REVOLVING DOOR:
Jordan Banks, former managing director of Facebook and Instagram Canada, will succeed the retiring Rick Brace as president of Rogers Media. Banks will take up the role effective Sept. 9, with the pair working together in a transition period until the end of the year. In addition to Facebook, Banks, 51, has also held roles with JumpTV, an internet broadcaster of sports and international television; was managing director at eBay Canada; and worked with the NHL Players’ Association in international business and licensing. Brace caps a more than 40-year broadcasting career that started at CBC in 1975. Prior to joining Rogers in 2015, Brace was with Bell Media/CTVglobemedia for 13 years in senior leadership roles, including president of CTV and president of Specialty TV. He also played a founding role at TSN, joining the network in 1984 as deputy head of sports and serving as president of the network from 1998 to 2000. Read more here.
CTV Vancouver has experienced another round of layoffs resulting in the loss of several long-serving behind-the-scenes employees. Among those impacted are ENG/SNG flight camera operator Murray Titus, who had been with CTV since 1997; David Alexander, who had been ENG Operations Manager since 1998; crew chief/floor director Jim Walsh, who had been with CTV for more than 21 years; VJ Steve Saunders; and cameraman Christian Adler. Read more here.
Lisa Dutton will be the new anchor of the Global News Winnipeg 6 p.m. news as of July 30. Dutton replaces longtime anchor Heather Steele, whose last day on-air was July 12. Steele is joining Corus sister radio station Global News 680 CJOB as executive producer. Dutton previously hosted Global News Morning Saskatoon, until relocating with her family to Winnipeg in 2015.
Andy Neal is the new host of CHEK-TV Victoria’s 10 p.m. weeknight newscasts. Neal has been working with CHEK since 2011, most recently hosting the station’s online-only morning newscast.
Calvin To has anchored his last CHEK newscast. To has been a weekend anchor and weekday reporter with the station since 2016.
It’s official! After a career in broadcast journalism that has spanned three provinces, it’s time to start something new. Nine years ago, I became a journalist so I could help make this world a better place… pic.twitter.com/bUUuLixZWU
— Calvin To (@CalvinToLaw) July 24, 2019
Cyril Lunney is no longer a co-host on the CTV Atlantic morning show after alleged inappropriate online behaviour. A brief announcement was made on Breakfast Television Tuesday morning. Lunney started his career with CTV in 1988 as a cameraman in Moncton.
Alyson Walker, former vice-president of Brand Partnerships and Client Strategy at Bell Media, and Tyler Keenan, former Nike brand lead, are joining Toronto-based global esports entertainment company OverActive Media. Walker becomes the new Senior VP of Business, while Keenan takes up the role of VP of Global Partnerships.
Coleton MacDonald is joining the Rebel 101.7 (CIDG-FM) Ottawa sales team, starting Aug. 16 as an account manager. A Loyalist College grad, MacDonald was most recently morning/midday host on Stingray’s Real Country 93.5 (CKVH-FM) High Prairie and Boom 95.3 (CJXK-FM) Cold Lake.
Ron Clark is back on-air in Edmonton, doing weekend mornings on 96.3 The Breeze (CKRA-FM). Clark did various dayparts on EZ Rock (CFMG-FM) Edmonton before its rebrand to Virgin Radio in 2011. Since then, he’s been running his own contracting company.
Fred Hutton has parted ways with CBC St. John’s, NL. The former longtime VOCM/NTV news director and anchor is leaving to pursue another opportunity. Hutton had been part of the CBC morning show for the past two years.
George Gordon is pinch hitting at Bell Media’s Okanagan stations part-time. The News 1130 (CKWX-AM) Vancouver and 680 News (CFTR-AM) Toronto veteran is doing vacation relief, filling in for Dale Cory on EZ Rock (CILK-FM) mornings and reading afternoon news on AM 1150 (CKFR-AM) Kelowna.
Britt Prendergast has left EZ Rock (CFTK-FM) Terrace and Kitimat and is now a free agent. Prendergast had been hosting the morning show for the past year. Grant Scott, program director for the Bell Media B.C. North group, has taken over the show as interim host.
Diana Cina is leaving Corus Entertainment to take a position with CBC. Based in Toronto, Cina was the program coordinator for brands including YTV, Teletoon, the Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. She’d held the role for the last five years.
Dexter Nyuurnibe will join the team at Global’s The West Block in Ottawa for the upcoming federal election. A recent Nova Scotia Community College Broadcast Journalism grad, Nyuurnibe interned with Global Halifax and has been freelancing with the bureau as an online digital producer this summer.
Arti Patel is now the national online supervising editor for lifestyle at Global News. Patel has been with Global online since 2017.
Kathleen Goldhar is leaving CBC Radio One, where she’s been working on The Current for the last 16 years, most recently as executive producer. She’ll join Antica Productions as a podcast producer.
Stephen Hoff is leaving CBC Ottawa to join CTV Ottawa Morning Live as a producer. Hoff had been freelancing with the public broadcaster for the last six months.
