REVOLVING DOOR:
CTV National News Executive Producer Rosa Hwang has departed the network as Bell moves to lay off 1,300 staff, amounting to six per cent of the media division. David Hughes, Ramneek Gill, Sophia Skopelitis and Jonathan Kay will expand their oversight within the news division, while Joanne Woo is now News Director, CTV News Channel/Manager, Ottawa News Operations. Corey Bellamy assumes the role of Director, Digital Growth, rejoining CTV News from Bell’s corporate digital product group. The network also announced the closure of its bureaus in L.A. and London with those caught up in the layoffs including L.A. Bureau Chief Tom Walters, Chief International Correspondent Paul Workman, Ottawa Bureau Chief Joyce Napier, CTV National News Senior Political Correspondent Glen McGregor, and UK-based correspondent Daniele Hamamdjian. Other casualties include Parliamentary Bureau field producer Ian Wood, W5 correspondent Molly Thomas, CTV Morning Live Calgary host Joelle Tomlinson, CTV Vancouver Island reporter/anchor Jordan Cunningham, and TSN field producer Matt Dunn, along with the staff of six AM radio properties being shuttered, including TSN Radio 1260 (CFRN-AM) Edmonton’s Shawn Simpson, Marc Stevenson, Ryan Rishaug, Jason Strudwick, Connor Halley, and Jason Gregor, among others. Read more in our Radio & Podcast column.
Karen Mitchell has retired from CTV Winnipeg after 15 years as News Director. Mitchell started her career in 1993 as part of the CJOJ Belleville, ON launch team. Her career then took her to CJOK-FM Fort McMurray, Craig Broadcasting Global News and CBC. Mitchell had been with CTV Winnipeg since 2000, working her way up from reporter/weekend producer. She was recognized with RTDNA Canada’s Distinguished Service Award last year.
Emma Ens is leaving CTV Kitchener after more than 15 years for a new opportunity. Ens, who started with the station as a technical operator in 2007, had been working as an assignment editor and reporter for the last six years.
Katarina Szulc has left CBC Edmonton to work as a freelance reporter, based in Mexico, where she’ll cover Latin America. With CBC for the past year, Szulc previously worked as a reporter and web editor with CityNews Vancouver.
Dione Wearmouth is joining CityNews Calgary as a part-time anchor and reporter. Wearmouth arrives from Brunswick News where she’s been a reporter for the last year and a half for the Daily Gleaner and Kings County Record. Prior to that, she was a videojournalist with CKPG-TV and worked with Vista Radio’s stations in Prince George.
Karli Zschogner has joined APTN News as a video journalist, based in Inuvik, NWT. Zschogner has been serving as the editorial director of the Arctic Youth Network mentoring and publishing program for the last eight months and working as a freelance journalist.
Amanda Young has accepted the role of Branded Content & Integrations Manager, Eastern Canada, at Rogers Sports & Media. In her new role, she’ll be responsible for leading the Eastern regional branded content & integration team. With Rogers Sports & Media for over 15 years, Young has successfully led promotions in several different markets, including JACK FM (CJAQ-FM) Calgary and CHFI Toronto. Most recently, she led BC&I campaign strategy and execution in priority Eastern Markets. She’ll continue to work out of Ottawa.
Geri Mayer-Judson has joined 980 CKNW Vancouver as an on-air contributor. Mayer-Judson has been a traffic reporter in the market for the past two years, most recently with the Canadian Traffic Network (CTN).
Sean Fitz-Gerald is among the Canadian staff laid off by The Athletic as the digital subscriber publication, acquired by the New York Times last year, moves to cut 20 reporters or about four per cent of its journalists as part of a company reorg. Other reporters will move from their current beats to new ones as some local NHL and MLB beats are eliminated, and the publication moves to appeal to a wider audience, including more regional and general assignment coverage. Based in Toronto, Fitz-Gerald had been with The Athletic since 2016 as one of its first dozen hires.
