REVOLVING DOOR:
.@LisaLaFlamme_ joins us LIVE from The Mall, where a steady stream of mourners are making their way into St. James’s Park to pay their respects to Queen Elizabeth II: pic.twitter.com/fINywEpR7j
— Breakfast Television (@breakfasttv) September 13, 2022
Lisa LaFlamme has joined CityNews as a special correspondent anchoring the network’s coverage of the passing of Queen Elizabeth II. LaFlamme joins Rogers Sports & Media just four weeks after the announcement of her departure from CTV National News where she’d been Chief Anchor and Senior Editor since 2011 and with CTV for 35 years. LaFlamme is leading the network’s coverage from London, providing daily reporting for newscasts across television and radio as well as making regular appearances on Breakfast Television. A Rogers Sports & Media spokesperson says how the relationship might proceed beyond the commemoration coverage is yet to be determined. Read more here and find details on network coverage plans in our TV & FILM column below.
Lauren Pullen has replaced Mary Cranston as CTV Vancouver’s weekend anchor, as Cranston moves into the late news anchor position. Pullen arrives from Global Calgary where she’s been a reporter for the past five years. Prior to that, she was an anchor/reporter with Global News Kelowna.
Amanda Parris has officially stepped away from CBC Music’s Marvin’s Room after six years in the host’s chair. Parris is also the creator, executive producer and showrunner of critically-acclaimed digital series Revenge of the Black Best Friend, which launched on CBC Gem this year, in addition to other creative ventures. Music journalist A. Harmony, who had previously served as the R&B program’s interim host, steps in to host Marvin’s Room.
Steve Pratt, who left Pacific Content earlier this year, has announced his next venture, The Creativity Business, a strategy firm designed to help creatives build better businesses and help businesses infuse creativity into their marketing, communications and internal cultures. Pratt has launched a newsletter for those also interested in exploring the space.
A message from Stephen Brunt … pic.twitter.com/jhnRhHY6C1
— Sportsnet 590 The FAN (@FAN590) September 9, 2022
Stephen Brunt has left Sportsnet 590 The Fan (CJCL-AM) Toronto. Brunt, 63, had been with the station consecutively for the last 11 years after initially leaving to join Team 1050 (CHUM-AM) as a host in 2001. Brunt is also a contributor to the Globe and Mail and has authored numerous books including 2006 Canadian best seller, Searching for Bobby Orr. Brunt also co-founded and serves as Artistic Director of The Writers at Woody Point literary festival in Woody Point, Bonne Bay, NL.
Caroline Hunter has joined Kris Jay on Bounce 99.9 (CFWM-FM) Winnipeg’s new Bounce Afternoons with Kris and Caroline. Jay and Hunter have both had successful solo shows on Bounce over the past seven years with Hunter moving over from middays. The new show launched Sept. 12 in the 2 – 7 p.m. weekday time slot.
Pete Walker has joined Stingray as host of The Early Show on New Country 92.3 (CFRK-FM) Fredericton. Moving closer to family ties in New Brunswick, Walker arrives from KX96 (CJKX-FM) Oshawa where he had worked since 1995. Most recently, he was midday host, while serving as Music Director for KX96 and KX94.7 (CHKX-FM) Hamilton. He replaces John Riordon on The Early Show, who is taking up the role of Director of Programming, NB at Stingray. Riordon will continue to host Weekend Country Heat every Saturday on Stingray’s New Country and Real Country stations nationwide.
Paul Herriot has joined the Grand@101 (CICW-FM) Centre Wellington, ON as part of the Billie & Friends morning show, in addition to taking on the role of Operations Manager. Herriot was laid off from Rogers Sports & Media earlier this year after almost 18 years with CityNews 570 (CKGL-AM) Kitchener where he was a technical producer and backfill programming assistant.
Vanessa Murphy is now being heard afternoons on Move 99.7 (CKPT-FM) Peterborough, in addition to her morning show on Bounce 91.9 (CKLY-FM) Lindsay. Murphy was the winner of Best On Air Solo Host (Small Market) in Broadcast Dialogue’s 2021 Canadian Radio Awards and first runner-up in worldwide radio talent competition, Radio Star.
Greg Beharrell has added Rock 102 (CJDJ-FM) Saskatoon to the list of stations picking up his syndicated show. Beharrell is heard in various markets and dayparts, including 100.3 The Bear (CFBR-FM) Edmonton, Indie88 (CIND-FM) Toronto, and 95.5 KLOS Los Angeles, among other stations.
