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CHEK Lays Off 20+
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CRS
January 29, 2008, 3:00am Report to Moderator

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Tell it like it is Bruce.  But I'm sure some young punk who thinks that TV land is grand will fill the thread and slam those, like Bruce, for lamenting the way things were...saying "the good ol' days weren't THAT great."  and on and on and on...


Local Radio OUT!!
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boomer
January 29, 2008, 3:19am Report to Moderator
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This is absolute crap.  Their mandate is to serve the Island and if they are not willing to do it then let someone else do it.

CHEK has been a solid product since david Armstrong started it in the fifties. The A Channel raided a good anchor in Hudson Mack and reporter Meribeth Burton however the rest of the crew are rank amateurs and laughable  (Sorry weatherguy I laugh AT you-- not with you.  You're not funny )

Islanders-  Speak up!!  Tell the CRTC to pull the license if the beancounters try to get away with this.

BOOMER
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FRED
January 29, 2008, 3:37am Report to Moderator
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Yeah, that weather guy is Ed Bain, and he's arguably the most popular broadcaster on the Island.  
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puhlease
January 29, 2008, 4:29am Report to Moderator
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Hey now!!! Its real crappy what's going on at CHEK. Its certainly not the station I grew up watching, but there's no need to bash the talent there, especially Ed Bain. He's a class act.

Be mad at Canwest for this little science experiment, thats bound to look real rocky in the fall.

However there's some great on-air talent at CHEK right now. I'm a huge fan of the early news anchor (Julie), and Jenifer and Scott are good on their own but haven't quite figured out their footing as a duo.
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Cued_Up
January 29, 2008, 4:37am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from boomer
The A Channel raided a good anchor in Hudson Mack


soooooorrry, he may be a nice guy. I understand he has a great sense of humour too, but hmmm, kinda dull after awhile....
I followed him over to A Channel and lasted for the better part of the honeymoon, then tried to return to CHEK, but his replacements at that time Ed Watson and Sophie Lui didn't grab me, so I went back to my good and reliable channel eight bctvglobal at 5, Global National 5:30 into Tony/Chris at Six. As a born Islander, I can't seem to focus in on either Victoria tv stations for news... I don't find the 'current' anchors on CHEK strong enough, not seasoned confidence and trustworthiness still counts and I believe its a matter of building over time. I am not condemning or trying to deny the current team all their efforts, their good, just lacking the much needed anchor to lead them into future days.
CHEK needs a good strong male news anchor.... My suggestion, Bob Kendrick of KUSA in Denver, Colorado. Yes, this guy is not only a former CHEKER, but ahome-grown Victoria boy who went by the name of Terry Roberts, (sports/news anchor and CHEK-A-Round with Gordie Tupper. he also worked at AM 900 (CJVI)

I believe this man is ready to come home...

http://www.9news.com/company/bios/article.aspx?storyid=69842

.
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Backin72
January 29, 2008, 1:21pm Report to Moderator
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In related CanWest layoff news:

Quoted Text

Canwest lays off specialty TV station employees

Fifty media workers at Canwest Global Specialty Television station in Winnipeg were handed layoff notices Monday, according to one of the workers who lost his job.

Canwest Global Communications is winding down the specialty television operation that broadcasts stations like TVTropolis and MysteryTV in stages this winter. The first layoffs take effect in February.
By October, the Global Specialty Television will be history in Winnipeg, the worker said.

Operations are being moved to Toronto, now that Global has merged with Alliance Atlantis Communications, workers were told.

The station is based on the 21st floor of the Richardson Building at Portage and Main.

In November, Global TV network announced 200 layoffs and a reduction of local programming.
The layoffs were anticipated following Global's merger with Alliance, which broadcasts a stable of popular specialty TV channels.

A corporate spokesman for Global, led by the Winnipeg Asper family, could not be reached for comment. When Canwest moved its news wire service from Winnipeg to Ottawa last year, some critics questioned the Asper family's commitment to their home town.


http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/subscriber/business/local/story/4113663p-4709381c.html

Nice. The Specialty channels was 6 1/2 years young, so most of the employees don't get much.  Many bought new homes in the last year and started families.  Very sad.
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CRS
January 29, 2008, 3:47pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from puhlease
Hey now!!! Its real crappy what's going on at CHEK. Its certainly not the station I grew up watching, but there's no need to bash the talent there, especially Ed Bain. He's a class act.


