Monthly Archives: February 2009

12 jobs to be cut at Info 690

Corus today announced it is cutting 12 people at its Info 690 all-news Montreal radio station, representing about half of its 30 unionized employees. This comes about six months after it decided to effectively shut down anglo sister station 940 News, laying off 18 people.

Corus says it's reorganizing the station, though it's unclear if that reorganization will be as severe as what happened to CINW. They hope to avoid layoffs through attrition and voluntary leaves.

Still, those people amazed that a staff of 30 can run an all-news radio station will be even more impressed if a staff of half that can continue doing so.

UPDATE: La Presse has a story about the job cuts, which also affect 10 administrative employees.

Gazette explores anglo exodus, DiMonte

It's really a story only The Gazette can do. And therefore it's a story The Gazette must do: The exodus of anglophones from Quebec.

So in a five-part feature series that ends today, the paper went all out, sending reporter David Johnston and photographer/videographer Phil Carpenter out to Calgary and Vancouver to interview ex-Montrealers.

DiMonte

Of particular interest to media watchers is probably Part 3, which interviews former CHOM morning man Terry DiMonte and his sidekick Peppermint Patti MacNeil (ex-Lorange). Although focused on language and culture, it also goes into a bit more detail about DiMonte's decision to move to Calgary and work at Corus's Q107 (it was business, not language politics, that was behind the change):

DiMonte's more recent departure can be seen as an example of the "normalization" of anglo migration from Quebec. As political and linguistic uncertainty has subsided in Quebec, anglos now leaving Quebec are tending to leave for the same ordinary dull reason that people everywhere move - opportunity. In DiMonte's case, there was also the added complication of a troubled relationship with a new boss; but there again, as he says himself, there's nothing so unusual about that. Here he was, a big fish in a small English market in a large French city, breezing along in midlife at the top of his profession, when suddenly he was presented with a new contract that called for him to sign in and out of work every day.

Until that offer was put before him by Bob Harris, newly arrived operations manager at CHOM, DiMonte had worked for years under simple contract terms: a 2-per-cent annual salary increase, and a car. But now he was being asked to sign a 15-page contract with a lot of fine print. DiMonte says he went to see Astral Media vice-president Rob Braide about it all, and Braide warned him, "Don't you dare try to bring in a lawyer."

The day after the 15-page contract was put before him, Corus Entertainment, owners of Q107 in Calgary, called DiMonte. A five-year offer; big money. Patti MacNeil remembers being at home on the day she heard DiMonte was moving to Calgary, and thinking, "Cool, someone new in the market, someone I know and like and will listen to." But then the incumbent morning-show team at Q107 was let go, and the next thing she knew, DiMonte phoned her up and asked what she would say if Corus were to approach her - about teaming up with him."

Of course, some might call this whining.

If the name Bob Harris sounds familiar, it's because he's the guy in charge of CJFM, aka Virgin Radio 96 aka the crap they replaced Mix 96 with. Both are owned by Astral Media. (Q92, where DiMonte phones in a noon show, is owned by Corus.)

Video

Aside from the big features are two video series from Carpenter (all compiled on this page): a documentary of interviews from those same ex-Montrealers (including DiMonte), and some interviews with young students here about their future.

Carpenter goes into some behind-the-scenes detail on his blog, saying it took him four months (on and off) to put the three-piece, half-hour documentary together.

And more

There are also two Flash animations with graphical data (one points out that unlike most regional newspapers, The Gazette's online traffic comes primarily from outside the province), and a blog from Johnston, in which he explains the story idea came from a conference he went to combined with a report from Statistics Canada showing anglos growing again for the first time in decades.

Board games I’d like to play

Sure, there's Montreal-as-Boardwalk Monopoly, but how about some board games that are all-Montreal?

Metro

From metrodemontreal.com

From metrodemontreal.com

I have no clue how this game is supposed to work, but it looks fun. Spotted in a metrodemontreal.com forum post.

Montreal Risk

Montreal Risk

I played this at a Geek Montreal GeekOUT, and won. (Hint: Controlling the West Island is key.)

Sadly, I wish I could point you to somewhere to buy/download/copy these things, but my searches have come up empty. So just stare at the pictures and imagine the fun of some day conquering the Plateau.

Gazette does yoga videos

My newspaper today launched (with press release and everything) Office Yoga, a web video series which has instructional videos on exercises you can do sitting in an office chair during your lunch break. It's paired with an article in this morning's paper.

The videos feature Kelly McGrath of Joy of Yoga, sitting in the office of Arts&Life editor Mike Shenker. One will be uploaded every weekday for at least a month.

Office exercises are nothing new (Craig Silverman shamelessly points to an article of his from two years ago talking about it), but it's not often you see this kind of thing being done by a newspaper.

Another day of newspaper pink slips

The Globe got 60 people to agree to buyouts, but that still wasn't enough, and they've laid off 30 more for a total reduction of 90. The cuts were previously announced, but now we know a third of them are involuntary.

Meanwhile, the Halifax Chronicle-Herald, which we'll remind you is newly without competition, is firing a quarter of its newsroom staff, confirming previous rumours.

Said, Sid, whatever

He looks like a terrorist, doesn't he?

He does look like a terrorist, doesn't he?

A fellow journalist spotted this on Canoe's website. It's a story (from "Agence QMI") about a man on trial for his alleged role in a bomb plot.

Only the guy in the photo isn't Saïd Namouh, it's Sidhartha Banerjee, a reporter for Canadian Press who has been covering the trial.

The photo has since been removed from the story. I don't know if that's because someone told them it was a CP reporter, or because someone realized that Saïd Namouh actually looks like this:

Saïd Namouh

Saïd Namouh

UPDATE: Rue Frontenac says Banerjee himself called up Canoë to complain.

It's not the first time the news has put up the wrong picture in a criminal case (usually it's the lawyer being identified as the client), but it's pretty rare that a journalist gets the rap (especially since most journalists are familiar with each other).

And some people suggested that a Journal de Montréal lockout would cause a degradation in the quality of reporting...

Steve Proulx also has a blog post about this, based off the same screen grab. News has since spread to Branchez-Vous and Regret the Error.

Journal Daily Digest: Martineau a hypocrite?

Richard Martineau: Pauvre moi!

As Journal de Montréal columnist Richard Martineau whines about the hate mail he's getting after his appearance on Tout le monde en parle Sunday night (he's still getting plenty of blog hate too, but I'd love for someone to setup a blog solely for the purpose of making fun of me), someone dug up a column he wrote for Voir back in 2003 bashing Quebecor's convergence and has apparently been emailing it to Richard Therrien, Steve Proulx, Rue Frontenac and others. Considering he now blogs for Canoe, writes for the Journal and has a show on LCN, it does kind of make him look like a hypocrite.

In other news

OutSOURCEd

Trouvez l'erreur

Trouvez l'erreur

Got a flyer from The Source a couple of weeks back. I noticed this ad on one of the inside pages. It caught my eye because it looked unusual.

I guess that whole bankruptcy thing means you gotta cut costs, which evidently include fact-checkers.

Google Reader catharsis

Empty Google Reader

Ha! I HAVE DEFEATED YOU!

From your 568 subscriptions, over the last 30 days you read 7,848 items, starred 0 items, shared 83 items, and emailed 0 items.

Chami-wow

There's a few videos on YouTube of this guy at the Montreal Auto Show selling what appears to be a Shamwow knockoff (or parody?). About as funny as the French dub of the original.