Penny Schreiner has retired from Golden West Broadcasting’s CJSN 1490 after 43 years. Schreiner began working at the Shaunavon, SK station under Frontier City Broadcasting in 1975, holding roles over the years from reception to commercial writing and log producing. After the station was acquired by Golden West in 1994, she went on to spend time as a morning show host and in sales. For the last decade, she’d been working in a news role with Swift Current Online, heard on CJSN 1490, and CKSW 570, Eagle 94.1 (CIMG-FM) and Magic 97 (CKSW-FM) Swift Current.
Sarah Miller, Program Director at Golden West Broadcasting’s 107.5 BOLT FM (CHBO-FM), is now also hosting the breakfast show from 6 a.m. – noon weekdays. Miller has been with the station since 2016 and in the PD role since 2018. Former morning host Calum McAnally moves to mornings on Golden West’s Mix 103.9 (CJAW-FM) Moose Jaw.
Eddie Gregory has been named the new voice of the Western Hockey League (WHL) Vancouver Giants. Gregory will serve as the team’s play-by-play broadcaster for 2022-23. He spent the past 18 seasons doing play-by-play in the BCHL for the Coquitlam Express. He’s also a producer for Sportsnet 650 (CISL-AM) Vancouver, which holds the Giants’ broadcast rights. He previously worked on various shows for TSN 1040 (CKST-AM).
Cole Schisler is joining CityNews 1130 (CKWX-AM) Vancouver as an anchor. Schisler has been working as a provincial reporter for Black Press Media for the last year and prior to that spent two years as the editor of the Ladysmith Chronicle.
Angela Mullins has been named Editorial Director at Pink Triangle Press (PTP). Mullins arrives from the Toronto Star where she’s held various senior roles since 2018 and is currently Senior Editor of Digital Audience Development, a unit she created to engage new “readers” in multimedia content. Mullins joins a content team led by Jennifer McGuire, former Editor-in-Chief of CBC News, who came to PTP in January. Mullins will be working with the Xtra Magazine team, and others, to create editorial content across audio, visual and text. Her career as a reporter began at The Herald Dispatch in West Virginia. She came to Canada in 2011, first working as a reporter for Metro News in London and rising through the ranks to become Managing Editor and eventually Deputy Editor of StarMetro, a brand she was instrumental in creating.
Jeff Norton is joining Corus Entertainment in an overall deal with his UK-based creative content company, Dominion of Drama, to head new IP and production venture, Waterside Studios. The new studio will be focused on producing scripted Canadian content for youth and primetime audiences. Originally from Canada, Norton previously worked at The Jim Henson Company in Los Angeles before moving to the UK to join Chorion Ltd. (Noddy, The Octonauts) as senior vice-president in 2007, He founded Dominion of Drama in 2020. Norton has previously worked as a consultant for Corus as executive producer of Trucktown for Nelvana, which Waterside will also work with to produce live-action programming for kids. Read more here.
Christine Diakos joins eOne as Vice President, Development, Unscripted – Canada, Television. In her new role, Diakos will be responsible for development, creation and pitching of non-scripted content, with a focus on lifestyle, reality and competition series. Prior to eOne, she was Senior Vice President of Production and Development at Big Coat Media where she served as a Supervising Producer on Love It or List It (HGTV), Love It or List It Vancouver (HGTV) and Jillian and Justin (W Network). She’s also served in senior production and development roles at Shaw Media and Peacock Alley Entertainment, working on content as varied as A Users Guide to Cheating Death (VisionTV) and Hockey Wives (W Network), among others.
Scott Boyd has been elevated to VP, Development, Unscripted and will oversee factual, true crime, and docuseries content. Boyd joined eOne in 2017 as a Development Producer, following eOne’s acquisition of Paperny Entertainment, and quickly progressed to Director of Development, steering such projects as Make it to the Moon (Discovery) and Arctic Vets (CBC). Both Diakos and Boyd report to Jocelyn Hamilton, President – Canada, Television.
Blue Ant Studios has added two newly-created leadership roles within its production and development divisions. Aileen Gardner has been appointed Head of Production, Canada, charged with leading operations for the studio’s slate of productions in Canada. She’ll report to Laura Michalchyshyn, CCO + co-president, Global Production, Blue Ant Media and Sam Sniderman, co-president, Global Production. Gardner arrives at Blue Ant with over 20 years experience in production across the UK, U.S., and Canada with companies like Mentorn, Endemol, Cineflix and Scott Brother’s Entertainment. Since arriving in Canada she has overseen shows such as Nazi Hunters (Discovery), the launch of American Pickers (A&E) and the reboot of Brother vs Brother (HGTV).
