Sign Offs - Broadcast Dialogue https://broadcastdialogue.com/category/sign-offs/ Broadcast industry trends Canada Mon, 15 Sep 2025 14:25:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 Longtime news anchor Beverly Thomson loses battle with breast cancer https://broadcastdialogue.com/longtime-news-anchor-beverly-thomson-loses-battle-with-breast-cancer/ Mon, 15 Sep 2025 14:21:22 +0000 https://broadcastdialogue.com/?p=74693 Longtime TV news anchor Beverly Thomson is being remembered by colleagues for her empathy and perseverance as she quietly fought cancer behind-the-scenes for decades, a battle she lost on Sunday. […]

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Longtime TV news anchor Beverly Thomson is being remembered by colleagues for her empathy and perseverance as she quietly fought cancer behind-the-scenes for decades, a battle she lost on Sunday. She was 61.

Thomson’s 30-year career as a journalist started in radio news in Newmarket, ON and 680 CFTR, before she arrived at CFTO Toronto as a reporter and weekend anchor. From there, she moved over to Global News Toronto as the weeknight, supper-hour anchor from 1997 to 2003. It was that year, that she received her initial breast cancer diagnosis, which she covered in the documentary, Where There Is No Fear, becoming an official spokesperson for the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation.

Thomson returned to CTV in late 2003 as host of Canada AM, while still undergoing chemotherapy. After a 13-run year with the morning show, she landed on the anchor desk at CTV News Channel in 2016, following Canada AM’s cancellation.

(l-r): Marci Ien, Seamus O’Regan, Beverly Thomson, Jeff Hutcheson

“People would ask us all the time if Beverly Thomson was as nice off-camera as she was on Canada AM. Well, she was. She was also a total pro, a committed and passionate journalist who persevered at work and in life,” wrote former Canada AM colleagues Jeff Hutcheson, Marci Ien and Seamus O’Regan, in a statement posted to social media. “She could scrap with politicians and give as good as she got. She always read the book and did the research. But she led, first and foremost, with empathy. Many of the guests we’d have on were ordinary Canadians telling their stories. She’d comfort them before the camera came on, she’d listen to their every word, she’d hold their hand during the commercial break. She would get the most extraordinary interviews, and she’s never betray their trust.”

Thomson continued to fight cancer off and on, with the disease recurring seven years into her time with Canada AM.

In 2019, Thomson was named a Member of the Order of Canada. She received Seneca College’s Distinguished Alumni Award in 2000 and the Ontario Premier’s Award for Creative Arts & Design in 2003. She was the 2006 recipient of the Humanitarian Award from the Gemini Awards (now Canadian Screen Awards). In 2009, she was appointed by the Earl of Wessex, Prince Edward, as the National Ambassador for the Duke of Edinburgh Awards. In 2024, she was recognized with an RTDNA National Lifetime Achievement Award.

Among other charitable endeavours, Thomson lent her time to the Seneca College Broadcast Communications Advisory Board, the Hospital for Sick Children, Children’s Aid, and Charles H. Best Diabetes Foundation.

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Broadcast Dialogue founder Howard Christensen dead at 80 https://broadcastdialogue.com/broadcast-dialogue-founder-howard-christensen-dead-at-80/ Fri, 12 Sep 2025 14:05:28 +0000 https://broadcastdialogue.com/?p=51212 Howard Christensen, a longtime broadcaster and the founder of Broadcast Dialogue, has passed away at the age of 80, after a long illness. Christensen passed away Thursday afternoon, according to […]

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Howard Christensen, a longtime broadcaster and the founder of Broadcast Dialogue, has passed away at the age of 80, after a long illness.

Christensen passed away Thursday afternoon, according to a Facebook post from his partner of 43 years, Ingrid, who worked alongside him on Broadcast Dialogue for almost three decades – growing its reputation as “the broadcast industry publication of record.”

Howard Christensen

Christensen’s career as an anchor, editor and reporter started at CHAM Hamilton in 1972, with stops at CKJD Sarnia, CHYM Kitchener, CHUM Toronto, CJAD Montreal, and CKVR-TV Barrie to follow. He joined the Broadcast News (BN) wire service in Toronto as a reporter/editor in 1977. When network newscasts were launched, Christensen was one of the six original newscasters who helped take BN into a new era of Canadian news audio delivery. In 1981, he was promoted to General Executive – Eastern Canada with responsibility for all Canadian radio and TV stations east of the Ontario/Manitoba border.

In 1989, the entrepreneurial bug bit. He started by writing, producing, and voicing corporate videos and writing and designing company newsletters, including one for BN.

Recognizing a lack of timeliness in the dissemination of broadcast industry news, Christensen launched Broadcast Dialogue in May 1992. Sent out weekly by fax, before long the Canadian broadcast community couldn’t live without their Thursday morning “fix.”

In 1998, Broadcast Dialogue was expanded to a monthly magazine. Together with editor Barry Hamelin, a colleague from his time at BN, they reimagined the publication.

In 2013, anticipating the tectonic changes about to take place within the broadcast industry, Christensen combined the weekly Broadcast Dialogue with the monthly magazine. Following the announcement of his retirement in 2016, the publication was acquired by publisher Shawn Smith, President of Vancouver-based Momentum Media Marketing.

“Howard Christensen was the north star for all of us who work in the Canadian broadcast industry,” said Smith. “Through Broadcast Dialogue, he kept us informed and current, fostering a community of professionals from coast-to-coast, starting at a time before the internet, FaceTime, and social media. Meticulous, passionate, and endlessly funny, Howard will be greatly missed. His legacy will last long into the future. Our love and condolences go out to Ingrid and family.”

Over the years, Christensen was honoured with “Friend of the Industry” awards from the Atlantic Association of Broadcasters, the Central Canada Broadcasters Association (now the OAB), the Western Association of Broadcasters (WAB) and the British Columbia Association of Broadcasters (BCAB), Radio-Television News Directors Association (now RTDNA), Central Canada Broadcast Engineers (CCBE) and the Western Association of Broadcast Engineers (WABE). In 2020, Broadcast Dialogue dubbed its new Canadian Radio Awards program “The Howards” to honour the publication’s founder. Broadcast Dialogue celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2022.

Following their retirement, the Christensens spent the majority of the last decade near the shore of Lake Simcoe at Lagoon City, ON.

Howard Christensen was a guest on Broadcast Dialogue – The Podcast back in 2016. Listen to that episode here:

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Sign Offs https://broadcastdialogue.com/sign-offs-242/ Thu, 11 Sep 2025 17:03:34 +0000 https://broadcastdialogue.com/?p=74581 Fred Merritt, 83, on Aug. 21. Merritt spent more than 50 years in radio at stations around Ontario, starting in Orillia in 1960 at the age of 19. From there, […]

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Fred Merritt

Fred Merritt, 83, on Aug. 21. Merritt spent more than 50 years in radio at stations around Ontario, starting in Orillia in 1960 at the age of 19. From there, he was on-air at CFCO Chatham, before moving over to CKKW-AM Kitchener in 1966 and sister station CFCA-FM when it began broadcasting the following year, hosting a daily live show and taping a late night easy listening program called “Night Flight.” He was among those caught up in layoffs following CFCA’s acquisition by CHUM Limited in 1994, but resurfaced a year later, hosting “Merritt in Stereo” on 98.5 CKWR-FM. Merritt retired from the station in January 2011 at age 69.

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