Victoria DiPlacido is the new digital director at ELLE Canada. DiPlacido has been with ELLE since 2015, most recently as Beauty Director, overseeing content across all platforms.
Scott Moore, former president of Sportsnet, will lead the expansion of athlete empowerment brand Uninterrupted in Canada, founded by LeBron James and Maverick Carter. Launching in Canada in partnership with Toronto’s favourite son Drake, this is the first international expansion of the brand, launched in the U.S. in 2015. Moore, who stepped down from Rogers at the end of October after eight years in the role, will focus on business operations and development as well as brand partnerships. Chief Content Officer Vinay Virmani, will lead creative operations and content development. Virmani has a background as an actor, film producer, and director (Dr. Cabbie, The Steps, Breakaway). Read more here.
Xavier Leclercq has been appointed vice-president of business development for content delivery and streaming solutions provider Broadpeak. Leclercq will be responsible for expanding the company’s presence across new markets and new applications for Broadpeak technologies, with a focus on next-generation solutions for OTT across any networks including 5G. Leclercq was previously director of IP video at Nokia and Alcatel-Lucent, where he led teams in consulting and business development.
Frank Kunkle has joined SMPTE, the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers, as its new director of marketing. Kunkle, who officially assumed the role July 22, was most recently marketing manager at the American National Standards Institute (ANSI).
Nick Crowe has joined Blue Ant Studios’ Toronto-based production company, Saloon Media, as Production Executive. Crowe will focus on developing new series and specials for the global market in factual entertainment. He joins Saloon Media after three years working in independent production where he developed and oversaw series like Thank You, Canada (History), Northern Gold (TVO) and Spaceman (CBC). Crowe was formerly Director of Original Factual Content at Shaw Media.
RADIO/AUDIO/PODCAST:
Audience Insights Inc. has worked on dozens of research studies on podcast listening in both the U.S. and Canada over the past few years, most recently collaborating with Westwood One on its Podcast Download – Spring 2019 Report. Audience Insights president and media researcher Jeff Vidler says three clear advantages of podcast advertising have emerged: deeply engaged listeners, personal connection to the program and host, and a unique opportunity for advertisers to reach an on-demand audience. The latest IAB/PwC Podcast Ad Revenue Study of the U.S. podcast industry estimates 2018 ad revenue for podcasts was $479 million USD, a more than 400% increase from $107 million in 2015. Read Vidler’s blog post Why Advertisers Are Opening Their Wallets to Podcasts here.
Golden West Broadcasting CEO Elmer Hildebrand is our guest on the latest episode of Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast. The Canadian Association of Broadcasters’ Hall of Famer, who has now been in radio for more than six decades, talks about how Golden West Radio has weathered shifting consumer habits with its commitment to local news and information.
SIGN-OFFS:
Gil McCall, 83, on July 29, at Cariboo Memorial Hospital in Williams Lake, BC. McCall was one of the original on-air personalities on CKCQ Quesnel, BC, joining Cariboo Broadcasters in 1958 after moving to the area from Edmonton. He was quickly promoted to program director and later station manager in 1979. McCall moved north to manage CJCI Prince George in 1982 and was recognized that same year with the B.C. Association of Broadcasters’ Roy Chapman Memorial Award as Broadcast Performer of the Year, one of the first small market broadcasters to receive the honour. In 1987, he moved again to CFFM-FM Williams Lake to both manage the station and take an on-air role. McCall retired from radio in the 1990s.
Gabe Khouth, 46, on July 23, of cardiac arrest in Port Moody, BC. Born in North Vancouver, Khouth and his brother Sam Vincent started acting in the 1980s as Vancouver’s film industry was taking off. Khouth was best known for his role as “Sneezy” on locally-shot ABC series Once Upon A Time, along with roles on Supernatural, MacGyver, Stephen King miniseries IT, and ABC TV movie Santa Baby, in addition to feature films like Ernest Goes To School. He was also an accomplished voice actor, lending his voice to animated series like Fruit Ninja, Hot Wheels: Battleforce 5, and Beyblade Burst. Khouth, who suffered from a congenital heart defect, died following a motorcycle crash in Port Moody.
Susan Woods (nee Fisher), 66, on July 20 in Victoria after a fight with cancer. Woods started her 30-year broadcasting career with BCTV Vancouver in 1974, moving over to News 1130 (CKWX-AM) as a reporter in 1976. She went on to report for CKVU-TV from 1982-89. In 1989, Woods moved to Victoria and became editor and publisher of the Fairfield Moss Rock Review. She also hosted and produced local history program “Remember When” for CFAX 1070 Victoria. Airing from 2003 to 2010, the show earned her a B.C. Heritage Preservation Communication Award, as well as a Victoria Woman of Distinction honour.
Rodney Merritt, 67, on July 15 in Yorkton. Merritt was a sales representative with CTV in Yorkton for nearly 40 years. Dedicated to both his clients and the community, Merritt earned several awards over the years, including inductions into the Yorkton Sports Hall of Fame and Canadian Broomball Hall of Fame. He was also a Canadian 9-ball billiards champion. Watch CTV’s tribute to Merritt here.