Vanessa Steinmetz and Nicole Butler are now co-CEOs at Pier 21 Films. With the appointments, Pier 21 becomes a fully female-led production company, with Pier 21 founder Laszlo Barna transitioning to the role of Chair. Steinmetz, a former SVP Production Finance at Entertainment One, is overseeing financing and business operations; while Butler, former COO with Pier 21, leads development and production activities. Current projects include Season 3 of Run the Burbs for CBC; Late Bloomer, starring Jasmeet Raina for Crave; and recently-announced Indigenous comedy Don’t Even, created by showrunner Amber-Sekowan Daniels, also for Crave.
Rose Mueller has joined AMPIA (Alberta Media Production Industries Association) as the organization’s new Operations and Communications Coordinator. Mueller has held communications roles with organizations from the federal government to the Edmonton Aboriginal Business & Professional Association. She was most recently Communications Manager at the Indigenous Knowledge & Wisdom Centre.
David Craig is the new President of Western Association of Broadcasters (WAB). Craig is Director of Programming & Development at MCA Media, which operates The Miracle Channel and Corco TV. Brett Adnum, Chief Operating Officer at Golden West Broadcasting, moves into the position of Past President.
RADIO & PODCAST:
Bell Media’s NewsTalk 1290 CJBK London, TSN 1260 (CFRN-AM) Edmonton, BNN Bloomberg Radio 1410 (CFTE-AM) Vancouver, Funny 1040 (CKST-AM) Vancouver, Funny 1290 (CFRW-AM) Winnipeg, and Funny 1060 (CKMX-FM) Calgary went off the air as of 11 a.m. ET Wednesday. Station websites showed 404 errors or had notices posted, informing listeners that “The Realities of AM Radio in the broadcast media landscape have made this change unavoidable.” Pending CRTC approval, Bell will also sell AM 1150 (CKOC-AM) Hamilton and Funny 820 (CHAM-AM) Hamilton, as well as Windsor’s AM 580 (CKWW-AM) to a third party. Bell Canada President Mirko Bibic cites profit losses of as much as 50% in the company’s radio business pre- to post-pandemic, along with declines in legacy phone revenues. Read more here.
Radiodays North America held its inaugural event in Toronto last week to rave reviews. At this year’s Broadcast Industry Hall of Fame Awards, Patrick Grierson, the late founder of Canadian Broadcast Sales (CBS), was recognized as the recipient of the 1st annual Allan Slaight Radio Salesperson of the Year Award. Grierson, who passed away in May 2022 at the age of 77, started his 40-year career with Standard Broadcasting in the 1970s, retiring in 2017 as leader of the largest national radio sales organization in Canada. Veteran Toronto music director Wayne Webster, who has been with Stingray’s boom 97.3 (CHBM-FM) Toronto for the last 13 years, was this year’s Allan Waters Hall of Fame recipient. An alum of Q107 (CILQ-FM), CHUM-FM, and Mix 99.9 (CKFM-FM), among other stations, Webster joked that he had spent most of his life trying to stay out of the spotlight, as he accepted the award. Read more here. More Radiodays North America coverage to come.
The Western Association of Broadcasters (WAB) wrapped up their 87th annual conference in Banff on Thursday, June 8 with the WAB Gold Medal Awards Gala. Two longtime radio reporter/anchors are this year’s WAB Hall of Fame inductees – Barry Lamb of CJRB Boissevain, MB and Tony King of Calgary’s 770 CHQR. Tyler Carr, morning show co-host on Evanov Communications’ Energy 106 (CHWE-FM) Winnipeg, is the recipient of the 2023 WAB Leader of Tomorrow Award. Read more here.
Red Robinson has been posthumously honoured by NABS with the Heart Award, recognizing his history of service to the organization supporting the health and wellbeing of those in media, marketing and communications. Robinson, who was pivotal in bringing NABS to Western Canada, was recognized at the organization’s Benevolence Bash in Toronto on Wednesday evening, with his daughter Kellie accepting the award virtually on her father’s behalf. NABS is marking its 40th anniversary, with founder Rupert Brendan, who travelled from the UK, and Daniel Rabinowicz, founder of Quebec counterpart bec, also recognized.
