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I can't say I've heard of all of these, while others are familiar. Some are for TV, the rest for radio. Some are still on, others are long gone and forgotten. (And notice the repeated spelling of the word "Color" with no letter "u.")
See if any jog your memory.
Radio
1968:
1973:
1991:
Undated:
TV
1969:
1971:
1974:
1992:
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I remember most of these. The picture of a very young Barbara Frum is kind of neat.
Also Lloyd in his younger years before he needed a ton of blue eye shadow and rouge.
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How about "This is the law" with Hart Pomerantz, Paul Soles and others
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Loved 'As It Happens'. Barbara Frum was the best.
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Some trivia you may not know.
Paul Soles of "This is the Law" was the voice of Spider Man in the original cartoon TV series.
Austin Willis was in the James Bond classic movie "Goldfinger."
He was the man being cheated at cards by Gert Frobe's Goldfinger at the hotel in Miami.
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I remember all of the radio shows and some of the TV shows. Another great radio show was Finkleman's 45s I listened just about every Saturday night. Then there were some of the local programs on CBL Radio. Bruce Smith in the AM and Elwood Glover in the afternoon.
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Calhame wrote:
How about "This is the law" with Hart Pomerantz, Paul Soles and others
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I almost forgot about this, and I don't know why.
Clyde Gilmour's show was must-listen to radio.
Also he was my next door apartment neighbour as a tween kid in Vancouver.
I used to talk to him all the time.
Gilmour's Albums was one of the longest-running radio shows on CBC Radio, and was hosted by former newspaper reporter Clyde Gilmour.The show started in 1956, and its format consisted of selections of music, hand-picked by Gilmour, many from his own vast personal record collection. The show, which was an hour long, defined the eclectic format, with a mix of opera, chamber music, show tunes, and jazz, and often concluded with a humorous musical number or comedy sketch. Every genre save rock and roll was played on his show.
Last edited by newsguy1 (November 10, 2024 7:47 pm)
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newsguy1 wrote:
I almost forgot about this, and I don't know why.
Clyde Gilmour's show was must-listen to radio.
Also he was my next door apartment neighbour as a tween kid in Vancouver.
I used to talk to him all the time.
Gilmour's Albums was one of the longest-running radio shows on CBC Radio, and was hosted by former newspaper reporter Clyde Gilmour.The show started in 1956, and its format consisted of selections of music, hand-picked by Gilmour, many from his own vast personal record collection. The show, which was an hour long, defined the eclectic format, with a mix of opera, chamber music, show tunes, and jazz, and often concluded with a humorous musical number or comedy sketch. Every genre save rock and roll was played on his show.
Yes! Absolutely one of my favourites. That was when Radio 1 still had some music programs. It was followed by Continental Rhapsody with Ivan Romanoff.
Last edited by turkeytop (November 10, 2024 9:12 pm)
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I wonder why they used the American spelling of "color" in the print ads rather than the Canadian spelling we all grew up with "colour".
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The only real explanation I can fathom is that the TV Guide, where those ads came from, was printed and laid out in the U.S., so to them, "colour" was naturally "color." They probably had no idea about the Canadian spelling.
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The 1991 ad brings back many memories of when my dad would have what's now known as CBC Radio One tuned in all day, usually via the Peterborough transmitter (CBCP-FM, first at 93.5 and now 98.7)... started with Ontario Morning, followed by Morningside, and the three shows in that ad. In the evening, The World At Six, As It Happens (with the classic Moe Koffman theme song), and the rest of the evening's shows, including "Ideas" with Lister Sinclair.
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turkeytop wrote:
I remember all of the radio shows and some of the TV shows. Another great radio show was Finkleman's 45s I listened just about every Saturday night. Then there were some of the local programs on CBL Radio. Bruce Smith in the AM and Elwood Glover in the afternoon.
Bruce Smith. His morning show was called "Toast & Jamboree" I think Walter Bowles [spelling may be off] did the news.
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zed wrote:
I wonder why they used the American spelling of "color" in the print ads rather than the Canadian spelling we all grew up with "colour".
My guess is that it might have been because of the past practice of many Canadian publications to use American spellings. From Wikipedia's article on Canadian English:
Throughout part of the 20th century, some Canadian newspapers adopted American spellings,[43] for example, color as opposed to the British-based colour. Some of the most substantial historical spelling data can be found in Dollinger (2010)[44] and Grue (2013).[45] The use of such spellings was the long-standing practice of the Canadian Press perhaps since that news agency's inception, but visibly the norm prior to World War II.[46] The practice of dropping the letter u in such words was also considered a labour-saving technique during the early days of printing in which movable type was set manually.[46] Canadian newspapers also received much of their international content from American press agencies, so it was much easier for editorial staff to leave the spellings from the wire services as provided.[47]
In the 1990s, Canadian newspapers began to adopt the British spelling variants such as -our endings, notably with The Globe and Mail changing its spelling policy in October 1990.[48] Other Canadian newspapers adopted similar changes later that decade, such as the Southam newspaper chain's conversion in September 1998.[49] The Toronto Star adopted this new spelling policy in September 1997 after that publication's ombudsman discounted the issue earlier in 1997.[47][50] The Star had always avoided using recognized Canadian spelling, citing the Gage Canadian Dictionary in their defence. Controversy around this issue was frequent. When the Gage Dictionary finally adopted standard Canadian spelling, the Star followed suit. Some publishers, e.g. Maclean's, continue to prefer American spellings.
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The Eclectic Circus on CBC Radio.
Hosted by Allan Mcfee.
Played everything from Bach to Zappa.
His comments were hilarious.
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There was also the Max Ferguson Show with Max and Allan McFee.
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RadioActive wrote:
The only real explanation I can fathom is that the TV Guide, where those ads came from, was printed and laid out in the U.S., so to them, "colour" was naturally "color." They probably had no idea about the Canadian spelling.
Lorne's explanation would be the right one. No magazine regardless of where it is printed would change the spelling or alter anything in an ad. The ads are sent "camera ready" and color was how CBC and most Canadian TV stations were spelling the word back then. TV Guide didn't produce the ads in their magazine, the space was bought and the advertiser provided the advertisement for the magazine.
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I, too, like Lorne's explanation. Although you'd think an institution like the CBC, created to specifically reflect Canadian culture, would have gone for the Canadian spelling.
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Back in the 60's and 70's when these ads ran, the Canadian culture did spell colour without the u. It was in the 90's as Lorne's post mentioned that the British spelling was mostly brought back and that is what we see today. You still see the American spelling occasionally on words like harbour or flavour in advertising, but normally it is now with the u and has been for around 30 years, with the exception of some logos or company names.