Actually I think Boomer was slamming that clown Williams on A Channel and not Bain, if you read his thread again.



Local Radio OUT!!
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MAILMAN
January 30, 2008, 6:32am Report to Moderator
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Could"A" Channel be next?  Watch out Huddy.....
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TommyD
January 30, 2008, 4:32pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from Bruce Payne
I worked at CHEK and sure there was some bitching about the company. show me any company which does not have that. The people who are getting the axe are  25 to 30 year people not one and two year people. That is a lot of talent to waste. I am glad you people are not looking for work after spending 30 years with a company. That aside there will be a loss of news coverage for island councils and communities and that too concerns me. When the word filters out and it will there will be some people complaining about including politicians. I already have heard from two MLA's will be complaining about it. I know it is the nature of the beast these days but you don't have to lay down and let them walk on you if you can stand up and speak about it. If nothing else it shows you are not happy with going along with the crows. Thanks Bruce Payne


Bruce, I feel your Payne.     Small town radio shut down after 28 years.


"always leave them wanting more"
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CRS
January 30, 2008, 6:56pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from TommyD


Bruce, I feel your Payne.     Small town radio shut down after 28 years.


But Tommy, you just KNOW what those currently in the industry will say that think nothing's wrong.  Something like: "the reason small town radio can cut the mustard anymore is because there are many more media options (ie: internet, satellite radio) nowadays that small markets can't compete with."  Which begs the question, how many people do you know in Chilliwack, Hope, Boston Bar that have satellite radios???  Local newspapers found a way to survive, etc.  Nuff said.  

BTW I totally agree, it's sad to see smaller market TV stations going through the same angst we went through 10 years ago.  


Local Radio OUT!!
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TommyD
January 30, 2008, 7:50pm Report to Moderator

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Quoted from CRS


But Tommy, you just KNOW what those currently in the industry will say that think nothing's wrong.  Something like: "the reason small town radio can cut the mustard anymore is because there are many more media options (ie: internet, satellite radio) nowadays that small markets can't compete with."  Which begs the question, how many people do you know in Chilliwack, Hope, Boston Bar that have satellite radios???  Local newspapers found a way to survive, etc.  Nuff said.  

BTW I totally agree, it's sad to see smaller market TV stations going through the same angst we went through 10 years ago.  


Too true.  It's just unfortunate that programming that really matters to the community doesn't pay the bills.  (you trying selling ads on the funeral announcements  )



"always leave them wanting more"
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Kahuna
January 30, 2008, 11:28pm Report to Moderator

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Location: Vancouver EMA
The technical feat Global is trying to accomplish in theory still has yet to prove itself in practice. Using broadband lines for communication and picture and robotics. I hear the new Vancouver broadcast center was still just an empty room after the holidays. The plan was to go live with Maritime stations in March! My guess is that CHEK might have a year or 2 before they get it up and running.

Technology has seen a lot of jobs go bye bye in print and broadcast. My friend's Dad used to be a linotype operator in the print business. Radio has been voice tracked for decades and traffic, payroll, and sales have all been amalgamated.  I imagine the technology will pull it off someday. Encourage your kids to be pipefitters or nurses. The TV field is narrowing.

  
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SAM
January 31, 2008, 1:55am Report to Moderator
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CHEKing In
CHEK-TV’s newscasts will be produced in Vancouver by fall 2008


Will television news survive the digital revolution?
By Jason Youmans
MondayMag.com
January 30th, 2008

Your Island’s own CHEK News” may need a new motto come fall 2008. That’s when the real-life backdrop that sets the scene behind CHEK-TV’s ever-chipper news anchors will become a work of digital wizardry as parent company CanWest MediaWorks Inc. shifts production of local newscasts across the country to four “state-of-the-art” broadcast centres.  

Richard Konwick, president of Communications, Energy and Paperworkers (CEP) Local 815, the union representing approximately 85 CanWest employees on Vancouver Island, says 15 full time CHEK-TV workers could see their positions slashed as Leonard Asper’s media monster simultaneously trims expenses and enters the digital age by introducing computer-generated sets and remote-operated cameras—a move that will transfer technical production aspects of Victoria newscasts to Vancouver. Moreover, red flags are being raised by the CEP that broadcasting newscasts from outside local stations contravenes the terms of CanWest’s station licenses.  

