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Toronto Media Landscape and Personalities

He seems like a class act. It's a shame TVO is losing him. I am among the few thousand who regularly watches The Agenda on YouTube and it seems pretty valuable for longer form discussions on Ontario specific issues. Oddly most Ontarians don't seem to care
Paikin is still hosting the OnPoli show (video and podcast) moving forward, as well as writing the occasional column on tvo.org
 
Paikin is still hosting the OnPoli show (video and podcast) moving forward, as well as writing the occasional column on tvo.org
And also a podcast... First one out tomorrow.

 

Corus has many otherwise viable assets, Nelvana included.

But like so many others in the Canadian landscape, those assets have been mismanaged.

Debt is an obvious issue here. Taking debt on for 'good' reasons is fine, to a point, but I would argue Corus took it on for the wrong reasons. It bought assets it couldn't afford, couldn't afford to invest in, and used debt to paper over the problems.

More broadly, Canadian broadcasters and film porduction/distribution companies have failed to grasp than the future is in global entertainment, and original content, not in being a licensee or distributor of the content of others.

Corus for years is/was a powerhouse in the home improvement space via HGTV. Its shows largely translated well into the U.S. market even when 100% Canadian, but they also can and did transfer those skills to develop/support U.S. made shows as well.

But they failed to take full advantage of that, even in that space, such that Corus wasn't necessarily the primary beneficiary of international sales, (many shows were independently produced and licensed); and they failed to follow that successful strategy with Food, Global or other properties.

They also let channels like Showcase whither, losing any sense of their 'mission' or 'audience' .........such that even channels focused largely on acquiring cheap content (no competitors in the Canadian space) saw massive erosion of viewership.

Many of those channels were originally Alliance properties...........which makes me recall fondly the impact of Robert Lantos who knew how to make money, but did so pursuing his passion for film/cinema and building a Canadian industry.

No one will ever say such a thing about the current crop of execs (and not most from the past either) at Corus, or Bell.

Robert, btw, is still around and still producing, but clearly w/o the same impact he once had with Alliance.

This is his most recent effort:

 
More job losses at CTV News...

TORONTO— Unifor is deeply concerned by Bell Media’s announcement of layoffs impacting 20 Unifor members, who delivered quality, fact-based journalism to Canadians from coast-to-coast.

“This is a critical moment to support Canadian jobs and Canadian journalists—especially when democracy itself is under attack,” said Unifor National President Lana Payne.

“Unifor will stand with our media members as they navigate this uncertainty. These cuts strike at the heart of Canadian journalism. Every newsroom job eliminated means fewer Canadian stories told, fewer facts verified, and less accountability for those in power. When journalism is weakened, democracy is weakened—and Canadians are the ones who pay the price.”

The layoffs include 11 journalists, among them five newly unionized CTV National News members from Unifor Local 79-M in Toronto, as well as journalists in North Bay, Ont., Halifax, and Calgary.
 
Former “Canada Tonight” host Travis Dhanraj, whose resignation from the CBC ignited a massive public scandal for the national broadcaster, is expected to testify before a parliamentary committee on Tuesday.
Dhanraj, who announced his “forced” resignation in July 2025, will appear before the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage as part of its study on fairness in the media. SEE: https://www.thestar.com/news/former...cle_47f84e30-a447-4b1a-9a20-419d2fe784c2.html

The article in Star goes on to say.. "In his complaint to the Canadian Human Rights Commission, Dhanraj pointed to several events that led to his resignation. He said throughout his employment, he repeatedly pushed for diversity and racial equality, but was “met with resistance at every point” and subject to a “toxic work environment.” Of course, his show was replaced by “Hanomansing Tonight” - also hosted by a non-white journalist - which would probably not demonstrate discrimination against people of colour.
 
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