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Roger Abbott, late member of Royal Canadian Air Farce; Vik Adhopia, reporter covering affairs of Newfoundland and Labrador; Kate Aitken, radio and television personality of the 1930s to 1950s; Madeleine Allakariallak, former anchor of Igalaaq on CFYK-DT; Andrew Allan, national head of CBC Radio Drama from 1943 to 1955
Individuals in this category live in the United States and/or report primarily for American news outlets. Pages in category "Canadian expatriate journalists in the United States" The following 34 pages are in this category, out of 34 total.
The Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB) is a trade association representing the interests of commercial radio and television broadcasters in Canada. It is co-located with the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council in Ottawa .
This is a list of Canadian television personalities. It should only include people associated with non-fiction programming, not actors. It should only include people associated with non-fiction programming, not actors.
In 1992, Pouliot was inducted into the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame, and in 1997, Concordia University granted him a Doctorate of Laws "Honoris Causa". [ 4 ] Pouliot supported a number of philanthropic causes, most notably the "Telethon of Stars", [ 2 ] first broadcast in English and French on CFCF-TV in 1977, benefiting ...
Brian Williams – Canadian sportscaster best known for Olympic coverages, former CBC anchor and current anchor at CTV/TSN; Fred Williams – former executive of Parliamentary Press Gallery, and journalist to various Canadian newspapers; Nancy Wilson – former CBC and CTV reporter, anchor, and host; Paul Workman – CTV News foreign correspondent
NABA's full members, who represent network broadcasters both public and private, work together with their colleagues including national broadcasting associations, speciality services, service providers and vendors to provide a common voice for the North American broadcast community.
In 2002, at the Canadian Association of Broadcasters annual meeting in Vancouver, Jim Robson was inducted to the CAB Broadcast Hall of Fame. [ 13 ] The broadcast booth at Rogers Arena is named after him.