Zachary Frank is VP, Development, Blue Ant Studios. He’ll work with the studio’s team in Los Angeles to further expand its development slate of limited and returnable series with an emphasis on the Canadian, UK and American markets. He’ll report to Jennifer Harkness, SVP, Unscripted, while working closely with Aileen Gardner in Toronto. Prior to joining Blue Ant, Frank was Senior Director at Cream Productions, where he developed projects for CNN (History of the Sitcom), Discovery ID (If I Should Die), Bell Networks (Fear thy Roommate), and Corus (The World Without).
Robyn Stewart is the new Executive Director of Women in Music Canada, a registered non-profit dedicated to fostering gender equality in the music industry. Based in Winnipeg, Stewart is a 20-year music industry veteran, currently serving as Executive Director and CEO of the Western Canadian Music Alliance and BreakOut West. Prior to that, she held roles as a talent buyer and event manager.
Nia Addison has been promoted into the newly-created position of Customer Success & Renewal Contract Manager at Promosuite. Addison will manage the contract renewal process in collaboration with PromoSuite’s sales and customer success teams. She’ll also continue to work directly with PromoSuite customers.
RADIO & PODCAST:
SiriusXM’s Top of the Country competition crowned SACHA from Warkworth, ON as this year’s winner. The fourth annual competition and talent search by SiriusXM Canada, in partnership with the Canadian Country Music Association (CCMA), saw SACHA appear at the CCMA Awards on Sept. 11, in addition to taking home the grand prize of $25,000. The three finalists, including Josh Ross and Shantaia, performed for a crowd of country music fans and listeners tuning into the live show on SiriusXM’s CBC Country (ch. 171) before a headlining set by CCMA Awards co-host and nominee Tenille Townes.
LISTEN: Over 600 college radio stations in more than 45 countries will celebrate World College Radio Day on Friday, Oct. 7. On this episode of Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast, we welcome the event’s founder Dr. Rob Quicke. You’d be hard pressed to find someone more passionate about college radio or with more street cred in the space as one of the students who helped launch the UK’s first-ever FM college station at Oxford University in the ’90s, in addition to 15 years as the General Manager of campus station WPSC-FM Brave New Radio in Wayne, New Jersey. Listen on your favourite podcast app or here:
LISTEN: Dervla Trainor, founder and co-owner of the V.O. North conference, returns to the Sound Off Podcast, as the event makes an in-person comeback, Sept. 16-18 at the Pantages Hotel in Toronto. Trainor talks about steering her voiceover business through the pandemic and what we can expect at Canada’s premiere voiceover event. Listen on your favourite podcast app or here:
SIGN OFFS:
Bob McCord, 82, on Sept. 12, at his home in California. McCord got his start in radio at CKLC Kingston in the early 1960s. Stints at WIFE Indianapolis, Indiana and WONE Dayton, Ohio doing the 8 p.m. – midnight show followed before he landed at 630 CHED in the summer of 1965. He left CHED in early 1966 to work at KLIF Dallas before returning to Edmonton later that same year to take over the afternoon show. He remained with the station until 1978 when he attempted to obtain a licence for a new rock station in the city. The application was denied, but he found success a few years later, in 1981, when he was awarded a licence for a contemporary country station. CISN-FM was launched on June 5, 1982 as “The Big 10-4.” McCord had long been retired to Laguna Beach, California where he moved after retiring from radio in 1988, concurrent with the sale of CISN-FM to Shaw. Read more here.
Matthew Rodrigopulle, on Sept. 8, suddenly at his home in Regina. A 2020 Ryerson University (Toronto Metropolitan University) graduate, Rodrigopulle started pursuing a passion for sports journalism while he studied contributing to The Ryersonian as a sports reporter, as well as FanSided. He joined Sportsnet in 2020 writing scripts and putting together highlight packages, while also acting as an ongoing contributor to Leafs Nation and working as a teaching assistant in the School of Journalism. Rodrigopulle left Sportsnet this past March to join Global News Regina as a reporter and digital broadcast journalist.
Elmer Tippe, 89, on Sept. 7. Originally from Eatonia, Saskatchewan, Tippe began began playing banjo and fiddle at the age of eight and started entertaining professionally at 15, playing dances up and down B.C.’s Fraser Valley with his two older brothers as “Ray’s Harmony Five.” After his brother Clarence was killed by a drunk driver, he and brother Ray went on to form The Pine Mountain Boys. After moving to Pitt Meadows, BC, Tippe began his broadcasting career at CJJC Langley in 1969, the province’s first full-time country music station. He moved over to Supercountry CKWX Vancouver in 1975 as the all-night DJ, later moving into middays where he stayed for 25 years until 1991. “The Elmer Tippe Show” featured segments like star phone-ins from Nashville and “Elmer’s Choice,” a special song chosen by Tippe each day. He concurrently recorded several albums and had three charting singles in the 1970s. Tippe was inducted into the Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame in 2002, in addition to the B.C. Country Music Hall of Fame (which in its inaugural year awarded Tippe both Male Vocalist of the Year and Disc Jockey of the Year in 1977), the B.C. Entertainment Hall of Fame, Western Swing Society Hall of Fame, and numerous Country Music Broadcaster Awards.
