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Ricky Leong

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Yet another reason I love my job

25 Thursday Feb 2016

Tags

alberta, calgary, canada, journalism, media

Star Trek-themed correction

This isn’t your standard newspaper correction. Published in the Wednesday, Feb. 24, edition of the Calgary Sun.

I was asked to make this correction more nerdy than it already was, so … I made it so.
See some of my more thought-provoking work, mainly commentary.

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Posted by Ricky Leong | Filed under Calgary, journalism, media, random

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Canada’s voice to the world … silenced

02 Monday Jul 2012

Posted by Ricky Leong in broadcasting, Canada, journalism, media, politics, radio, world

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

broadcasting, canada, CBC, censorship, Internet, politics, radio, Radio Canada International, RCI, shortwave

Signing off

As of last weekend, Radio Canada International no longer resembles an international broadcaster.
CBC slashed RCI’s budget from an austere $12-million to a paltry crippling $2-million. The result was the laying off of most of its staff and the elimination of all shortwave, satellite and Internet broadcasting services.
(Above is a view of RCI’s main shortwave transmission site in Sackville, N.B., as it was in 2003.)
It’s hard to get taxpayers too upset about the change. After all, the whole point of RCI was to provide radio services outside of Canada.
Its impact on the domestic radio market was pretty much nil, apart from the handful of hours a week it used to fill during late-night and overnight hours on Radio One and Première Chaîne. There was also a short-lived, ill-fated radio channel on Sirius for a few years.
And as the argument goes, everyone’s using the Internet, so who needs a radio service specifically for international consumption anyway? CBC offers all of its radio services as live streams on the Internet, 24 hours a day. Canada’s private TV broadcasters produce ethnic programs daily that are also viewable on the Internet.
As it was, RCI was only producing a few hours of original programming a day in English, French, Spanish, Chinese, Arabic, Russian and Ukrainian. It produced even fewer hours per week in Portuguese.
I can understand why international broadcasters stopped beaming their programs to the developed world. We can listen, read and watch damn near anything we want.
Here, censorship and other limits to viewing/listening are less a matter of political control and more a matter of content producers trying to protect their distribution rights.
But overseas, it’s another matter.
Just before I started typing this, I read an article about how Bloomberg News had its website blocked in China, after it reported on the vast wealth on its leader-in-waiting. Soon after, all searches on his name were blocked.
Although international radio broadcasts can be jammed, it would take a little more effort than blocking the Internet.
The same goes for places like Syria, where it’s been almost impossible to get news in or out of that country since people there began their revolt against the regime of President Bashir Al-Assad.
The big boys — BBC World Service and the Voice of America — are still doing actual radio broadcasts but it seems sad that those two will be the only main points of view English speakers across the world will have access to.
Canada is left with an RCI that’s a shell of its former self, producing blogs and weekly audio programs for consumption online.
No more telling Canada’s stories to the world in an accessible analog radio format.
Sadly, it’s a trend that other countries have adopted.
June 2012 also marked the end of broadcasting services for Radio Nederlands, which was seen (as RCI was) as a respected voice of a world middle-power.
This is not the sort of thing where you’ll see private interests picking up the slack, as there’s no way to accurately measure the audience and no simple way to make money.
Bringing light to the oppressed peoples of the world needs to be the function of the world’s public broadcasters.
And if done right, it shouldn’t cost very much to do it.
I really do wish RCI will make a comeback, some way and somehow.
But failing that, in an era of worldwide budget cuts and navel-gazing, I can only hope the free world’s remaining international radio voices — Britain, America, Australia, New Zealand, Germany and Japan, to name a few — continue to retain the financial and political support necessary to stay alive.

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Inaccurate reporting on DTV transition

27 Saturday Aug 2011

Posted by Ricky Leong in broadcasting, media

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Tags

ATSC, digital, DTV, OTA, over-the-air, television, transition, TV

If some media reports are to be believed, antennas for your television are useless as of next week.
Not so.
Switching to digital does not necessarily mean having to rid yourself of your old antenna, although in some cases it might.
More likely, people will have to make adjustments to older TV sets by either buying a digital converter or upgrading to a whole new television.
In any case, the misunderstanding and misinformation is leading to headline writers to proclaim the death of all antenna television as if Sept. 1.
That’s the biggest mistake if all.
If anything, antenna OTA television is getting a much-needed upgrade and will be, in many cases, the TV source with the best visual quality out there.
To my fellow journalists: Please do your homework and get it right. Antenna television is alive and well.

