CKUA Sound Archives
Search
Go
English
Français
  

Heritage Canada CKUA Radio Network Heritage Community Foundation

HomeBackgroundProgrammingProgrammingSound ArchiveEdukitSitemapAbout UsContact

CKUA Top 5 Hot Files

1. Part 1 – Workshop West Theatre's artistic di...(Arts Alberta)
more
 
2. Part 1- Tony Dillon-Davis talks with the Jef...(Arts Alberta)
more
 
3. Part 1 – Tommy Banks talks to Allan Sheldon ...(Arts Alberta)
more
 
4. Part 1 – Colin McLean talks with Jim Marsh, ...(Arts Alberta)
more
 
5. Part 1 – The new theatre program at Grant Ma...(Arts Alberta)
more

News, Public Affairs and Politics

Much of CKUA's current daily airtime is derived from its coverage of music and the arts. But throughout its 75-year history, the station has presented a sturdy diet of news coverage, current affairs, history and politics.

Fil Fraser, host of Alberta MorningInter-city citizen debates (The Round Table, and Farm Radio Forum, both from the 1930s), coverage of the Alberta Legislature, public affairs documentary production (such as the 1983 award-winning Hiroshima Revisited), newsmagazine shows and call-in forums (such as Fil Fraser's Alberta Morning, which debuted in 1983), a newsroom that covered breaking news, news bureaus in Calgary, Lethbridge, Grande Prairie and Red Deer - all of these played a significant role in CKUA's coverage of the life and times of Alberta after the Second World War.

Developments and approaches to newsgathering, presentation and interpretation resulted in broadcasting innovation in both Canada and the world. In 1944, the station was the first in Canada to send newscasts by telephone line to the Yukon and the Far North. Question Period, presented daily with commentator Warren Graves, was the first time in the world that a sitting legislature had been presented on radio. With its appointment of a full-time legislative reporter in 1947, CKUA was also the first to broadcast commentaries from the Press Gallery of a provincial legislature during sessions.

And in October 1985, it took an unprecedented walk on the wild side of remote broadcasting with 15 hours' continuous live coverage of the Conservative Leadership Convention.

Peggy Holmes and Chris Allen, host and producer of Something For SeniorsThere would be productions such as Ask an Alcoholic, in which alcoholics discussed their addiction and experts fielded calls by telephone; earlier in its history, CKUA had been the first to broadcast an Alcoholics Anonymous program. In 1982, Chris Allen would pair up with Peggy Holmes (at 85 years of age, the oldest broadcaster in Canada) to produce the issue-based series, Something for Seniors.

Today, news and public affairs coverage is featured on four shows: CKUA's flagship compendium of Alberta politics, Sunday Magazine; the 30-minute news show, B.B.C. World News, broadcast Sunday through Thursdays at 10 p.m.; Heritage Trails, Cheryl Croucher's vignette-laden Alberta history series and the features and hourly news updates each weekday morning on Alberta Morning with Dave Ward.


  

Top Back

View the CKUA Timeline »