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17 novembre 2008
In onda da 40 anni senza interruzioni,
As it happens, il programma di interviste telefoniche in onda
sulla canadese CBC, è una delle trasmissioni giornalistiche
più navigate del mondo. Nato espressamente - come racconta
il quotidiano The Star - per contrastare l'onda montante della
televisione, il programma rovescia il concetto di phone-in
(le telefonate del pubblico) con quello di phone-out: è
la radio che usa il telefono per raggiungere le persone e
i luoghi che fanno notizia.
Il quarantesimo anniversario, che cade domani, 18 novembe,
viene celebrato da As it happens anche con l'uscita di un
libro scritto da Mar Lou Finlay, che ha condotto la trasmissione
dal 1997 al 2005.
As it happens, radio translates well
onto paper
Book revisits host's top moments on
CBC show
November 16, 2008
Greg Quill
By design CBC Radio's As It Happens
– after the network's Ideas, the world's longest-running
radio program – is the ultimate listening adventure.
Limited only by the imagination of its producers and hosts,
the phone-out show reaches around the world every day to interview
– via the crudest and most commonplace communication
device, the telephone – newsmakers, local heroes and
nutters, politicians, pundits and fools, mountain climbers,
sailors and astronauts, talking dogs, sports stars, tricksters
and brain surgeons.
It produces auditory snapshots of characters and events that
are in turn thrilling, touching, hilarious, dramatic, informative,
sometimes downright frightening, and above all, immediate.
It is perfect radio.
That the concept might not work so well as non-fiction literature
apparently never occurred to Mary Lou Finlay, the veteran
broadcast journalist who hosted the program with Barbara Budd
from 1997 through 2005.
As it happens, her The As It Happens Files (Knopf Canada),
published last week, is more than a gripping condensation
of Finlay's favourite interviews and reminiscences. It's also
an enlightening historical document, a testament to her appetite
for a great yarn, and evidence of her sharp wit and keen journalistic
sensibilities.
"I never kept notes while I was on the show," she
told the Star. "So when I decided to write this book,
I just dug into the CBC archives, through 10,000 interviews,
most of them on 7-inch reels of tape, starting with the moments
I treasured – they're the core of the book.
"I used the online logs of the show as a map. And each
program I listened to reminded me of six others. I just kept
going till I ran out of time."
The book reveals Finlay's empathy with ordinary people who
find themselves in extraordinary circumstances, like the 80-year-old
Miami lawyer who survived a 20-hour ordeal in the open sea
after losing his boat, and Canadian harmonica virtuoso Mike
Stevens, who stumbled upon a heartbreaking Canadian tragedy,
the lost native children – gas-fume addicts –
of remote Sheshatshiu, Labrador, and offered them hope and
spiritual sustenance through music. She has a thing for battlers
and oddballs, too, like the Coquitlam, B.C., businessman who
spent $120,000 fighting a traffic ticket; a Hamilton inventor
who spent years trying to perfect a Kodiak bear-proof armoured
suit; and a British woman who set up a sanctuary for garden
gnomes.
Finlay's commentary and written introductions to the selected
interview segments have the same easy, almost whimsical conversational
style that is As It Happens' stock- in-trade. And it's not
all light and breezy reading. Her essay on the whys and wherefores
of the Air India disaster and the failure of authorities and
the government to investigate and prosecute is a marvel of
intellectual clarity and plain-spoken common sense.
"There's a lot I had to leave out, mostly for space reasons,"
said Finlay, adding she'd "like to commit more journalism
in the future.
"We went on a rant once on As It Happens about declining
literacy, and about the abuse of grammar, and the misplaced
apostrophe. The radio audience loved it, but on paper it was
too pedantic.
"Writing a book, I have learned, is hard and lonely work.
This experience has almost killed the passion I once had for
writing. I found myself doing strange things, like washing
the windows, to avoid it. But when the deadlines loom, and
I forced myself to start writing, all the doors opened, and
it was wonderful."
40 YEARS ON AIR
Created 40 years ago this month by
then-CBC producer, the late Val Clery, a former British army
paratrooper, As It Happens started as CBC Radio's desperate
response to television's ascendancy in the news and information
business, airing at first on Monday nights, in a series of
two-hour segments that rolled across Canada's five time zones.
It was a brave and dazzling concept, Clery used to say, that
left its producers, researchers and lead-runners exhausted
after every marathon.
A short time later, the show's success spawned Radio Free
Fridays, with the late Peter Gzowski as host, but in the early
1970s, with the late Barbara Frum and Cy Strange as co-hosts,
the two programs merged, and As It Happens took the shape
and frequency (90 minutes, five nights a week, starting at
6.30 p.m.) and style (a heady mix of hard news follow-up,
humour, music and irreverence) that would make it unassailably
popular and the envy of broadcasters the world over.
As It Happens is celebrating its 40 years on air through this
month. Tomorrow's subject is 40 years of Reading, and the
reasons this obscure British town been for so many years one
of As It Happens' weirder obsessions.
On Tuesday night, the actual anniversary, current and former
members of the crew pull back the curtain and share stories
from behind the scenes.
And in coming days, regular listeners will be invited to share
memories about their favourite interviews from over the years.
(radiopassioni.it)
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