Former CBC insider trashes its one-sided, ‘thoughtless cheerleading’

The CBC is at a watershed moment, observes longtime CBC insider David Cayley. The previous era of Canada’s publicly funded broadcaster has exhausted itself, Cayley concludes, and in the new era that’s unfolding, what the country desperately needs and deserves is a dialogue, not a monologue.

“Everything ends in time,” he observes, “and I believe that (CBC’s) properties, its idea that it would belong to the audience, that it would stake its legitimacy on the audience, has brought it to a place where it has only one preferred audience — and can’t address the rest of the country, and can’t get outside or above or beyond the assumptions it shares with that audience — so it’s become a kind of boutique.”

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CBC hired 84 percent racialized, Indigenous, or disabled while having job vacancies for top talent: Internal report

The CBC far exceeded its “equity representation” target in the last fiscal year, with 84.1 percent of new hires being “Indigenous Peoples, persons with disabilities, and racialized people,” according to the public broadcaster’s new corporate report. In the “reflecting contemporary Canada” subsection, the report shows the CBC had aimed for 65 percent of new hires to fall within the three groups, but surpassed it by 19 percentage points.

Some employment lawyers believe the CBC’s fixation on race and disabilities in its hiring process is limiting the broadcaster from accurately reflecting the Canadian population, and could fall into hiring discrimination.

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The CBC’s Burqa Wearing Misogyny Expert Is More Butch Than Their Masculinity Expert

Misogynistic ideas made popular online are popping up in Canadian classrooms, survey says

In her Grade 8 to Grade 12 classrooms, Annie Ohana says ideas with toxic undertones are often not far away.

Like earlier this school year, when she was handing out cups for an activity, and a boy asked if any part of it would “lower [his] testosterone.” The student conceded he didn’t actually know what testosterone was or how it impacted his body but, Ohana says, he was familiar with the misinformation that circulates online that claims men who have low testosterone are less masculine.

“I know exactly where that kind of language comes from. It is very much from… the manosphere,” Ohana told CBC News.


The CBC is Progressive Hell. The manliness person has an NGO. Of course.

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CBC’s five-year plan includes grooming kids & foreigners to build audience

OTTAWA – CBC/Radio-Canada says it wants to expand its audience by pitching itself to Canadians who “under-value” its services — or don’t watch, listen to or read its offerings at all.

In its new five-year strategic plan, released Tuesday evening, the public broadcaster says it can’t “afford to rely solely on existing users and fans as confirmation of its value to the public.”

The strategy calls on CBC/Radio-Canada to build up its audience by reaching out to children and youth, newcomers and “non-users or dissatisfied users.”

What value?

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CBC ombudsman slams bias, says network must be clearer with viewers

The CBC needs to come clean with Canadians about how it picks its guests and frames its stories, according to its own ombudsman, after complaints of bias over coverage of gender identity programs in schools.

Blacklock’s Reporter says the rebuke followed a 2023 episode of CBC Radio’s Front Burner that addressed nationwide protests against gender identity curriculum but only featured two guests — both transgender and both connected to sexual minority activism.

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David Cayley: CBC actively suppressed credible COVID dissent

On March 22, 2020, CBC News Network interviewed Dr. Richard Schabas. Schabas had been Ontario’s chief medical officer of health between 1987 and 1997 and had appeared, or been heard, on the CBC, by his estimate, “literally hundreds” of times before. For more than 30 years, he had been a regular and trusted source on public health matters, and he had fully justified the CBC’s confidence in him. During the SARS outbreak in 2003, for example, Schabas was the chief of staff at one of the affected hospitals, York Central. At a time when there was widespread panic and some models were predicting 120 million deaths worldwide, he determined that the disease was not sufficiently infectious to spread in community settings and predicted that it would die out as soon as proper infection control measures were adopted in hospitals. He was proved right.

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David Cayley: How CBC botched coverage of the Freedom Convoy

The CBC once imagined its audience as a single community, bound by shared interests and a common national purpose. In the 1960s, producers like Patrick Watson were taught to ask of every program: “How will it serve the audience?” That question presupposed a public that was coherent, if not always unanimous — a public that might quarrel over facts and policies, but still inhabited the same civic space.

That assumption no longer holds. The ideal of a singular Canadian audience has shattered. A dramatic fragmentation has occurred, and Canadians now divide on first principles. Where there was once consensus, there is now dissensus.

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CARPAY: Outside of the CBC’s echo chamber, everyone is ‘far-right’

When the CBC dislikes a person or an opinion, our taxpayer-funded broadcaster calls it “controversial.” In CBC-speak, “controversial” means conservative, libertarian, religious, traditionalist, classical liberal, or otherwise not in line with woke ideology. For the CBC, there is nothing “controversial” about a man who “identifies” as a woman having an absolute right to enter women’s washrooms and other female spaces. Only those who seek to protect safe spaces for women are “controversial.”

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Former CBC host Travis Dhanraj files human rights complaint against broadcaster

Travis Dhanraj, the former CBC News Network host who denounced the Crown Corporation for “dysfunction at the highest level” in an internal email from July that went viral, has filed a human rights complaint against the CBC, claiming discrimination based on colour, disability, and race.

The CBC is about as diverse as a Maoist Struggle Session.

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Jesse Kline: Ottawa spent $1.5B and all I got was this over-priced Gem streaming service

Since it launched in 2018, CBC’s Gem streaming service has been a slap in the face to Canadians. Ottawa takes around $1.5 billion a year out of our pockets, ostensibly so the public broadcaster can provide reliable news and support the domestic film industry, but if Canadians want to watch CBC News Network without a cable package, or tax-funded programming without ads, they have to fork over an additional $5.99 a month.

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CBC going to court to fight disclosure order for Gem subscriber numbers

OTTAWA — CBC/Radio-Canada is going to court to defend its refusal to disclose subscriber numbers for its Gem streaming service.

A spokesperson says the public broadcaster will make its case in Federal Court, after the information commissioner ordered CBC to make available the number of paid subscribers to Gem.

Everything is a secret with our public broadcaster.

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CBC avoided term ‘terrorist’ in coverage of Palestinian violence, letter reveals

CBC executives advised journalists to avoid using the term “terrorist” in coverage of Palestinian violence, citing its political sensitivity, according to a newly released internal letter.

The 2023 letter by George Achi, then CBC’s director of journalism standards, explained the broadcaster’s reluctance to label attackers as terrorists.

h/t Mauser

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