Truro News

Reinvented experience

‘The National’ entering new era Monday with revamp featuring four hosts

- By Victoria ahearn

Six time zones, three cities, four hosts.

CBC’s revamped “The National” debuts Monday with a new format that aims to reinvent the evening news experience.

“If we get this right, we will show how a late-night national newscast can still actually be relevant,” said Ian Hanomansin­g, one of a quartet of hosts for the refreshed version of the public broadcaste­r’s flagship news program. “It would be the coolest thing ever if, A: this works the way we hope it’s going to work, and B: imagine if other broadcaste­rs in other countries looked at this and said, ‘Let’s try this.’”

Hanomansin­g, a former Vancouver-based host on CBC News Network, is sharing anchor duties with a diverse group of establishe­d journalist­s who have contribute­d to “The National” over the years: senior correspond­ent Adrienne Arsenault, “Power & Politics” host Rosemary Barton and Vancouver local news host Andrew Chang.

For the most part, Hanomansin­g and Arsenault will be based in Toronto, Barton will remain in Ottawa and Chang will stay at the Vancouver studio. But each will also do field and feature reporting and may be in different cities from time to time, giving “The National” a different look every night.

Arsenault, for instance, was just in Syria for a feature series that viewers will get a first look at Monday.

“I still feel rooted in being a reporter and this is just a different incarnatio­n of it,” said Arsenault after a day of technical rehearsals New CBC “The National” news anchors Ian Hanomansin­g, left, and Adrienne Arsenault rehearse a news cast in Toronto. CBC’s revamped “The National” debuts Monday with a new format that aims to reinvent the evening news experience.

on the Toronto set.

“This show is so different from anything I’ve done before,” added Hanomansin­g.

The four hosts vary in age and background but are on equal footing, he said.

“Andrew is just as likely to jump on that plane as Adrienne is, or when the live special goes wall-to-wall, it could be Rosemary as easily as it could be me,” said Hanomansin­g. “That alone sends a message about, maybe not egalitaria­nism, but about being collegial and teamwork.”

“The National” will air from Sunday to Friday and there will be a live component to the hourlong

show in each time zone.

“The show will hand over in terms of the presentati­on of the show from Toronto to Vancouver after 11 at night,” said CBC News editor-in-chief Jennifer McGuire. “We’re handing it over to Vancouver to allow the show to be able to be live until 2 a.m. eastern, so that will allow us to be able to respond to breaking news in a way that is built into the assumption of the show.”

The top of the show will be from Toronto in the first week, but it won’t always be the same host opening the broadcast.

“You’re rarely going to get all four of them on any given night,”

said McGuire. “We probably will do that a little bit out of the gate, just to establish that there’s four of them and getting the audience used to the idea that it’s multiple versus one host.”

It’s a stark difference from the previous incarnatio­n of “The National” with Peter Mansbridge, who stepped down from his role as anchor and chief correspond­ent in July after nearly three decades with the program.

“The National” will also have an updated look, with a new logo and set design. And while the Toronto set has a desk, Arsenault and Hanomansin­g said they won’t just be glued to their chairs.

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CP PHOTO

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