Showing posts with label Radio Canada International. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Radio Canada International. Show all posts

Monday, April 09, 2012

Dancing in the Radio Towers



I wonder if artist Canadian Amanda Dawn Christie will do something like the above? (update: video seems to have vanished. Not sure why. May be music violation). It was clearly filmed at a power station. Frankly, some of the transmitters look a lot more interesting, especially when they are still on the air.


RCI Sackville Shortwave Transmitter Site in New Brunswick as seen from the Trans Canadian Highway. Tnx to Google Streetview


CBC News New Brunswick, reported on 7 Apr 2012  that a "A Moncton artist is now working against the clock to film the Radio-Canada International shortwave towers in her latest film project. Budget cuts at CBC announced last week mean the transmitters, near Sackville, New Brunswick, will soon be shut down, but it's not known exactly what will happen to the antenna towers themselves. Amanda Dawn Christie said she remembers coming and going from Moncton and the towers signifying that she was almost home. 'Whenever I would drive in, I would just be filled with this exhilaration and I don't know if it's the high voltage. Like, some people get headaches and nauseous; I would get exhilarated,' she said. ... She even created a sculpture on the marsh near the towers — a kitchen sink designed to catch radio waves — a phenomenon often reported by locals. ... Christie said she's particularly fond of the sight at dawn and dusk. 'The sky's kind of pink and blue, and the lights are on but you can still see all the towers and the wires. It's very magical,' she said."  See also Amanda Dawn Christie's website.

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

At 67, Radio Canada International is effectively retired by CBC


Those spending cuts announced last week in Canada's latest federal budget have reached Radio Canada International. Speaking to employees at RCI's headquarters in Montreal on Wednesday, RCI director Helene Parent announced that two out of three RCI employees---about 40 people---will lose their jobs by the end of July 2012. According to the CBC website, RCI will be "transformed" to quote the PR spin.

RCI's Russian and Portuguese language sections will be closed along with the English and French-language newsrooms. RCI will have no reporters in the provinces. All shortwave broadcasts will cease as well. RCI will continue to exist solely on the Internet in five languages---English, French, Arabic, Spanish and Mandarin. And the short-wave transmitter site in New Brunswick will be closed. So that puts an end to any transmitter swaps. The RCI Action committee reports that the new budget will be around CAN$ 2.3 million. It's a pity that the official CBC Blog has not been updated in years (thanks to Kai Ludwig for pointing this out) although the Twitter feed with the hashtag #CBC is still working.



To be honest, I'm convinced there is no longer need for an RCI as a separate offering on the Internet in 2012. It's a rather sad shadow of it's former self, in an era when there was a need for a different context in order to understand what was happening in Ottawa and it's impact on the world. RCI used to make great crafted radio content that complemented what their domestic radio colleagues were doing. It had focus and purpose. But that was more than a decade ago. Now the press blurb speaks of "online content", showing they don't really know what RCI on the web is supposed to share.

Now, nobody searches on the Internet to find out what just happened in Canada - and if they want Canadian news, then CBC or the Toronto Globe and Mail do a comprehensive job. Radio Canada International, without radio, becomes a branding mistake rather than a serious service.

The work that members of the RCI Arabic team did in the 1990's to explain the Gulf Wars to the Canadian public was much more valuable than the RCI Arabic language news broadcasts well after midnight on Radio Monte Carlo Middle East. Why not let them go out in style rather than a wimper? 

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