Saturday, November 8
CBC News reporter released by Afghan captors

CBC reporter Mellissa Fung was previously based Regina. She's seen in this photo reporting from Beijing during the Summer Olympics in August.

CBC journalist Mellissa Fung was released into the custody of Canadian officials in Kabul on Saturday, four weeks after she was abducted.

Fung was taken by armed men who approached her in a refugee camp on the outskirts of Kabul on Oct. 12. The journalist, who was stationed at the NATO military base in Kandahar but was visiting the Kabul-area camp to report on a story, was then taken to the mountains west of the Afghan capital.

As news of her release emerged on Saturday, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported that she was in good health and undergoing a medical examination.

News of the abduction had been kept secret over concerns about her safety.

“In the interest of Mellissa’s safety and that of other working journalists in the region, on the advice of security experts, we made the decision to ask media colleagues not to publish news of her abduction,” CBC News publisher John Cruickshank said. “All of the efforts made by the security experts were focused on Mellissa’s safe and timely release.”

“Fung’s family was in daily contact with the team at CBC that was trying to negotiate this and help this go forward to the successful conclusion,” said CBC journalist Susan Ormiston, who has also filed stories from Afghanistan.

Ormiston said several other reporters have gone into the same camp where Fung was taken. Fung was visiting the camp for internally displaced people to report on refugees who have streamed back into Afghanistan from Pakistan and Iran.

“It’s a difficult situation. It’s a management of risk all the time, and it’s something that we journalists do on a regular basis,” she said.

Fung herself first alerted authorities about her kidnapping on her portable phone. Her captors were not Taliban militants, she said, but unaffiliated bandits.

Adam Khan Serat, spokesman for the provincial governor in Afghanistan’s Wardak province, said the journalist was freed after tribal elders and provincial council members negotiated her release.

“I cannot offer any detail about how the negotiations were managed in any respect,” Cruickshank said. “We can’t discuss any demands or promises made to secure her release, except to say it is the policy of the CBC not to pay ransom, and we followed that policy to the letter.”

“She sounded terrific, and she said she hadn’t been harmed in any way,” CBC president Hubert Lacroix said. “She said she was sorry for all the trouble she caused.”

Harper thanks Afghan government

Prime Minister Stephen Harper told reporters that no ransom was paid. He also thanked all those who “worked so tirelessly” to help win Fung’s release, singling out Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

“I spoke with President Karzai immediately following her kidnapping, and he assured me of the full co-operation and engagement of his government, and he has delivered,” Harper said.

“This is wonderful news for her family, for her colleagues and for all Canadians,” the prime minister said.

Lacroix thanked Canadian and Afghan government officials, as well as dozens of media organizations in Canada and around the world that agreed not to publicize the abduction during the reporter’s month-long ordeal.

“Mellissa is now safe and in reasonable health, given the more than four weeks [she spent] in these difficult circumstances,” he said at a news conference Saturday afternoon.

“She is being examined by Canadian medical staff in Kabul and soon she will be flying to another location in the Middle East in preparation for her return to Canada.

“Plans are being made to reunite Mellissa with her family as soon as possible,” he added.

Lacroix said employees at the public broadcaster prepare “rigorously” for the possibility that a journalist may be abducted in a conflict zone, but no amount of planning or training could prepare them for the feeling of “hopelessness, anger and dread” they felt after hearing about Fung’s abduction.

Wednesday, September 17
CBC Radio gets new executive director

From a CBC News Release:

CBC English Services has filled the important radio leadership chair in the country with its appointment today of renowned media executive Denise Donlon as executive director of radio, effective September 29, 2008.

Donlon, 52, a journalist, producer and former president of Sony Music Canada and vice president and general manager of CHUM Television’s MuchMusic and MuchMoreMusic, is one of the country’s best-known media executives and has focused much of her recent attention on various international environmental and humanitarian initiatives.

“Denise is without question one of the broadcasting industry’s most talented and dynamic organizational leaders,” says Richard Stursberg, executive vice president of CBC English Services. “She is both a proven administrator and team builder and a champion of creativity, artistic excellence and social responsibility. Her media experience and knowledge will complement and strengthen the mandate of CBC Radio, which is to engage all Canadians through its unique position as a non-commercial national public radio service.”

“In addition to her professional attributes, she has developed a prodigious network of relationships throughout the entertainment, government, business, humanitarian and environmental communities in Canada and around the world,” Stursberg said. “All of which is useful to her leadership of CBC Radio, given its enormous range of programming which includes news, current affairs, the arts and, of course, the best music on Canadian airwaves.”

“I’m delighted to join CBC, as I’ve always believed in a strong and vibrant public broadcaster,” Donlon says. “CBC Radio is on a tremendous roll right now, launching exciting new programming that is engaging and meaningful to diverse audiences, reflecting all Canadians. These are exciting times and I believe CBC Radio is well-positioned to enhance its reputation as the country’s best and most vital radio service.”

