Lisa LaFlamme 'blindsided' by cancellation of contract with CTV - Action News
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Entertainment

Lisa LaFlamme 'blindsided' by cancellation of contract with CTV

Veteran news anchor Lisa LaFlamme says she was "blindsided" as Bell Media ended her contract at CTV National News after more than 30 years, a "business decision" it says will move the chief news anchor role in "a different direction."

In Twitter video, LaFlamme says she is 'shocked and saddened' by the move

An elegantly dressed woman speaks into a microphone with an award statuette held in one hand.
Lisa LaFlamme, of CTV National News, accepts the award for best TV news anchor at the 2015 Canadian Screen Awards in Toronto on March 1, 2015. On Monday, LaFlamme said she was 'blindsided' by CTV's decision to end her contract. (Mark Blinch/Reuters)

Veteran news anchor Lisa LaFlamme says she was "blindsided" as Bell Media ended her contract at CTV National News after more than30 years, a "business decision" it says will move the chief news anchor role in "a different direction."

In a subsequent news release, CTV said the decision to end LaFlamme's contract was due to "changing viewer habits" and thatnational affairs correspondentOmarSachedina, who joined the network in 2009,will take LaFlamme's place as chief anchor.

"I am honoured to follow exemplary journalists, such as Lisa LaFlamme and Lloyd Robertson," Sachedina was quoted as saying in the release.

"The daily connections we make with Canadians over the past six decades are built on a foundation of trusted journalism, fairness, balance and integrity. I look forward to upholding this, and continue delivering news that Canadians rely on."

LaFlammebegan her journalism career in her hometown of Kitchener-Waterloo, Ont., inthe late 1980s atthe television station CKCO, which later changedits name toCTV Kitchener. She would eventually go on to spend nearly a decade as CTV News's national affairs correspondent, before becoming chief news anchor of CTV National News with Lisa LaFlammein 2011. There, she won "best national news anchor" at the Canadian Screen Awards five times, including in 2021 and 2022.

LaFlamme announced the change ina Twitter video and subsequent news release, both postedon Monday. In thevideo, LaFlamme said she was "shocked and saddened," by the decision, which she learned of on June 29.

"At 58, I still thought I had a lot more time to tell more of the stories that impact our daily lives," LaFlamme said in the video. "Instead I leave CTV humbled by the people who put their faith in me to tell their story.

"While it is crushing to be leaving CTVNational News in a manner that is not my choice, please know reporting to you has trulybeen the greatest honour of my life, and I thank you for always being there," she said.

Confusion over sudden departure

Globe and Mail columnist and entertainment journalist Johanna Schnellertold CBCRadio'sHere and Nowthat the nature of LaFlamme's departure stuck out for how abrupt it was. She pointed to other anchors such as CBC's Peter Mansbridgeand CTV's Lloyd Robertson, whoLaFlamme replaced when he retired in 2011 as having more ofa grace period between retiring and actually leavingtheir shows.

LaFlamme's treatment and sudden departure could reflect the "double standard" women in media are held to as they age,Schnellersaid even as LaFlamme made headlines for letting her hair go grey during the pandemic.

"I feel other anchors who are as experienced and storied and hard-working as Lisa were given the chance to sign off. Lisa ends her video by saying'I guess this is my sign off from CTV,'" she said.

"One can't help but think that women still have a shorter shelf life than, you know,Peter Mansbridge[at age] 69,Lloyd Robertson [at] 77, when they retire."

Two smiling people are seated at a news desk, with TV monitors and the CTV logo visible behind them.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, right, gets ready for an interview with CTV National News with Lisa LaFlamme during a campaign stop in Toronto on Oct. 17, 2019. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Journalist and author Jeffrey Dvorkin, who worked previously as managing editor at CBC and vice-president of NPR,told CBC News thatwhile LaFlamme's departure was sudden, it reflects the way modern news organizations tend to deal with replacements.

While ending LaFlamme's contract suddenly especially as her show performed so well inratings did lead to an immediately negative reaction, he said that to "rip the Band-Aid off quite quickly" was likely preferable for CTV and parent company Bell Media.

"Audiences are kind of fickle these days, and they have a lot of choices.And news managers understand this.And that's probably one of the reasons why they did it in this way in August, when people are at the cottage, maybe not paying so much attention," he said. "By September, everything will calm down and they can move in the direction that they think they need to go."

Other Canadian media personalitiesshared messages of compassion, confusion and anger over LaFlamme's departure.

"You have always been the best of field colleagues. And such a hard-working passionate human and we have all benefited from your rigour and dedication,"CBC News chief correspondent and host of The National Adrienne Arsenaultwrote under LaFlamme's video. "I am really, really sorry to hear this."

"Wow, unbelievable," tweeted former MP Jody Wilson-Raybould.

CityNews journalist Cynthia Mulligan wrote it was "a huge loss for journalism in this country."

"I'm so sorry Lisa," she continued.

"Wow. Did not see this coming at all," addedGlobal News anchorSophie Lui. "Huge loss for CTV National News."

With files from Lisa Xing and The Canadian Press