A comprehensive November 9, 2007 complaint filed by CEP vice-president of media Peter Murdoch to the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) summarizes the situation in one fundamental criticism: “To the best of CEP’s knowledge, the current terms and conditions under which most CanWest stations operate are set out in CRTC decisions from 2000 and 2001. CEP submits that by removing production responsibility and decision-making authority about its local newscasts from its television stations, CanWest is now, and will continue to be, operating in breach of these decisions. It is essentially transforming these undertakings from originating programming stations operated for the benefit of local communities by employees located in those communities, into something entirely different.”

The CanWest plan was first unveiled to the public in an October 4 press release laden with the typical corporate euphemisms that accompany any round of job cuts: “Streamlining local production enables stronger focus on local content generation, generates substantial operational efficiencies.”  

An internal memo circulated to CanWest staff the same day—complete with a “Not to be distributed outside of CanWest” caveat—describes those operational efficiencies in detail, including the installation of high definition cameras to be controlled from the Vancouver Broadcast Centre.

Stage lighting, microphone levels and teleprompters will also be controlled from the broadcast centre, as will the generation of virtual sets and graphics, while local news anchors will deliver the day’s stories in front of a green screen taking cues from a director in Vancouver. Stories edited in Victoria will be sent via broadband connection to the broadcast centre, along with suggestions from the local producer about the best order to run the stories, where it will be assembled into a consumable package, sent to CanWest master control in Calgary before being flung back to Victoria viewers.

CHEK-TV news director Rob Germain takes exception to the bleak picture painted by the communication workers union.  

“Our news gathering is not going to be affected. We’re still going to have reporters and photographers here,” says Germain. “They’ll be assigned by somebody in Victoria, they’ll be edited by somebody in Victoria, news will be produced here in Victoria. We’re even creating a technical producer role here. The heart of the station is news, and news will continue to be produced as it is now.”

Under the terms of its license, CHEK-TV is required to provide 23 hours of locally-generated content every week. Given lax CRTC regulations, CHEK’s local contribution currently sits at 17.5 hours, as the 11 p.m. nightly news is repeated early the following morning. Because of staffing issues, the station had occasionally aired pre-recorded versions of its Sunday night news in 2007, though this situation has been rectified.

CanWest Broadcasting’s Vice-president of News and Information Steve Wyatt says the company is simply trying to stay one step ahead of the competition in an ever-shifting media climate where the internet threatens to undermine viewer numbers and advertising revenues. In the fourth quarter of 2007, CanWest’s media operations lost $57 million, but offset the loss by selling radio stations to fellow broadcast behemoth Corus Entertainment and divesting itself of its New Zealand television subsidiary for a combined $257 million.

“We have 15 television stations across the country, all of which were using technology that is virtually obsolete,” says Wyatt. “We couldn’t invest in every single one of them and still move forward and stay in business under the current model. Whenever you introduce new technologies to keep yourself in a forward momentum, there are job losses, and it’s really unfortunate. The challenge now is that we’re going to make every effort to ensure all those people who are facing a layoff because of this introduction of new technology will be given an opportunity to learn the new technology and move across the country to any of our various operations.”

CanWest says 200 employees will lose their jobs in the nationwide shake-up. An unofficial e-mail circulated to local media outlets claims that number could be closer to 300. Meanwhile, the company has promised to create 50 new positions at its broadcast centres.

Job cuts have also been an ongoing theme at CanWest’s print publications as well. Circulation of Vancouver’s two major CanWest dailies, the Sun and the Province, are at the same level they were in 1957, according to media analyst Marc Edge, whose book Asper Nation details the family’s slash-and-burn approach to mass media management. In November 2007, announcements were made that up to 15 editorial staff in each newsroom would be shown the door—this at publications where there are half the editorial positions today as there were 15 years ago.

The shift to the Vancouver broadcast centre is not the first salvo fired in CanWest’s move toward operational centralization at the Victoria station. In 2004, 12 employees were let go when the company moved all its master control capabilities to Calgary.