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CBC/Radio-Canada backtracks … sort of

01 Monday Aug 2011

Posted by Ricky Leong in broadcasting, media

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Tags

ATSC, CBC, CRTC, digital TV, DTV, NTSC, Radio-Canada, SRC, television, transition

Two weeks ago, I complained about the CBC’s terrible plans for DTV transition, which would involve turning off several terrestrial transmitters as of Sept. 1 because the crown corporation didn’t want to undertake a DTV transition for those repeater stations in mandatory markets.
Since then, CBC/Radio-Canada has applied to maintain analog coverage to certain markets, all in the east of Canada:

  • Windsor (SRC)
  • London and Kitchener (CBC & SRC)
  • Quebec, Trois-Rivières and Saguenay (CBC)
  • For the most part, interventions from private individuals welcome the maintaining of OTA service but all demand the CBC/Radio-Canada undertake a full DTV transition for those stations.
    Link to CRTC Part 1 applications, where the intervention period has elapsed.
    Link to CRTC Part 1 applications, where it is still possible to intervene.

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    Mad Lib: Intro to a Gordon Ramsay television program

    18 Monday Jul 2011

    Posted by Ricky Leong in broadcasting, food, fun, media

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    Tags

    dining, food, gordon ramsay, Mad Lib, reality TV, restaurant, television, TV

    Tonight on [Gordon Ramsay program title] —
    It’s a race to the [noun] and the restaurant is [verb ending in -ing] with [plural noun].
    But when Chef Ramsey makes a discovery he can’t [verb], sparks [verb] and the [noun] is on.
    You won’t want to [verb] the most [adjective] and [adjective] episode yet.
    That’s tonight on [same Gordon Ramsay program title as before].

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    CBC/Radio-Canada bungles transition to digital over-the-air TV

    15 Friday Jul 2011

    Posted by Ricky Leong in media

    ≈ 1 Comment

    Tags

    antenna, ATSC, CBC, digital television, DTV, OTA, over-the-air, Radio-Canada, television

    In a little more than a month, television in Canada’s biggest cities will be changing drastically.
    As you’ve heard in all those public service announcements, your service may be affected if you use an antenna to watch TV.
    Television is most of urban Canada will be switching from analog service to digital service.
    It will happen as late as Aug. 31, but some stations have stated they are switching earlier. CFKM in Trois-Rivières, for example, has already turned off analog service in favour of digital.
    Still others have been running the digital TV services alongside their analog service for some time.
    In short, if you’ve got an older tube TV or a flat-screen TV with only an analog tuner, you’ll need a converter box to keep getting a signal.
    This isn’t your grandma’s antenna TV — the picture quality for digital antenna TV is simply stunning compared with any kind of analog service. It’s technically superior to any digital signal you get from cable or satellite providers.
    (To avoid clogging up this post with too much technical stuff, please see more on the DTV transition on the discussion boards at Digital Home Canada.)
    Although Canada’s private broadcasters are going ahead full-bore with the DTV transition, CBC/Radio-Canada’s version of the DTV switch-over can only be described as a disaster.
    Here are the cities were the CRTC has mandated DTV transition for Aug. 31, 2011:
    Victoria, Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Lethbridge, Lloydminster, Regina, Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Thunder Bay, Windsor, London, Kitchener, Toronto/Hamilton/Barrie, Ottawa/Gatineau, Montreal, Quebec, Saguenay, Sherbrooke, Rivière-du-Loup, Rouyn/Val-d’Or, Fredericton, Saint John, Moncton, Charlottetown, Halifax and St. John’s.
    But CBC/Radio-Canada is only doing a DTV transition for stations where it makes original programming — a list that excludes repeater stations, so it is much shorter than the CRTC’s list.
    This means huge swaths of Quebec and New Brunswick (including Quebec, Sherbrooke, Saguenay, Trois-Rivières, Moncton) will lose CBC service and huge swathes of Canada outside Quebec (including Calgary, Windsor, Fredericton, Saint John, Halifax, Charlottetown and St. John’s) will lose Radio-Canada service. In the worst cases, in places such as London and Saskatoon, people will lose both English and French television altogether.
    Management at CBC/Radio-Canada has been repeating a mantra about Canadians migrating away from tradition television toward online/mobile technologies and that no one uses antenna television anyway.
    They constantly cite a meaningless statistic, that only 8% of Canadians use antenna television, in hopes that repeating a lie will somehow make it true.
    You see, the 8% statistic only represents the number of Canadians who use OTA exclusively as a means of capturing TV signals. If you use cable or satellite in your family room but use antenna TV in the kitchen and in your bedroom, you’re not being counted as an antenna TV viewer.
    And frankly, even if that statistic is true, 8% of 34 million Canadians is still almost 3 million people. That’s a huge chunk of the Canadian population who are paying taxes that subsidize CBC services but will be soon unable to watch it.
    Another curious part of the CBC/Radio-Canada’s transmission strategy is that they are maintaining a huge analog TV broadcast network, reaching sparsely populated, far-flung parts of Canada where satellite services are arguably more efficient to deliver service. Meanwhile, they are abandoning antenna TV in some of Canada’s densest areas. That dichotomy doesn’t make sense.
    More things to consider:

