The Daily Courier

What will happen to The National now?

- By VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO — Now that Peter Mansbridge has signed off as anchor of The National, speculatio­n abounds as to what will happen with the public broadcaste­r's flagship program.

Mansbridge's last night on The National was Friday he’ll then helm the CBC’s Canada Day coverage today.

The CBC has said it will unveil a revamped edition of The National on Oct. 30 with multiple hosts, a new format, a new set and new graphics. It’s a change industry observers welcome. “I would urge and applaud them to use this opportunit­y to create something different,” said Janice Neil, chairwoman of the school of journalism at Ryerson University.

“I think it should distinguis­h itself from the other stations. You only have to look at the ratings tumble over the years to see that CTV has continued to do so well with its newscast, it’s not declining the way the others have. So why should the CBC try to go head-to-head? I know they’re not the same hours, but why should they?

“It’s an opportunit­y to try different things, like there is experiment­ation elsewhere in local and in other markets.”

Including airings on both CBC and CBC News Network, The National’s average minute audience between Aug. 29, 2016 to April 9, 2017 was 866,000 viewers, according to data supplied by ratings agency Numeris. Including all CTV and CTV News Channel broadcasts, the average audience of CTV National News during the same period was 1.3 million.

In an age when many viewers consume news all day on social media, some say The National needs to focus on in-depth conversati­on and context to the headlines.

“The only way a newscast like that, I think, is going to work in the future is (if) it’s not going to tell you the news, it’s rather going to make sense of the news,” said Richard Stursberg, a former CBC executive and the new president of the writers’ group Pen Canada.

“So then it becomes about context, background, analysis, investigat­ory. It becomes all that kind of stuff rather than just telling me what the news is — because I already know that.”

Ian Morrison, spokesman for the advocacy organizati­on Friends of Canadian Broadcasti­ng, declared: “Judged by the hard numbers, it’s time for a change.”

“The status quo isn’t working and so shaking things up and trying another approach is something that I think all viewers should welcome,” said Morrison, noting he’d like to see a current affairs-style element to the show that appeals to a younger generation.

“A lot of the appetite for watching The National now is those panels that they have, the Chantal Heberts or Jennifer Ditchburns or whatever ... helping to contextual­ize the informatio­n and I think that that’s really important.”

Diversity is also a critical factor the CBC should be considerin­g, he added.

“I think there’s a lot of pressure, and appropriat­e pressure, on the public broadcaste­r to reflect Canada on the screen,” Morrison said. “And that involves diversity in age, in facial colour, in male-female balance and a whole range of things."

Mansbridge announced nearly a year ago his planned exit from The National, where he has been at the helm for nearly 30 years.

He said in a recent interview with The Canadian Press that he hasn’t been a part of the decision-making for the new show, although he has offered input.

“I do raise the cautions about risking going too far in change and I think those warnings are respected,” he said.

The switch to multiple anchors isn’t a huge change, added Mansbridge.

Stursberg argued the role of news anchors has changed and they now have much less influence.

Neil noted the news anchor has typically been seen as “the captain of the ship,” but “now viewers are increasing­ly perfectly happy to be their own programmer.”

Still, Mansbridge does believe that in a time of crisis, viewers want to watch an “anchor they respect and like the most.”

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