TV & FILM:
Global Montreal celebrated 25 years on Wednesday, Sept. 14. In 1997, Global News became the third English-language television network to broadcast in Quebec. The milestone anniversary was celebrated with a special broadcast on Global News Morning and stories throughout the day showcasing the significant events the station has covered over the last 25 years. Three members of the original launch team are still with the station including News Director and Station Manager Karen MacDonald, Global National reporter Mike Armstrong and Videojournalist Karol Dahl.
Fanshawe, Seneca and Centennial College are collaborating on a new set of microcredential courses to address the skills shortage in Ontario’s screen-based industries as the province’s production sector continues to ride the wave of demand for streaming content. The suite of eight short programs is designed to help industry professionals upskill and current students learn additional in-demand production and technology skills. Among the courses offered will be Grip/Lighting and Television and Film Production Accounting Basic Skills at Centennial; Location Sound, Previsualization and Virtual Production – Unreal at Fanshawe; and Media Organization for Unscripted TV – Avid, Output and Delivery for Unscripted TV – Avid and Virtual Production – Unity at Seneca. The post-secondary collaboration is being developed with funding from the Ministry of Colleges and Universities’ Challenge Fund and the support of industry partners Avid, The Stratagem Group and Unity. Also partnering on the project is media training program, POV, which will help members of equity-deserving groups access the microcredentials to further diversify representation in the sector. Read more here.
Bell Media and Productions J have announced that well-known Quebec actor, TV and radio host Patrice Bélanger will host Survivor Québec, set to premiere on Noovo next spring. Set on a deserted island in the Philippines, Survivor Québec is currently recruiting participants, who have until Oct. 2 to apply.
ONLINE & DIGITAL MEDIA:
Mike Bendixen, former Newstalk 1010 (CFRB-AM) program director and National Format Director, News & Talk Programming, who parted ways with Bell Media last November, has launched a new newsletter on Substack. The broadcast media veteran promises “analysis of the news of the day and how it’s being covered.” His inaugural post discusses his early experiments with TikTok at CFRB and why research indicates those in the content business should embrace the platform.
REGULATORY, TELECOM & MEDIA:
1/2 Today the FCA granted Radio-Canada leave to appeal the CRTC’s decision 2022-175 concerning the use of an offensive word on air. In keeping with the Court’s established practice, no reasons were given.
— Federal Court of Appeal (@FedCourtApp_en) September 12, 2022
The Federal Court of Appeal has granted CBC/Radio-Canada (SRC) leave to appeal a June CRTC decision forcing it to apologize to complainant Ricardo Lamour for use of the N-word on-air. Back in August 2020, the n-word was used during a segment featuring Annie Desrochers and columnist Simon Jodoin as part of a discussion about a petition demanding the firing of a Concordia University professor who had quoted the title of a book by late Québécois journalist Pierre Vallières that features the N-word. CBC/Radio-Canada has apologized but takes issue with the CRTC decision which states that CBC “overstepped its authority with respect to the independence of the public broadcaster.” It’s estimated a hearing on the merits could take place in winter or spring 2023.
BROADCAST TECH & ENGINEERING:
Maison de Radio-Canada opens its doors to the public Sept. 24-25, however tours are already sold out. The free, hour-long guided tour of the public broadcaster’s new Montreal headquarters will take visitors behind-the scenes of the innovative new building that earlier in the summer was awarded second place in the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) Technology & Innovation Awards. Designed to house a staff of more than 3,000, it incorporates cutting-edge, end-to-end Media-over-IP infrastructure with more than 400 IP routers constituting the backbone of the network. As part of the Sept. 24-25 events, Place de Radio-Canada (at the corner of René-Lévesque and Alexandre-DeSève) will host a number of free shows and activities. CBC is promising more tours of the state-of-the-art building on weekends in October.
LISTEN: On this special sponsored edition of Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast, Dielectric President Keith Pelletier discusses a variety of exciting new technologies being offered to TV and FM broadcasters in North America and worldwide. These include breakthroughs in AI-based FM antenna pattern verification, and their IP-connected system that delivers real-time data to effectively monitor transmission lines.