    • Canadians might not have embraced analog antenna television given its relatively poor picture quality. That doesn’t mean we will do the same with over-the-air DTV, which is superior to analog OTA in almost every way.
    • Not all Canadians are able to afford a subscription to television services via cable or satellite. CBC/Radio-Canada has been pushing Canada’s cable and satellite systems to offer a low-cost “skinny local” service — but cheap is not free.
    • CBC/Radio-Canada has been pushing their online/mobile services, yet many parts of Canada are still without reliable high-speed Internet. And in those places that do have good high-speed Internet, most major service providers are generally a lot for bandwidth.
    • Some of Canada’s smallest broadcasters are doing their all to convert to DTV. Consider eastern Quebec, where the transition is not mandatory, yet local networks are switching to DTV anyway.

    CBC/Radio-Canada, like every other broadcaster in the country, knew years ahead of time the DTV transition was coming.
    Perhaps it was unable to budget the money required to convert its transmitters as per CRTC rules, so it chose to turn off a number of urban transmitters instead.
    Perhaps it shifted its DTV strategy mid-stream, choosing deliberately to eliminate antenna TV service to so many parts of the country.
    There are signs CBC/Radio-Canada has suddenly realized Canadians won’t just accept the Mother Corp.’s DTV transition plan without asking questions and pushing back. After the CRTC turned down CBC’s application to turn off their transmitter serving Saint John and Fredericton, to be replaced with service only to Fredericton, CBC came back with a plan to retain analog service to Saint John, even after the mandatory transition deadline. There are rumours surfacing about the same sort of thing happening elsewhere.
    All this reeks of poor planning and poor management at CBC/Radio-Canada.
    Not only must the corporation correct the omissions from its DTV transition plan by implementing DTV service in all urban areas as mandated by the CRTC, it also must be taken to task for bungling the transition in the first place.

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    “Safari can’t find the server”

    10 Thursday Jun 2010

    Posted by Ricky Leong in Internet, media

    ≈ 7 Comments

    Tags

    apple, DNS, error, errors, mac, prefetch, safari

    But the server is there, I swear!
    I wrote early this morning I couldn’t replicate an error in Safari 5 I had been experiencing through the previous day, where the browser would tell me it could not connect to a server even though the server was just fine.
    Since I posted that message, the error came up again — and I got some screen grabs for you.
    When confronted with the error message …

    201006-SafariFail1 20100610-SafariFail3

    … I hit the refresh button to reveal the webpages:

    20100610-SafariFail2 20100610-SafariFail4

    Anyone else in cyberspace experiencing this trouble?

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    Sharp arguments

    05 Wednesday Aug 2009

    Posted by Ricky Leong in journalism, media, newspapers, politics

    ≈ 1 Comment

    Tags

    alberta, calgary, calgary sun, canada, column, freedom, kirpan, politics, religion, religious

    My Calgary Sun column today was about a recent incident where concert-goers trying to attend a show by a Punjabi artist were told they could not attend because they were wearing kirpans.
    I’ve been receiving lots of negative e-mail reaction to my commentary, in which I argue kirpans are religious symbols and are inherently harmless. My reply has been almost identical in every case, and I feel compelled to share the gist of my replies here with everyone.

  • Allowing people to wear kirpans is not a threat to Canadian identity or the religious freedom of the majority. No one is forcing non-Sikhs to wear a kirpan, just as Christians aren’t forcing non-Christians to carry a cross.
  • If someone chooses to use a kirpan (or anything else) as a weapon, it says more about the person than it does about the object, doesn’t it?
  • What do you think?

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    Makeover means new link

    16 Saturday May 2009

    Posted by Ricky Leong in Internet, journalism, media, newspapers

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    Tags

    calgary sun, calgarysun.com, Internet, journalism, media, news, newspaper, web

    The Calgary Sun website recently got a radical makeover.
    The result is a much cleaner layout for better reader navigation.
    There are also new features, including RSS feeds and browsing for your mobile phone.
    The change also means my columns have a new home.
    Please go check it out if you have a moment.

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    ‘Final Edition’ – the end of the Rocky Mountain News

    15 Friday May 2009

    Posted by Ricky Leong in Internet, journalism, media, newspapers

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    Sent to me by a colleague. Worth watching if you haven’t seen it.

    Final Edition from Matthew Roberts on Vimeo.

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    Greetings

    Welcome to rickyleong.com and thanks for stopping by. Pictured in the header above is Calgary’s skyline seen from McHugh Bluff.

    About me


    Journalist by trade, photographer for fun. I help make multi-platform content at Postmedia in Calgary. Opinions expressed here are my own.

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