Spring 1991

 Howard Ackler

Aiming to Displease

Aiming to Displease

Frank magazine serves up its victims with great relish. The results are sometimes off target and always off the wall

Frankly it seemed like a perfect story. It was a barbed, somewhat nasty tale, and it made all the right people look . Wrong. For Frank, the satirical magazine notorious for scoops on the press, a chance to take i poke at The Financial Post was too good a pass up. When whispers of injustice […]

 Janet Franklin

CB-SEE RADIO

CB-SEE RADIO

Sentimental journalism-when the facts sink into the mush

WHEN KING GEORGE VI and Queen Elizabeth toured Canada in 1939, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, then barely three years old, covered the visit with 91 broadcasts. Everything went smoothly until the last day when an announcer was heard describing the royal couple’s departure. “The Queen I think I told you, is wearing powder-blue,” he said. […]

 Carole Paquin

How the West was Won

How the West was Won

With only a fistful of dollars and a preacher's zeal, Ted Byfield has made his Alberta Report the voice of Western Canada

During the 1957 FEDERAL campaign, an irate western farmer asked C.D. Howe, Liberal minister of trade and commerce, how he was expected to survive with the price of oats as low as it was. When an arrogant Howe tapped the farmer on his belly and told him, “You look pretty well fed,” a young reporter […]

 Laura Pratt

Storm Warnings

Storm Warnings

Under a torrent of editorial and financial problems, Toronto magazine is struggling to stay afloat in some very rough waters

Last fall, Edwin O’Dacre, director of magazine publishing at The Globe and Mail, cast a gaze across the most recent products of his empire, arranged on a black lacquered table in front of him. Behind him, bookshelves bulged with back issues of the Globe’s trove of magazine titles. Next to Report on Business Magazine, Toronto […]