REVOLVING DOOR:
Scott Mitchell has joined TSN to cover the Toronto Blue Jays and MLB. Mitchell has previously covered sports for the Toronto Sun, Calgary Sun and Calgary Herald.
Sue Prestedge is retiring as coordinator of Journalism at Hamilton’s Mohawk College. Before joining Mohawk, Prestedge worked at CBC in both radio and television and was senior vice-president of WTSN – a digital sports network concentrating on women’s sports. Among other accolades. Prestedge was the first woman to win ACTRA’s Foster Hewitt Award for Outstanding Sports Broadcasting.
Jeff Michaels has stepped down as morning host and APD at 93.7 Praise FM (CJLT-FM) Medicine Hat due to health reasons. He’s been with the station since Oct. 2012.
David Sparrow has been elected by ACTRA’s National Council to a two-year term as national president. Sparrow served as ACTRA Toronto president from 2013 until this year and has served as an ACTRA National councillor since 2007.
Bernard Graham will head the new CBC London, ON bureau as executive producer. Graham was previously executive producer of radio talk programming at CBC Calgary. CBC veteran Rebecca Zandbergen will host weekday mornings, along with morning news editor Gary Ennett, who has been with the CBC Radio One London bureau since its inception in 1998. Chris dela Torre takes on afternoon hosting duties, while Kerry McKee covers off afternoon news. Field reporters include Kate Dubinski, who joins CBC London from the London Free Press; Hala Ghonaim from AM980 News (CFPL-AM) London and Andrew Lupton, a digital journalist with CBC Toronto. Colin Butler returns to his hometown as a VJ after stints with CBC bureaus across Ontario and Eastern Canada. Ryan Soulliere joins the team from CBC Windsor as associate producer/technician. Rounding out the team are CBC London producers Amanda Margison and Nathan Swinn.
Tracey McLeod, former sales manager of Jewel 88.5 FM (CKDX-FM) Toronto, has taken over GSM duties for Evanov’s Brantford stations Jewel 92 (CKPC-FM) and 1380 Hometown Radio (CKPC-AM).
Mike Farwell will take over the 570 News (CKGL-AM) Kitchener midday talk show starting June 5. The Mike Farwell Show will run weekdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Farwell has been with Rogers since 2007 in positions ranging from reporter at 570 News to morning update anchor at Sportsnet the Fan 590 (CJCL-AM) Toronto from 2011 to 2013. Since then, he’s been co-hosting the morning show on 570 News sister station Country 106.7 (CIKZ-FM) where his last day is June 2.
RADIO/AUDIO/PODCAST:
Montréal’s TSN 690 (CKGM-AM) and the Montreal Alouettes have announced a new multi-year broadcast rights agreement that sees TSN 690 remain the exclusive English-language home of all Alouettes games. Rick Moffat returns to provide play-by-play commentary, joined by former CFL cornerback and three-time Grey Cup champion Davis Sanchez.
The historic CHCM-AM building in Marystown on Newfoundland’s Burin Peninsula was demolished on May 15. The station opened in 1962 as an affiliate of Newcap-owned VOCM. While the bricks and mortar location closed in 2016 when the company consolidated programming for Marystown, Grand Falls and Stephenville out of St. John’s, Newcap still employs a news person and sales account manager in the area, who work out of a home-based office.
1050 CJNB, Q98 (CJCQ-FM) and 93.3 The Rock (CJHD-FM) North Battleford raised over $190,000 on May 12 during the On Air for Healthcare Radiothon. Battlefords Union Hospital (BUH) partnered with the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group for the second annual event, which raised funds to purchase surgical equipment for BUH’s recently recruited ears, nose and throat surgeon.
SoundExchange has acquired the Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd. (CMRRA), the music licensing collective representing the vast majority of songs recorded, sold and broadcast in Canada on behalf of music publishers. The move marks the first time that a U.S. collective for sound recordings and the music publishing sector have come together under common management. CMRRA will continue to operate out of its Toronto headquarters with president Caroline Rioux and her management team remaining with the operation, reporting to the board of directors of SXWorks, a new subsidiary of SoundExchange. CEO Michael Huppe will lead SXWorks as chairman of the new company.
NewsTalk 1010 (CFRB-AM) Toronto is the first Canadian station to pick up new syndicated, late-night, live, paranormal series Beyond Reality Radio, hosted by Ghost Hunters co-creator Jason Hawes. NewsTalk 1010 started airing the series this week, Monday to Friday midnight to 2 a.m. ET. The series is distributed by Momentum Media Networks in Canada.
