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Peter Mansbridge OC (born July 6, 1948) is a British-born Canadian retired news anchor. From 1988 to 2017, he was chief correspondent for CBC News and anchor of The National, CBC Television's flagship nightly newscast. He was also host of CBC News Network's Mansbridge One on One.
Mansbridge One on One was a weekly TV program on CBC Television featuring CBC's News' chief correspondent Peter Mansbridge who is a 12-time Gemini Award recipient and officer of the Order of Canada. [1] The program began airing in 1999, [2] and had featured interviews with the likes of Hillary Clinton. [3]
1976–1978: Peter Kent; 1978–1988: Knowlton Nash; 1988–1992: Peter Mansbridge; 1992–1995: Alison Smith; 1995–2017: Peter Mansbridge; 2017–2020: Adrienne Arsenault, Rosemary Barton, Andrew Chang, Ian Hanomansing [1] 2020–present: Adrienne Arsenault and Andrew Chang
CBC Television (also known as CBC TV, or simply CBC) [1] [2] is a Canadian English-language broadcast television network owned by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the national public broadcaster. The network began operations on September 6, 1952, with its main studios at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre in Toronto.
Following Frum's death in 1992, and with plans underway to move their daily news and current affairs hour to 9 pm, the CBC chose to also revamp its entire approach to TV news programming. In the fall of 1992, CBC Prime Time News debuted with Peter Mansbridge and Pamela Wallin as equal cohosts of a package that mixed news and Journal -type ...
Peter Armstrong – business reporter, former host of CBC Radio's World Report and former foreign correspondent with CBC News; Sally Armstrong; Adrienne Arsenault – anchor at CBC-TV "The National". foreign correspondent with CBC News; Michel Auger – Le Journal de Montréal; Michel C. Auger – Le Soleil, Radio-Canada, Le Journal de Montréal
Pamela Wallin - Worked as a producer on CBC Radio. Her first TV work was on CTV's Canada AM. She later appeared on CBC TV, as cohost of Prime Time News and later host of Pamela Wallin Live. Mary Walsh, writer, director, comedian, This Hour Has 22 Minutes (1993-2013) John Warren; Morgan Waters; Patrick Watson; Al Waxman; Wayne and Shuster
Mansbridge again became the sole anchor of the news portion of the show, and Wallin became the host of a magazine segment very similar to The Journal. [14] However, the show retained the name Prime Time News for the 1994–1995 television season, and Wallin sometimes appeared as substitute anchor of the main news portion when Mansbridge was absent.