M.J. said:Also, big, flashy studios found on a lot of American stations are the exception in Canada. Although plasma screens are now commonplace, most stations still operate local news from very small studios (notwithstanding CHUM). In Ottawa, for example, CBOT has one anchor either behind a desk or standing next to a plasma screen delivering news, all in a small, plain studio; CJOH has its anchors behind a plain desk with the CTV logo on the front, with the Ottawa skyline in the background, and some maple leaf motifs to the sides. Stations in Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal tend to broadcast from larger, open concept studios with more screens and views of newsrooms, but are generally far more subdued than American stations. The focus is on the news, not the set (again, not withstanding CHUM). CHUM has tried a more American-style presentation in various markets across Canada, and have failed miserably in almost every case. I'll put it another way. WDIV's "The Power of 4" would never work anywhere in Canada.
The CBC outlet I watched all the time was CBET-TV Channel 9 in Windsor. David Kyle was their local 10pm anchor when I lived in Detroit for four years in the mid-90's. I liked their local news, but as M.J. said, there's not enough local hard news. I think one reason for that is because overall, there's less crime in Canada. I would go on a date and she and I would walk down a dark alley at 3 in the morning and not be afraid of getting robbed. There was no homelessness or "street people", and there's also gun control in Canada. For a population of more than 175,000 people, it's a very safe city. I remember then-mayor Mike Hurst going on TV regularly and always having an upbeat positive attitude about his city and his country. I think you have to create human interest stories just to fill time.
The down side...the media is for the most part, government controlled. This, I'm sure has an impact to some degree on the amount of national news that comes out of Ottawa. Canada has also had the unfortunate reputation of having one of the most corrupt forms of government in the Western Hemisphere. I hope it has gotten better over the years.
Fred...to my knowledge, Peter Mansbridge was still doing the CBC national news when I was in Detroit. Proof positive you don't have to be pretty to be an effective journalist. He's not easy on the eyes by any means, but I'll bet every Canadian takes his word as gospel!
For the most part, the CBC is an effective news operation. It's very basic, yet it does the job. A co-anchor, overdecorated set, and a contingency of blow-dried poofs on that same set bantering back and forth is just for show. It's not about show with the CBC. It is what it is.