CityNews 680 is 30 years old. I take a look at some of the moments that have helped define the powerhouse all-news radio station. https://t.co/iMyL1r1J6S
— Richard Southern (@RichardCityNews) June 7, 2023
Rogers Sports & Media’s CityNews 680 (CFTR-AM) Toronto is celebrating 30 years as an all-news station. The station officially adopted the format on June 7, 1993, transitioning from CFTR 680 AM’s Top 40 format with Starship’s “We Built This City.” Eight million time checks and 1.5 million traffic reports later, the station is celebrating its 30th anniversary. Retired News Director Scott Metcalfe has put together a podcast on the evolution of the brand.
iHeartMedia’s Hot AC station The New Mix 102.9 (KDMX-FM) Dallas has secured Canadian voiceover talent Matt Fogarty and Melissa Thomas as new branding voices. KDMX-FM returns to its former “MIX” branding, abandoning its former NOW 102.9 moniker.
LISTEN: Tyler Glen, former longtime program director and morning show host on STAR FM (CKSR-FM) and CKLQ in Brandon, MB, is on the Sound Off Podcast. After more than two decades on-air in the market, Glen now livestreams his own morning show on Twitch.tv. He shares anecdotes with Matt Cundill about his morning show career, the incredible community that exists in Brandon, and more. Listen on your favourite podcast app or here:
SIGN OFFS:
Doug Caldwell, on June 12. Following his graduation from the Radio Television Program at NSCC Kingstec, Caldwell got his start in broadcasting with Annapolis Valley Radio in Kentville, NS in the early 1980s, holding roles from copywriter to on-air and assistant music director. He joined Q104 Halifax in 1983 as Music Director and an on-air personality, before moving into a more than two-decade career in music marketing, initially as National Promotion Director for Island Music Canada and then National Marketing Manager for Virgin Music Canada from 1991-2001, working with acts from the Spice Girls to Lenny Kravitz and Smashing Pumpkins. He went on to work as the marketing lead for the Associated Labels Department at EMI Music Canada. Concurrently, Caldwell taught courses on Music Industry Marketing and the History of Pop Music at Toronto’s Trebas Institute, George Brown College, and the Metalworks Institute of Sound & Music Production in Mississauga. In more recent years, Caldwell had worked in sales and marketing with Toronto indie label Sparks Music and served as a contributing writer on Jeff Woods’ nationally syndicated show “The Legends of Classic Rock.”
Walter Kemp, 85, on June 9. CKDU Halifax’s longest-serving programmer, Kemp had hosted “Saturday Morning Musical Box” since February 1985 — the first week the Dalhousie University campus station hit the airwaves. He went on to serve the radio station for 38 years. Born in Montreal and educated in Toronto, Harvard, and Oxford, Kemp founded and chaired the Music Department at Waterloo Lutheran University (now Wilfrid Laurier), before moving to Halifax in 1977 to become Chair of the Dalhousie Music Department and Director of the Dalhousie Chorale. Since 2005, Kemp had served as Artistic and Administrative Director of Opera Nova Scotia.
Scott Bodnarchuk, 63, on June 5. The General Sales Manager for Rogers Sports & Media’s radio stations in Atlantic Canada for the last 12 years, Bodnarchuk claimed “he never worked a day in his life” because of his passion for radio sales, according to his obituary. Based in Halifax, Bodnarchuk joined Rogers in 2011 as Retail Sales Manager, Atlantic. Prior to joining Rogers, Bodnarchuk ran the Local Management Agreement (LMA) between CHUM’s stations in Halifax and Newcap Radio. Read Danny Kingsbury’s tribute here.