Leigh Kelk, 76, unexpectedly on July 17. After graduating from Ryerson University in 1964, Kelk embarked on a long career as a broadcast advertising executive. He started as a junior buyer for Ogilvie and Mather, moving on to work as a radio rep at Stoven Byles, then Stephens & Towndrow, and later Paul Mulvihill for many years. He wrapped up his career working in sales for Global TV, retiring to New Hampshire in the fall of 1999. He was married in 2000 to Linda, a former sales assistant at Stephens & Towndrow that he had kept in touch with over the years. Together, they owned and operated the American Plate Glass Company before selling the business and returning to Toronto in 2013.
TV/FILM/VIDEO:
MEDIAPRO has been appointed as the global consultant to the Global T20 Canada League, the International Cricket Council-sanctioned tournament running through Aug. 11 in Brampton, ON. The three-year global consultancy agreement includes global media rights distribution to be managed by MEDIAPRO Middle East, with the support of MEDIAPRO Asia and MEDIAPRO HQ in Barcelona. MEDIAPRO Canada is providing all audiovisual equipment and technical crew for the 2019 event, while WTVision India is producing TV graphics and managing the big screen and live streaming distribution. Live coverage is being aired worldwide to a potential global audience of over 150 million households by broadcasters including Star Sports in India, the UK’s Premier Sports, Sportsmax (Caribbean), Willow (USA), Sky (New Zealand), Astro Cricket (Malaysia and Brunei), Kwesé Sports (Sub-Saharan Africa). In Canada, coverage is shared by TSN and ATN. MEDIAPRO Canada will cover the 22-match series with a crew comprised of 60 broadcast professionals and cricket experts from around the world, representing 11 different countries.
ONLINE/DIGITAL:
The CRTC has published a code of conduct for Internet service providers (ISPs) aimed at providing Canadians with more safeguards against the shady practices of Big Telecom. Set to come into effect Jan. 31, the Internet Code is intended to protect Canadians from so-called bill shock and arm consumers with easier-to-understand information on everything from security deposits and disconnections to bundles, time-limited discounts, and data-usage limits. New rules will allow customers to cancel a contract with a service provider within 45 days, without paying an early cancellation fee, if the contract differs from the offer. Once in effect, the code will also obligate ISPs to notify a customer when they reach, 75%, 90% and 100% of their data-usage limit within a single monthly billing cycle. The CRTC consultations on the proposed code of conduct were among the most contentious in recent memory with a number of high-profile Canadian telco researchers and consumer groups opting not to participate due to the tight time frame given (28 business days to prepare initial comments). OpenMedia executive director Laura Tribe says the rushed nature of the proceeding, without adequate consultation from public interest groups, is visible in the final result with the code failing “to provide any meaningful penalties to providers for known systemic issues…” Read the full story here.
GENERAL:
The B.C. Association of Broadcasters (BCAB) has released the speaker lineup for this year’s conference, Oct. 2-3 in Victoria. Among those speaking are media strategist Fred Jacobs; Jeff Vidler of Audience Insights Inc., who will host a panel exploring the media consumption habits of Generation X; and Broadcast Dialogue publisher Shawn Smith, in addition to Numeris, nlogic, and others. Learn more here.
Quebecor president and CEO Pierre Karl Peladeau says Bell Media’s move to acquire conventional French-language TV network ‘V’ would amount to giving the media giant a monopoly if allowed to proceed. Bell revealed last week, it has entered into an agreement with the shareholders of Groupe V Média to acquire the network and related digital assets, including ad-supported VOD service Noovo.ca, subject to regulatory approval. Adding fuel to a mounting series of ongoing legal fires burning between Quebecor and Bell, Peladeau has weighed in on the proposed transaction, issuing a press release entitled “Bell Media one step closer to becoming a monopoly again.” Peladeau says allowing Bell to acquire V and its digital assets will further undermine an already precarious ecosystem by allowing the largest vertically integrated provider of telecommunications and broadcasting services in Canada to “dramatically increase its power and dominance in the French-language market in terms of competitive posture, advertising revenues and content offerings, ultimately at the expense of the consumer.” Read more here.
Dawn Marie Paley, a Canadian freelance journalist and author based in Mexico, is this year’s winner of the Portenier Human Rights Bursary. Presented by the Canadian Journalism Forum on Violence and Trauma, the $3,000 award provides hostile environment safety training designed for journalists who cover armed conflict and other crisis situations. Based in Puebla, Mexico, Paley is currently writing a book, under contract to Verso Books New York, on social issues and human rights concerns facing Mexico in the first year of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador’s tenure. The Canadian Journalism Forum on Violence and Trauma is a charity whose work to further the physical and emotional care of journalists is supported by The Globe and Mail, CBC News, Radio-Canada, Cision and individual donors.
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