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FYI

Media Beat: January 20, 2020

Media Beat: January 20, 2020

By David Farrell

Globe & Mail stubbing out pot publication in Feb.

The euphoria over predicted pot sales hasn’t materialized and now The Globe and Mail has announced its Cannabis Professional will be discontinued as a stand-alone product as of Feb. 1. Lanna Crucefex, communications manager for the newspaper now advises that coverage “will be incorporated into our award-winning Report on Business.”


Analysts expected retail cannabis to be a multi-billion-dollar sector by the end of 2019, but Statistics Canada figures show sales were just shy of $1B. — David Yasvinski, The GrowthOp

The station that would become CFCF made radio history 100 years

On May 20, 1920, a large group of Canada’s most eminent scholars gathered in the ballroom of Ottawa’s Château Laurier Hotel for a live concert.

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The twist was that the performance was taking place in Montreal.

Two hundred kilometres away, in experimental radio station XWA on William St. in Griffintown, soprano Dorothy Lutton sang two ballads that were “quite distinctly heard in all parts of the hall” in Ottawa, the Montreal Gazette reported the next morning.

Canada’s radio age was underway. –– Marian Scott, Montreal Gazette

APTN and Rogers Sportsnet broadcasting NHL games in Plains Cree

Clarence Iron is the play-by-play announcer with host Earl Wood and analyst John Chabot in the first of six games to be broadcast in Plains Cree this season. — CP

Best Buy is selling a TV that costs $100K

The 98" model costs almost twice as much as what the average Canadian makes in a year. According to Statistics Canada, as of January 2019, the average weekly salary for Canadians was $1,011.62, or just over $52,000 a year. –– Colin Leggett, Narcity

Bell Canada using AI to block spam calls

Bell has developed network technology based on Artificial Intelligence (AI) that could block approximately 120 million more fraudulent telephone calls per month than Bell is able to stop using call-blocking methods currently mandated by the CRTC. –– Newswire

The last radio station

North of Silicon Valley, protected by the Point Reyes National Seashore, is the only operational ship-to-shore maritime radio station. Bearing the call sign KPH, the Point Reyes Station is the last of its kind. — Chris Gates, TechCrunch

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Clearview facial recognition technology has police forces gawking

More than 600 law enforcement agencies have started using Clearview in the past year, according to the company, which declined to provide a list. The computer code underlying its app, analyzed by The New York Times, includes programming language to pair it with augmented-reality glasses; users would potentially be able to identify every person they saw. The tool could identify activists at a protest or an attractive stranger on the subway, revealing not just their names but where they lived, what they did and whom they knew. –– Kashmir Hill, NYT

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Jade Eagleson
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Jade Eagleson

Awards

Jade Eagleson, The Reklaws Lead CMAOntario Nominations in 2024

The Country Music Association of Ontario has announced the nominations for its 12th annual CMAOntario Awards, with Jade Eagleson racking up five nominations. The awards will be presented on June 2 at the Living Arts Centre in Mississauga.

Jade Eagleson is poised to win big at the CMAOntario Awards, presented by the Country Music Association of Ontario.

The "Rodeo Queen" singer picked up five awards nominations today, including Single of the Year, Album/EP of the Year, and Male Artist of the Year — the most nominations of any artist. Eagleson is followed by sibling duo The Reklaws, rising artists Josh Ross and Karli June, and mainstay Meghan Patrick, who all have four nominations each.

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