Monthly Archives: June 2009

CBC seeking co-host for Montreal at Six

Michel Godbout has been hosting CBC News Montreal at Six alone since 2006. (Fagstein photo illustration)

Michel Godbout has been hosting CBC News Montreal at Six alone since 2006. (Fagstein photo illustration)

Thomas tips me off to a job posting from the CBC for a co-anchor for its weeknight Montreal newscast (the only remaining local programming on CBMT).

The posting doesn't make it clear, but I'm assuming the co-anchor will be added to the desk next to current anchor Michel Godbout, who has been hosting the newscast since he replaced longtime Newswatch anchor Dennis Trudeau.

I'm not quite sure about the strategy behind this. Dual anchors are at best redundant, and while a lot of News at Six involves Godbout speaking, he does it well enough. Especially considering the current firing craze at the network, it seems silly to hire someone new for purely aesthetic reasons.

And even then, what's the point? Silly host banter? We already have that with Godbout and "weather specialist" Frank Cavallaro.

Besides, the studio space allotted to CBC News at Six is so tiny, it would be cramped with two people inside.

Applications are due by June 10. Any takers?

The Toronto/B.C. Globe and Mail

The Globe and Mail is being all proud of its new Toronto section, which includes a content-sharing deal with the Torontoist blog.

In a chat with readers, Toronto editor Kelly Grant took a few minutes from being so gosh-darn adorable to counter a complaint that I was about to make: Isn't this supposed to be a national newspaper? Here's what she said:

I think you underestimate The Globe's ability to do more than one thing at a time. We  have always been and always will be a national paper -- in print and online. We have more resources in more parts of  Canada and around the world than any other newspaper in the country. This new initiative won't diminsh our superb national and international coverage.

Those of you who don't read the paper in the GTA and Ontario may not realize that we usually dedicate roughly two pages of space in the A-section to Toronto news. We have different editions across the country. (In B.C., for example, we have  a large bureau and a section front full of news you won't see in other parts of Canada.) Yet online we buried the work of our expanded B.C. and Toronto bureaus until recently. I see no reason to shortchange our loyal online readers in two of  Canada's largest and most important cities, especially when I know it won't hurt our coverage of other parts of Canada.

She's got a point, and the B.C. website is also impressive. But considering how little attention other places get (like, say, the entire province of Quebec) compared to Toronto City Hall, I still find myself wondering if the Globe is too focused on the few streets outside its two homes instead of the rest of us.

Let's hope Canada's national newspaper slowly moves to cover every city like it does the country's largest.

CDN/NDG bike paths just lipstick on asphalt

De Maisonneuve Blvd. W. at Decarie Blvd.

De Maisonneuve Blvd. W. at Decarie Blvd.

You'd think that Côte des Neiges and Notre Dame de Grâce, being so young, urban, working-class and eco-friendly, would have lots of bike paths spread across its huge territory. And yet, when you look at a map, you see only one, along de Maisonneuve Blvd. next to the tracks.

So I'm sure plenty of people got excited when they heard last Friday that the borough is working to vastly improve its bike path network, adding a new east-west corridor on the north side, about where the 51 bus travels. It would start from the western end of the de Maisonneuve path, go up West Broadway, east along Fielding and Isabella, then along Lacombe and Édouard-Montpetit until it reaches the Outremont town limit, where it will link up with the new path along Côte-Sainte-Catherine Rd.

Well, almost.

Read More »

Telegraph’s scoops aren’t telling the whole story

The New York Times this weekend explored the London Daily Telegraph's British-MPs-exploit-expense-accounts scoop (or, rather, scoops - they dished out the details bit by bit over several days, milking their investigation for all it was worth). It spreads the rumour that the Telegraph paid for the information (a faux pas, at least among the upper class of the British press).

The Telegraph, which doesn't confirm nor deny the rumour (usually an indication that it's true), throws in this quote (emphasis mine):

“One of the great rules of journalism is that you don’t discuss your sources, so long as you establish the information is reliable and in the public interest,” said Benedict Brogan, assistant editor of The Daily Telegraph, in an e-mailed statement.

Is that really a rule of journalism, much less a great one?

I don't think so. Some sources require protection, the Deep Throat-like ones who come forward with important information but can't be identified because they could lose their jobs or worse for leaking something to the media. But recently the granting of anonymity has become commonplace, given to random people on the street giving their opinion about things because they just don't want their full names in the paper. (Not that knowing their names really changes anything, mind you.)

Not discussing where you got your scoops isn't a great rule of journalism, it's an unfortunate consequence of newspaper competition, and one of the places where journalism takes a back seat to self-marketing and self-congratulation.

I'm not necessarily saying that the Telegraph shouldn't have paid for the information, provided it treated it with the highest amount of skepticism. Nor am I necessarily saying it shouldn't disclose who or what sold them the information (though a discussion of their motivation would certainly be helpful). These are grey areas of journalism ethics.

I'm saying that when the Telegraph hides this information from the public, it shouldn't be proud of it.

Montreal Geography Trivia No. 38

A riddle this time:

I affect every other that crosses me, but not necessarily every one I touch. And I'm the only one in Montreal that does this. Or at least I was before the merger.

What am I? What do I do to others? And who is the other that's (kinda) like me?

UPDATE: Three of you independently got the first two right: It's St. Laurent Blvd., which splits the island between East and West. Any streets that cross it (actually, any streets that can be found on both sides, whether or not they actually cross) get East and West designations. Those that are only on one side (even if they intersect St. Laurent) don't have them.

UPDATE (June 2): Michel K gets the last part right: Gouin Blvd. in Roxboro splits three streets - 3rd Ave., 4th Ave. and 5th Ave. - into North and South. (Two others, 1st Ave. and 2nd Ave., have North designations but no southern counterpart.)

Kate also notes Montreal West, which is split North-South by the tracks.