SIGN-OFFS:
Andy Michaelson, May 10, in St. Albert, AB. Michaelson started his career as a radio announcer and reporter in the 1960s at CHED-AM Edmonton, followed by CKYL-AM Peace River and CJCA-AM Edmonton. He moved to Vancouver in the 1970s where he was heard on-air over the next two decades as Andy Michaels on CISL-AM, CKNW-AM and as morning show co-host on CJOR-AM. Michaelson later worked as a communications consultant in Vancouver and Edmonton. He eventually found his calling as a writer and poet in St. Albert, AB devoting many hours as a teacher and mentor to both children and adults, encouraging them to write and perform their poetry. He was a co-founder of Poets’ Ink, a local writing group and regularly performed at poetry readings. In 2009, Andy received a St. Albert Mayor’s Celebration of the Arts Award for Arts Promotion and in 2011, a St. Albert Community Recognition Award for Arts and Culture.
TV/FILM/VIDEO:
The CRTC has issued a competitive call for applications for a new television service offering national multilingual and multi-ethnic programming including news and information. If licensed, the service would receive mandatory distribution on the digital basic service starting in 2020. As an interim measure, the CRTC has approved the licensing and mandatory distribution of Rogers Media-owned, multilingual, multi-ethnic channel OMNI Regional on all digital basic television packages in Canada. With CRTC concerns the service won’t fully meet the needs of Canadians, OMNI Regional is receiving mandatory distribution for a three-year period only and may not be renewed.
As part of Monday’s license renewals, the CRTC is adopting a five per cent PNI or “programs of national interest” expenditure requirement for all services within the groups, of which at least 75 per cent be allocated to independently-produced programming. In their interventions, the Canadian Media Producers Association (CMPA), Directors Guild of Canada (DGC) and Writers’ Guild of Canada (WGC) noted that the Bell and Corus groups had averaged an eight per cent PNI expenditure level from the 2011-2012 to 2014-2015 broadcast years. The DGC submitted that existing spending be maintained and proposed that the PNI expenditure requirement for all three groups be set at nine per cent, while ACTRA proposed that it be initially set at eight per cent and increased annually over the next licence term. Media unions were quick to decry Monday’s policy changes with Unifor saying the decision will do nothing to stop further cuts to local television news. The WGC also called the changes “a major blow to Canadian screenwriters – and Canadian audiences.” Executive director Maureen Parker said the cuts “could mean the devastation of Canadian domestic production,” amounting to an over $200 million loss for PNI over a five-year licence term.
Troy Reeb, senior VP of news, radio and station operations for Corus Entertainment tweeted that more investigation is merited after Global News videographer Jeremy Cohn was arrested Tuesday night at the scene of a fatal collision in Hamilton. Freelance journalist David Ritchie is facing a charge of obstructing police stemming from the same incident. Hamilton Police say they are still investigating.
GENERAL:
Bell is apologizing to its customers after 1.9 million email addresses and approximately 1,700 names and active phone numbers were stolen from a company database. In a statement Bell said there was no indication that any financial, password or other sensitive personal information was accessed and that the incident wasn’t connected to the recent, global WannaCry malware attacks. The company said it was working closely with the RCMP cyber crime unit in its investigation and has informed the Office of the Privacy Commissioner.
The 70th Annual British Columbia Association of Broadcasters Conference is underway in Osoyoos, BC. The event’s social program kicked off Tuesday with 18 holes under uncharacteristically cold and rainy conditions at the Osoyoos Golf Club. Conference highlights included Wednesday’s keynote speaker Roger Haskett on The Power of Play, Jeff Vidler‘s Reaching Millennials, featuring a live Q&A with a focus group of young radio listeners from the Okanagan region, 45 Things I’ve Learned in 45 Years of Radio from Paul Ski, as well as The Thing is Not the Thing from David Phillips. Duncan Stewart also gave his Deloitte 2017 TMT predictions.
BCAB also recognized new inductees into its Quarter Century Club and Half Century Club at its annual awards luncheon on Wednesday. Celebrating 25 years were Bill Dinicol (JPBG Kamloops), Bob Duck (Vista Radio), Brenda Clotildes (JPBG Prince George), Jasmin Doobay (BCAB Board Member & JPBG Kelowna), and Mel Kartusch (JPBG Vancouver). New BCAB Half Century Club inductees were Doug Collins (JPBG Kamloops), and Terry Moore (Bell Media Victoria).