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Home > The National


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The National is the CBC's flagship national television newscast. It reports on major Canadian and international news stories, airing weekday nights at 10:00 pm.

1 History

The National evolved in the early 1970s out of the CBC's national news programming, airing at 11:00 pm as a half-hour program. On January 11, 1982, The National was relaunched in the 10:00 pm timeslot with a modernized design and format. The Journal, a program that covered news stories in greater depth using interviews and documentaries, followed it at 10:22 pm.

One of the hosts of The Journal from the beginning was Barbara Frum, who quickly became a symbol of CBC News as she was not afraid to tackle the toughest and most controversial of issues. This was intended as a full hour of news and information programming. Frum died suddenly in March 1992. Her final interview was with Canadian author Mordecai Richler, which took place just days before her death.

That same year, the CBC, which was undergoing major changes, replaced The National and The Journal with Prime Time News, an integrated package which aired at 9:00 pm with two hosts, Mansbridge and Pamela Wallin. However, the show fared poorly in the ratings, and returned to the 10 p.m. time slot in 1994.

In 1995, the program reverted to the name The National, and was followed by The National Magazine, which later became simply The Magazine . When the program was revamped significantly in early 20012001 is a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar), and also: The International Year of the Volunteer The United Nations Year of Dialogue Among Civilizations Events January January 1 A black monolith measuring approximately nine feet tall ap this segment was renamed Documentary. The program acquired its current look and format in the fall of that year with the CBC's corporate redesign.

2 Presentation

2.1 1970s - 1982

The show opening during this period, known as "the Bloops", featured the title of the program in a "space-age" font in green on the bottom of the screen, superimposed over a wide shot of the set. Sometimes the program title appeared in the center of the screen, with a black background. Accompanied by synthesizedThe term "synthesiser" is also used to mean frequency synthesiser, an electronic system found in communications. This article is about the musical instrument. A synthesizer (spelling var. synthesiser is an electronic musical instrument designed to produce beeps that resembled an old computer, different letters appeared from left to right until they spelled "The National".

An announcer would intone "The National, with," followed by the name of the anchor, followed by a cut to a shot of the anchor beside a screen. The anchor of the program would then summarize the top stories as different slides appeared for each of them on the screen.

2.2 1982 - 19881988 is a leap year starting on Friday (click on link for calendar). Events January January 2 Georgia celebrates its bicentennial statehood. January 9 Connecticut celebrates its bicentennial statehood. January 26 Australia celebrates its bicentennial day.

On January 11, 1982, the CBC relaunched The National with a radically different format and presentation style that looked very hi-tech for its time. The new logo used the typeface Stop.

The opening animation, an electronic globe that features a map of the world mapped onto an array of cubes, used red 3d vector computer graphics with blue shading.

The synthesized opening music featured a fanfare played by The Canadian Brass.

During the mid-1980s Quantel Paintbox was used to create many of the graphics for the stories.



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