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"What was CBC North management thinking?" A question fresh on the mind of CBC audiences and CBC staff this week, shocked and dismayed at the decision to combine three territorial morning newscasts into one. A decision that proved short-lived, however: even before the ink was dry, CBC brass buckled under the backlash and reversed course.
In this discussion, host/producer Rick Harp is joined by Ken Williams, assistant professor with the University of Alberta's department of drama, as well as Candis Callison, Associate Professor at UBC's Graduate School of Journalism as they try to parse out the 'logic' behind the move, what it tells us about how well CBC gets the north, as well as what it would take—and who—to make things right going forward.
// CREDITS: This episode was edited by Anya Zoledziowski; our theme is nesting by birocratic.
By Rick Harp4.9
126126 ratings
"What was CBC North management thinking?" A question fresh on the mind of CBC audiences and CBC staff this week, shocked and dismayed at the decision to combine three territorial morning newscasts into one. A decision that proved short-lived, however: even before the ink was dry, CBC brass buckled under the backlash and reversed course.
In this discussion, host/producer Rick Harp is joined by Ken Williams, assistant professor with the University of Alberta's department of drama, as well as Candis Callison, Associate Professor at UBC's Graduate School of Journalism as they try to parse out the 'logic' behind the move, what it tells us about how well CBC gets the north, as well as what it would take—and who—to make things right going forward.
// CREDITS: This episode was edited by Anya Zoledziowski; our theme is nesting by birocratic.

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