Accessibility Links
Broadcasting and the war
On a summer's day in 1927, Canadians coast to coast sat enthralled before their radio sets as Prime Minister Mackenzie King spoke to them from Parliament Hill. Through the 1930s radio kept them entertained, and in wartime radio kept them informed. Then, Canadians were captivated all over again by television. In 1952 a bald puppet named Uncle Chichimus ushered them into the TV age, and in 1966 an animated butterfly made Canadian TV a more colourful pace.
Program: CBC Radio Special
Broadcast Date: Oct. 24, 1939
Speaker: Augustin Frigon
Duration: 19:43
Last updated: January 3, 2013
Page consulted on January 3, 2013
All Clips from this Topic
-
Canada sends out holiday greetings to the British Empire in 1932.
-
Leonard Brockington, chairman of CBC, opens CBA radio outside Sackvill...
-
Radio may be an international problem during the Second World War.
-
A CBC Radio technician pioneers a method for capturing the sounds of t...
-
Millions of dollars have been spent developing TV in the United States...
-
BBC, CBS and the United Nations congratulate CBC as Canada enters the ...
-
New technology linking CBC stations means all Canadians can finally wa...
-
A CTV executive talks about the potential for competition with the CBC...
-
Public-radio champions Graham Spry and Alan Plaunt rouse support for a...
-
Radio veterans recall the triumphs and challenges of broadcasting from...
-
CBC Radio gambles and wins big on an innovative prime-time program.
-
CBC Radio reporter Bob Bowman shares his memories of Canadian radio be...
-
Radio pioneers remember primitive studios and build-it-yourself radios...
-
A creative, keen young staff brings a "loose, wide-open feel" to CBC T...
-
From Signal Hill to Parliament Hill, radio's presence in Canada evolve...
-
TV broadcasts now come in all shades of the rainbow, but colour TV set...
-
Elettra Marconi, daughter of the inventor, visits Newfoundland for Mar...
-
On a summer's day in 1927, Canadians coast to coast sat enthralled bef...
-
On September 8, 1952, CBC Television first flickers to life.
-
CBC Chairman Leonard Brockington tells listeners about the challenges ...
