The Peterborough Examiner

CBC’s flagship gets an update, but will it float?

- BILL BRIOUX THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Can four new hosts take the place of an anchor who led CBC’s The National for nearly 30 years?

It will take more than one newscast to properly judge, but CBC demonstrat­ed Monday that its new team approach to the nightly news at the very least looks different — and younger — than what rival broadcaste­rs have to offer.

There’s no blaring theme song to open this new National, no showy, brightly coloured graphics off the top. Instead, three or four simple stills set the table for the day’s headlines. Viewers are then whisked to Toronto-based Ian Hanomansin­g, Adrienne Arsenault and Rosemary Barton in Ottawa and Andrew Chang in Vancouver. On opening night, they often appeared together on screen in separate, hockey card-shaped rectangles, leaving barely enough room for all their poppies.

The four anchors smiled but never got too chummy, like on The View. They also didn’t shout over each other, like on the old At Issue panel.

There never seemed to be any need for all of them. Barton, on this night, did not grill an Ottawa party leader in studio. And Chang was the Ringo of the group, the one with little to do who could have been paid less.

A rock-steady veteran and spry improviser, he brought gravitas to the proceeding­s as viewers were told a police officer had been slain in Abbotsford, B.C.

A map locating the city would have been helpful. So would more informatio­n about exactly what happened. A suspect was hurt and taken to hospital. We eventually learned he is in his 60s and from Alberta. But questions remained: Did this story just happen? Is that why it seemed as if it was quickly thrust to the top of the news?

Things quickly pivoted to what was likely the original lead item: the aftermath of the mass shootings in Sutherland Springs, Texas. Here, real resources were activated, with veteran news contributo­r Paul Hunter gathering some very raw, emotional testimonie­s.

“The debate over gun control here is essentiall­y over,” he said, “and the NRA won.”

A long commercial break then derailed the momentum. If the CBC really wants to distinguis­h itself from its rivals — and attract millennial­s who don’t watch network fare — it will eventually have to deliver commercial-free news hours.

“The wind still carries the stench of the dead,” reported Arsenault, who, guided by an armed escort, bravely walked into war-torn streets. She even got a little Barbara Walters with her Turkish protector, asking him at one point if he is married and lonely.

A segment on a musical tribute to Leonard Cohen followed before the four hosts saluted the sparse, blue-and-black Toronto set. In one corner is a stack of old cameras, microphone­s and other artifacts from National newscasts past, a towering tribute to CBC’s broadcasti­ng heritage.

How far The National will extend into the future will depend on whether millennial­s will sit for an hour crammed with commercial­s — and whether their parents and grandparen­ts will stick with this experiment long enough for four people to collective­ly find their feet.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? New CBC The National news anchors Ian Hanomansin­g, left, and Adrienne Arsenault rehearse a news cast in Toronto on Nov. 1.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS New CBC The National news anchors Ian Hanomansin­g, left, and Adrienne Arsenault rehearse a news cast in Toronto on Nov. 1.

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