Joy Rosen, 65, on June 9. Originally from Montreal, after completing her B.A. in English at the University of Toronto, Rosen found herself with a desire to make documentary films which took her to Syracuse University, where she graduated with a M.Sc. in Television, Radio and Film. Rosen founded Portfolio Entertainment with Lisa Olfman in 1991 after the company they were working at downsized, building the venture into a globally-recognized production, distribution, and animation company with a catalogue of over 2,000 episodes of animation, kids, scripted and digital media content. Together with Olfman, Rosen was awarded the 2015 WIFT-T Crystal Award for Outstanding Achievement in Business and the Rotman Canadian Woman Entrepreneur of the Year Award.
Ab Douglas (Abram Driediger), 93, on March 21. After graduating from Queen’s University, Douglas started his broadcasting career in 1951 in Manitoba. He went on to become CTV’s Parliamentary Bureau Chief and co-anchored the first CTV National News program with Baden Langdon (later with Peter Jennings) in November 1962. In 1967, he joined CBC to produce documentaries and work as a foreign correspondent in Moscow, where he remained until 1972. He also served as the national reporter in Edmonton and Vancouver. In 1980, he went on to a teaching position at the University of Regina School of Journalism. He concluded his career helping set up the Inuit broadcasting network, based in Nunavut. Retiring in the 1980s, he ran the family cattle and horse ranch near Maple Creek, SK until moving to Kelowna in 1989. In 1993, he published On Foreign Assignment: The Inside Story of Journalism’s Elite Corps, taking readers “behind-the-scenes to a formal dinner with DeGaulle and to a beach party at the Kennedys.’
TV & FILM:
In honour of our final farewell, the studio has been dedicated to @MarilynDenisCTV for 34 incredible years in daytime television. 👏 And if it couldn’t get any better, former The Marilyn Denis Show floor director, Kathy Adetuyi stopped by to present this honour to Marilyn. 🎉 pic.twitter.com/4kkPMS5rU2
— The Marilyn Denis Show (@TheMarilynShow) June 9, 2023
Bell Media has dedicated a studio to Marilyn Denis, marking the 34 years of daytime television she produced there. Denis signed off from The Marilyn Denis Show for the last time Friday after 13 seasons on-air. Denis, 64, will continue on the CHUM 104.5 Toronto morning show, alongside Jamar McNeil, where she’s been a fixture for 37 years, in addition to being heard on Marilyn Denis Does A Podcast.
Bell Media has unveiled its English and French-language original content slate for 2023/24, totalling 96 titles and 1,037 hours of original content. The network is upping the ante on reality series, including English and French-language versions of international format The Traitors, greenlit for CTV and Noovo, both hosted by Karine Vanasse (Cardinal). Comedian Russell Peters will host The RP4, a series of comedy galas for CTV Comedy Channel, and is also the subject of a new Crave documentary. New Crave Original series include sketch comedy offering The Dessert from Kids in the Hall’s Bruce McCulloch, and comedy series The Trades from the producers of Trailer Park Boys. Bell Media Studios has announced new daytime series The Good Stuff with Mary Berg.
Global’s 2023/24 broadcast slate is led by new procedural drama Matlock starring Kathy Bates in the titular role. Also joining the lineup is new drama Elsbeth, starring Carrie Preston, based on and named after the fan favourite character from The Good Wife and The Good Fight. Also coming to Global is new medical drama Doc, based on the Italian format, and comedy Poppa’s House starring Damon Wayans and Damon Wayans Jr. Corus Entertaiment’s speciality lineup includes the premiere of Ted, a live-action comedy series based on the film franchise, with Seth MacFarlane reprising the voice of the iconic teddy bear; Based on a True Story, a dark comedic thriller starring Kaley Cuoco and Chris Messina, following a realtor, a former tennis star and a plumber who seize a unique opportunity to capitalize on America’s obsession with true crime; limited drama series Apples Never Fall, based on Liane Moriarty’s bestselling novel, starring Annette Bening, Sam Neill, Jake Lacy, and Alison Brie; and The Tattooist of Auschwitz, an adaptation of the best-selling book, starring Harvey Keitel.