Since that time, content originating in Victoria, or any of CanWest’s 15 Canadian TV outlets, has been sent to Calgary and then bounced back to the local station for transmission. With the addition of the new Vancouver broadcast facilities, stories will originate in Victoria, be assembled in Vancouver, be beamed to Calgary and then back to viewers in Victoria. The Vancouver centre will also be responsible for the production and broadcast of CanWest’s Winnipeg newscasts.

CEP local 815 president and CHEK-TV five o’clock news producer Richard Konwick says at issue is the station’s ability to respond to the community’s needs in ways that befit a local television station.

“We have concerns about the ability of the newsroom to respond in a crisis situation like a fire or an earthquake,” says Konwick. “There have been several occasions in the past where we have broken into regular programming—sometimes for sustained periods—during snowstorms, fires, tsunami warnings. These are the kinds of services a local station should provide to the community, and we feel these will be greatly compromised if this goes ahead.”

News director Rob Germain doesn’t see it that way.

“I think the opposite may be true,” he says. “Currently there are long stretches of the day where we don’t have a technical crew available. We can break into programming at any time with our newsroom camera with just one person to give a bulletin, but to do a substantive news coverage of a breaking event, we need a large crew. With this new technology we can utilize technical crews across the country, not just the one in Vancouver—if there were a disruption in Vancouver because of a problem we could use a crew in one of the other broadcast centres to get on the air immediately to get the news out to our viewers.”

When CanWest acquired Victoria’s CH (now CHEK) Television from Western International Communications in 2000, it was on the condition the station create and broadcast local content separate from that of the former BCTV, which CanWest also acquired in the contentious deal, and whose signal also reaches Island viewers. While it may still be able to do the former, the latter seems to have disappeared from CanWest’s mandate.

Since filing its complaint with the CRTC in November, the CEP has continued to push the regulator for a public inquiry into CanWest’s plans.

“It is particularly telling that for the most part, [CanWest’s] reply simply asserts that [the company] is complying with its licenses. Unfortunately, since assertions do not constitute evidence, the serious questions we have raised about CanWest’s Broadcast Centres remain unanswered,” wrote Murdoch in a January 9 dispatch to the CRTC chairman Konrad von Finckenstein.

It’s a safe bet, however, that the alleged safe-guard of the public interest will find some way to justify CanWest’s move.

“I have no faith in the CRTC,” says CHEK-TV’s Konwick. “I think the CRTC has shown it responds to the corporate agenda. Its track record has been to act as an industry rubber stamp.”  

The regulator has been wholly supportive of untrammeled media concentration in the country over the past decades and seems willing to turn a blind eye to cost-cutting steps companies take to keep their bloated empires afloat, even when those steps damage the quality of content the Canadian public receives. This approach is reflected in comments made by the commission’s former chair Madame Francoise Bertrand when it authorized CanWest’s acquisition of WIC’s television assets.

“In today’s decisions, the CRTC has recognized the importance of consolidating the Canadian radio and television industries, while at the same time promoting the diversity of voices and choices. The stronger our companies, the more they can contribute to achieving the cultural objectives set out in the Broadcasting Act”, said Bertrand.

It’s unclear where slick graphics and virtual reality sets are mentioned in the tenets of Canada’s Broadcasting Act, but CanWest’s Wyatt is excited nonetheless.

“The really interesting part about this, and the one that will have the most immediate impact on our viewers in Victoria, is that they will see us generating on air, a dramatic new look through this virtual set technology,” he says. “It’s not so much the virtual set in and of itself that matters, but what that virtual set becomes as a storytelling tool.”

After all, in an age where style trumps substance, who wouldn’t be excited about the changes in store for “your Island’s own” local newscast?

http://web.bcnewsgroup.com/portals-code/list.cgi?paper=117&cat=23&id=1148015&more=0
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Craic
January 31, 2008, 2:10am Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Logintoday
Hey, on these threads we talk about radio, and programming from other parts of the country, to listeners in Vancouver etc.
So what's the difference for these Biggies programming "local news" from a different city?  None.
It's whats happening today ... live with it!


You can't be serious? No difference programming 'local' content from a different city?
As for the last comment, history is replete with people being told that there is no use in speaking up and 'to live with it'. I agree with Mr. Payne, who understands the importance of community and local-ness in radio and TV programming.
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Kahuna
January 31, 2008, 8:48pm Report to Moderator

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A Channel is sure to follow with "down sizing", although CTV has deep deep pockets how can they let the money bleed continue.
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