canada’s intelligence services had investigated TikTok Technology Canada, the local operating arm of ByteDance, with offices in Vancouver and Toronto.
The federal government has not revealed the security grounds on which it has ordered the shutdown of TikTok Canada’s local operations, citing confidentiality. TikTok also faces an uncertain future in the U.S. market, again over national security concerns.
With U.S. President Donald Trump eyeing a possible sale of the video sharing platform to a U.S. consortium, media reports point to TikTok looking to build a new version of its platform exclusively for American users.
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