Throughout her career, Donlon has initiated projects that have brought together music, journalism, social issues and human rights advocacy. She has promoted media literacy among young people and in 1993 was awarded the first Peter Gzowski/ABC Canada Award for Literacy. That same year, her team won a Gemini Award for Best Special Event Coverage - Election Night 1993 for Vote with a Vengeance, which raised political awareness among new voters. In 2001, Donlon traveled to Sierra Leone, Thailand and the Thai-Burmese border as a field producer for the award-winning WarChild documentary Musicians in the War Zone.

In 2000, Donlon became president of Sony Music Canada, leading a team of more than 300 professionals with an annual $200 million budget and whose key initiatives included the establishment of electronic music distribution and the promotion and development of emerging Canadian talent and internationally established Canadian artists. Donlon left Sony Music in 2004 and has since lent her support and production abilities to a variety of high profile projects including Live 8, CBC’s Tsunami Concert of Hope, the inaugural Green Living conference main stage, the President Clinton Foundation Birthday Event, which raised over $21 million in one evening for poverty alleviation, people living with HIV/AIDS and to combat climate change. She was appointed to the CHUM board of directors in 2005.

Three times (1994, 1995, and 1997) Donlon was named Broadcast Executive of the Year at the Canadian Music Week Industry Awards. In 1997 she was the recipient of Toronto’s Women in Film & Television Outstanding Achievement Award. In 2001, Donlon received the Wired Women’s Woman of Vision Award and the Canadian Women in Communications Woman of the Year Award. She was inducted
into the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2002 and in 2005 was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada. She holds two honorary law degrees from the universities of Waterloo and Calgary.

Donlon is a Trustee of Lake Ontario Waterkeepers and most recently, was involved with the Lake Ontario Waterkeepers and Royal Bank Financial Group on its inaugural Waterkeepers event at the Toronto Film Festival, featuring Robert F. Kennedy Jr. She has also been involved with the Clinton Giustra
Sustainable Growth Initiative, which focuses on social and economic development efforts in the global resource development community.

Monday, September 8
Pressing the pause button on the blog

With all the changes going on inside the CBC this fall, it only makes sense that some changes occur at Inside the CBC.com as well! ;-)

When we launched blog a few years ago, the CBC was just putting its toe delicately into the blog world with a few shows publishing their own (at the time, unofficial) sites to engage more directly with its audience. Since then, the CBC has a channel on YouTube, dozens of fan pages and groups on Facebook, thousands of hours of free podcasts, blog commenting on CBCnews.ca articles, programs for sale in iTunes, blogs for many of our TV and radio shows, and more. Suffice to say, we have kind of dived in lately!

Actually, when this blog started, it was envisioned as a blog for employees to share news about our colleagues, staff changes, and happenings around the various centres. We just figured we’d leave the door open so you could see some of our own chatter.

Well, 1,532 articles and 8,841 comments later, it’s time to evolve again. Within the next week or two, I’ll be transitioning out of the blog editor’s chair to recover from a couple of major health setbacks and to work a bit on some outside projects. But I’m looking forward being back at CBC Radio helping produce the shows you love.

And that brings us to suggestions from you…

What should the future of Inside the CBC entain? What sort of content would you like to see? Should it be hosted interally only for staff to communicate with each other, or remain publicly accessful? Should there be a network of contributors with one editor? Or written by a single author? If you’re a CBC employee, what parts of this blog experiment have you found valuable? Or do you get your news from other sources?

We’d welcome your thoughts here or email kevin.payan@cbc.ca

And thanks for letting me share a part of your screen time the last couple of years.

Tod Maffin
CBC Vancouver

Thursday, August 28
The new CBC Radio 2 schedule

Download a full-size image suitable for printing.


Radio 2 Drive: What you’ll hear

Richard Terfry will have a regular day job soon.

The musician (who plays under the name Buck 65) will be the host of Radio 2 Drive when the show launches next week. The Halifax Chronicle-Herald profiled Terfry Tuesday and got his thoughts on what you’ll be hearing starting September 2:

We kept it real simple, something punchy, think­ing about the fact that we’re going to be reaching a lot of people during their afternoon commute and we’re going to be providing a soundtrack for that….

As for the description of Drive as a “songwriters’ show,” Terfry hopes that the term is inclusive enough to reach as many listeners as possible, while opening up the spectrum of musical guests that will join him in the studio every week to talk about the creative process and even play a song or two.

“It’s really broad,” he admits. “We use that designation fairly loosely. There’s a lot of talk of songs, and a lot of singer-songwriters pop up on our play­list, as far as I can see it doesn’t really exclude much from what we can play

We’re playing a lot of Canadian stuff, 75 to 80 per cent, but a lot of stuff from around the world in practically every genre you can think of. [We'll play] some hip-hop, which may not be the first type of music you’d think of froma singer-songwriter perspective, but there’s also been those artists you’d ex­pect like Ron Sexsmith and Kathleen Edwards and Neil Young. Neil’s like a holy figurehead around here.

The full article is here.

