Video: Inside CBC Radio Master Control
This is the last of my three-part video series taking you, literally, inside the CBC. I’d like to know if you would like more of this kind of material — not sure how well it went over.
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| Behind the Scenes, Transmission |




















I love this s**t. But I’m a geek.
Absolutely. I’ve enjoyed them a lot…even if CBC Radio 3 doesn’t turn my crank, it’s been great to see what goes on radio that you don’t normally see…I mean, hear. And I also really enjoyed your conversation with Shelagh about Peter Gzowski the other week.
One more thing. Too tell you how much I enjoyed it…my DSL connection died at about the halfway point in today’s video, and I bookmarked the post so I could catch up when my connection returned (thankfully, only about 10 minutes later).
That’s very cool. There’s so much more to radio that I never would have known about. Thanks, Tod!
I think it’s a great learning experience. The Ceeb is such a huge corporation, it’s nice to “get to know” colleagues that are in different departments and far-away cities. Apart from that, it’s cool to see how it all works.
Oh this is too great. A tad bit more beefy compared to the setup I used to work with, but I recognized a lot of stuff. Thanks for the tour, Tod!
Awesome job Todd! You know, you are turning me into the ultimate CBC geek…after yourself of course.
I too would love to see some more, particularly in some of the regions, and in the mothership operations in Toronto and Montreal if you ever have the chance!
Hi Tod
totally awesome to see inside CBC vancouver. Please please show us more. Toronto master. Radio FX toronto and more from the regions. this really was totally awesome. Thank you
I absolutely love all of the behind the scenes videos. Thanks Todd! Like Jason Paris mentioned, seeing the studios in Toronto would be awesome.
Jeff in Kelowna, BC
Cool
It’s a great look inside the Corpse. As a listener and viewer, I really like knowing how a national radio network functions across time zones and across the regions. Very cool!
I want to see more now.
That was fun to watch, Todd. Especially because I did not have the chance to see Jim and Keng’s finished opus magnus before I retired. Keep it up!
That was cool – how about how the network works, ie how do shows get time-delayed so they air at 10am in each timezone? Are shows sent to different provinces’s master controls? Is it a big computer network (ie I saw SLC was stored in a computer) or is stuff sent by fibre optics or what?
*/geek mode off*