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Most recently Graham Richardson has been the CTV Ottawa chief anchor, and has appeared on various CTV network news programs as a commentator and host. Also a regular fill in for Vassy Kapelos when she is away on her radio program. In his 31 year broadcast career Richardson has worked for CBC, Global and CTV. Graham Richardson announced on Thursday evening that he is leaving CTV news to pursue some new opportunities outside of media.
From Broadcast Dialogue..
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He will have more to say in July when he officially makes his exit.
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I remember him on Global over 20 years ago, I believe he was the Queen’s Park bureau chief back then.
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He was on ITV (Global) Edmonton) before he made his move to Global Toronto. He was great back then too.
I think other than CFTO's weekday noon and 6 PM, CTV Ottawa's 6 PM news is the only newscast across the network that has two anchors (please correct me if I'm wrong). Maybe behind the scenes there was some gentle nudging from Bell to get him off the books, and an opportunity for Graham came up at the right time.
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Friday is Richardson's final broadcast in Ottawa. He had a lengthy chat on CTV Morning Live, reminiscing about his years in the business.
Meantime, the network has announced who will officially replace Richardson in the air chair.
Patricia Boal named anchor of CTV Ottawa News at Six
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Seems Mr. Richardson isn't exactly letting the grass grow under his feet. He's already signed up to join Edelman, a government relations and PR firm, that operates in Canada and a number of other countries.
Last edited by BowmanvilleBob (July 9, 2024 8:48 am)
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It's more than likely he'd already landed this gig before he handed in his resignation.
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RadioActive wrote:
It's more than likely he'd already landed this gig before he handed in his resignation.
No doubt. Still, it's looking like another record year for senior broadcast journalists across the country leaving the industry to join PR/advocacy firms or staring their own consulting gigs, whether through voluntary or involuntary departures. The loss of this level of experienced talent doesn't bode well for the future.
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Kelly Cutrara had a segment on her AM640 show Monday featuring a study that shows younger demos are getting their news not just from the Internet - but from comments left on the various sections. Yes, the comment section. Where there's no need to fact check what's being said by people who aren't qualified to be journalists and can often just make stuff up.
Maybe Graham has seen the writing on the wall and is getting out while the getting is good.
God help us all!
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A recent perspective I learned related to this phenomenon.
"Within a week of actual research, we just threw out the term information literacy," says Yasmin Green, Jigsaw's CEO. Gen Zers, it turns out, are "not on a linear journey to evaluate the veracity of anything." Instead, they're engaged in what the researchers call "information sensibility" — a "socially informed" practice that relies on "folk heuristics of credibility."
In other words, Gen Zers know the difference between rock-solid news and AI-generated memes. They just don't care.
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RadioActive wrote:
Kelly Cutrara had a segment on her AM640 show Monday featuring a study that shows younger demos are getting their news not just from the Internet - but from comments left on the various sections. Yes, the comment section. Where there's no need to fact check what's being said by people who aren't qualified to be journalists and can often just make stuff up.
Maybe Graham has seen the writing on the wall and is getting out while the getting is good.
God help us all!
"That's not news. But, that too, is reality."
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Keith Morrison, who fled Canadian hard news media to go to Los Angeles eventually left Los Angeles TV news because, as he put it, consultants told his station to always lead with stories about animals.
Then he went on to star is TV documentary news that led to him being ridiculed by the likes of Bill Hader.
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This is a very long and detailed article, but it's interesting. It talks about the future of TV news (and whether it has one) and what recent studies say Gen Z want to see in news, and what - if anything - will make them pay attention.
Local TV news takes Gen Z beyond broadcast