Wednesday, August 27
The Raw Numbers: CBC Olympics’ coverage

A little infopr0n of the CBC’s Olympic coverage, for those of you who like numbers:

  • >90% satisfaction level with CBC programming, among Canadians who watched the Games (CP/Harris Decima)
  • 1.29 million viewers: overall average CBC Television audience
  • 933,000 viewers: Opening Ceremony
  • 8.20 million viewers: Closing Ceremony
  • Largest audience: 2.6 million (for Simon Whitfield’s race on Aug. 18)
  • 46 million web pages viewed under CBCsports.ca/olympics
  • >2 million web pages per day viewed
  • 3.2 million: live streams served
  • 1.7 million: on-demand streams served

Over to you, CTV. As they say fondly in some regions of the country, “Do your worst, m’ boys.”


Will Definitely Not The Opera be renamed to CBC Pop Culture Saturday?

Is it just me, or have the the fine folks in the CBC Bureau of Name Allocation* stopped adding a little, er, “inspiration” into their morning coffees?

We’ll soon have CBC Canadian Songwriters and CBC Canadian Composers as names of web radio streams and Radio Two Morning and Radio Two Drive for the…. well, you know.

Fair enough, the rationale is hard to argue with. Simple, descriptive names make it easier for the audience to remember. Besides convenience, that can pay off for us during the ratings weeks. Unlike television, where viewership is measured by a monitoring device attached to TVs, radio listenership in Canada is measured by surveys asking participants to remember what station they listened to and when. This is why private radio stations will tell you the name of their station every three seconds: (”You’re tuned to 92FM where 92FM time is just past noon. 92FM Weather in a moment, but first to Anna with 92FM Traffic.”)

And true, CBC Radio Two Morning will indeed be easier to remember than something “clever” like The Forenoon Acoustics, but seriously, do we have to be so… so… bland?

  • Could the late ground-breaking Brave New Waves have been as adored by fans as it was with a name like CBC Eclectic Overnight?
  • Would science geeks rally as devotedly around Quirks and Quarks as they would around CBC Science On The Radio?
  • Could Definitely Not the Opera and its predecessor Brand X have captured the hearts of Canadians as CBC Pop Culture Saturday?
  • Would ratings improve if we changed The Vinyl Cafe to Stuart McLean Reads Loudly From a Book?

Given time, this infection of blandness might even spread to the junior service with shows titled CBC News: Sunday, Steven and Chris, and The CFL on CBC?

Oh. Right.

Your thoughts and further “improvements” to show names welcome, in the comments.

* Incidentally, there is no longer a CBC Bureau of Name Allocation. Budget cutbacks, you know.


Four web-radio streams to launch September 2

More details are beginning to emerge about the four 24-hour web radio streams CBC Radio will launch next week, along with changes to CBC Radio Two:

CBC Jazz: CBC Jazz will feature a “deep playlist” featuring jazz music and musicians from across the decades.  You’ll hear an emphasis on Canadian performers and compositions (Michael Bublé, Diana Krall) but also favourites like Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Oscar Peterson, and more.

CBC Classical: CBC Classical will play music from across the centuries includuding pieces by classical composers and performed by the best Canadian and international orchestras, chamber ensembles and soloists.

CBC Canadian Songwriters: Pretty much what it says. Artists heard will include Gordon Lightfoot, Bruce Cockburn, Alex Cuba, Feist, Basia Bulat, Blue Rodeo’s Jim Cuddy, and Greg Keilor.

CBC Canadian Composers: The entire range of music composed by some of Canada’s most reknowned composers and performed by our premiere ensembles. Think John Weinzweig and Christos Hatzis.

Monday, August 25
Private radio continues to do well, despite new technologies

Private radio in Canada is basking in some of its best profits in decades.

In a report by Statistics Canada, commercial radio stations reported nearly 20% profit margin (before interest and taxes) in 2007 — that’s the industry’s third best result in 30 years, after 2006 and 2005.

The boom comes despite the emergence of new technologies such as satellite radio, online radio and portable digital players.

From Broadcaster Magazine:

[Statistics Canada] says regulatory changes in 1998 allowed for greater concentration of ownership, which helped radio withstand the competition from other media.The industry also rationalized its operations by transferring AM stations to the generally more popular and more profitable FM band.


Vancouver radio columnist dies
Jim Kearney

Jim Kearney in his earlier reporting days

CBC Radio sports columnist Jim Kearney passed away Friday at 86.

Kearney spent most of his career in print — starting at the Victoria Times in 1940 then moving to the Vancouver Sun in 1943, churning out five sports columns a week.

Fellow columnist Jim Taylor noted that Kearney was a stickler for accuracy. “If Jimmy wrote that the sky was falling I would reach for my umbrella because he wrote it straight and he was accurate — [a] solid, solid reporter,” Taylor said.

After “retiring” from newspapers in the 80s, Kearney brought his thoughts about sports and life in general to CBC Radio, appearing bi-weekly on CBC Radio’s Early Edition. He also wrote a book about sports in British Columbia called Champions.

Kearney covered four summer Olympics and three Commonwealth Games and won numerous awards including the National Newspaper Award for a two-part series on drugs in sport and was inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame about ten years ago.

Did you work with Jim?
Have any memories you’d like to share?

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