Corus Entertainment’s Waterside Studios, an IP and production venture focused on premium scripted Canadian content for youth and primetime audiences, has started production on new series Geek Girl (10×30), based on the best-selling novels by Holly Smale. Production is now underway in the UK with co-producers RubyRock Pictures and Aircraft Pictures and will continue in Canada later this summer. Slated to premiere on YTV and STACKTV in Canada and worldwide on Netflix next year, the series will be distributed globally by Nelvana thereafter.
Pier 21 Films is partnering with Canadian comedian Julie Kim on a new half-hour comedy series in development at a major broadcaster. The development deal marks Kim’s debut at the helm of a sitcom and comes on the heels of her gala performance at the Just for Laughs Festival in Montreal and a 40-theatre North American tour with Ronny Chieng (Crazy Rich Asians, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah). Kim will co-write the pilot with Strays alum, Clara Altimas. The show is a workplace comedy that follows a headstrong doctor (played by Kim) who, after losing the promotion of a lifetime as an emergency medicine physician in the U.S., finds herself back in her Canadian hometown, operating a rundown walk-in clinic.
The Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television (the Canadian Academy) has announced Misdirect: The Nick Nemeroff Comedy Grant, a new initiative aimed at supporting emerging Canadian comedians who embody the spirit of the late Canadian comedian. The grant will provide a cash prize of $10,000 CAD to the winning comedian, intended to be utilized for their next television special, album, or other comedy-related project. Eligibility requirements will be announced prior to the opening of submissions this fall.
ONLINE & DIGITAL MEDIA:
REGULATORY, TELECOM & MEDIA:
Canadian Heritage has published the proposed policy direction that will guide the CRTC as it works toward developing a new regulatory framework under Bill C-11, the Online Streaming Act. The commission has been explicitly directed to exclude content made by social media creators under the Act, including podcasters and any content on social media not also made available on a non-social media broadcast undertaking, as well as video games. In terms of the issue of discoverability of Canadian programs, the CRTC is being directed to implement discoverability in a way “that respects and, where possible, increases choice for users while also minimizing the need to alter algorithms of broadcasting undertakings.” In response to concerns about the tight timelines outlined in its previously-announced public consultation process, the commission has extended the deadline for the submission of interventions to July 11 and the deadline for the submission of replies to July 26. Read more here.
Every Canadian journalist knows our FOI system is broken.
Today we’re launching a project called Secret Canada, @globeandmail‘s answer to a dysfunctional system.https://t.co/qC9tvT8MOH
— Matt Frehner (@mattfrehner) June 9, 2023
The Globe and Mail has launched Secret Canada, a searchable database of over 300,000 Freedom of Information summaries, in response to Canada’s broken FOI system. The project is intended to help Canadians navigate records held by public institutions. Some of its insights are based on the work of Tom Cardoso and Robyn Doolittle from The Globe and Mail’s investigations team, who decided to take on Canada’s FOI system in the fall of 2021, filing more than 430 requests to public bodies across the country asking for data from their FOI request tracking systems.
Press Gallery President Guillaume St-Pierre presented the oversize novelty cheque and invited me to say a few words. I thanked the Gallery and also the CBC’s @cbctom Tom Harrington, who took the initiative to establish the fund in memory of his friend, who passed away in 2020. pic.twitter.com/bTLTIWxa2V
— Allan Thompson (@ProfAllan) June 11, 2023
The Peter Leo Emerging Reporter Fund has officially been established at Carleton’s School of Journalism, supporting a graduating journalism student to pursue an innovative and original research/reporting project with a preferred focus on broadcast journalism. Students will be required to submit a detailed pitch/proposal for their project, and the Journalism Program will lead the selection process joined by one or more representatives from CBC Radio News, which may provide editorial guidance, with the final product to possibly be broadcast on CBC Radio. Leo was the leader of CBC Radio News live specials for more than 20 years. The award was established by former colleague Tom Harrington and friends.