Why I quit my job:

Until Thursday, I was CTV’s Quebec City Bureau Chief, based at the National Assembly, mostly covering politics. It’s a fascinating beat - the most interesting provincial legislature in Canada, and the stories coming out of there lately have been huge. The near-implosion of the Parti Quebecois has kept the press gallery hopping well into summer. If you’re not from Quebec, it’s hard to explain the place the National Assembly holds in the popular imagination – but suffice to say that within francophone journalistic circles it carries more prestige than Parliament Hill. I had the privilege to be working next to several of the sharpest reporters in the country.

Fred Biss in Labrador

The city is beautiful, ancient, and a great place to learn French. As master and commander of my own little outpost, I had significant editorial control over what I covered and how I treated it – granted, within a recognizable TV news formula. My bosses trusted and encouraged me, my colleagues at the station in Montreal were supportive and fun to work with, and my closest collaborator, cameraman/editor Fred Bissonnette, quickly became a close friend.

I was a full-time employee making good money, with comprehensive benefits and retirement options (I was even lucky enough to be hired before Bell bought CTV and began clawing back some of those expensive perks.) It was what I would qualify as a “great job,” especially for a 24-year old. Many of you told me how proud you were of my quick climb. But there was a growing gap between the reporter I played on TV, and the person I really am and want to become. I reached my breaking point suddenly, although when I look back now, the signposts were clear.

First day working with Fred in Quebec City - courtesy Thomas de Lorimier

 

Not why I quit my job:

Let me pause for a minute and tell you the reasons for which I did not quit my job. I didn’t quit my job because I had a falling out with anyone at CTV or the National Assembly or in my life outside work. And I didn’t quit my job because it was too hard. It’s true that the position demands responsibility. You have to know what’s happening, what’s important, and deploy your limited resources accordingly (namely, me and Fred). When I went to bed I turned email notifications off on my Blackberry, but I left the ringer on. After all, when you’re the network’s only reporter between Montreal and the Maritimes, they have to be able to reach you. But I would say, humbly, that I didn’t just meet expectations – I excelled. In everything I was asked to do, I performed consistently at a level above my experience. We made some good TV. So I didn’t quit my job because I felt frustrated or that my career was peaking. I quit my job because the idea burrowed into my mind that, on the long list of things I could be doing, television news is not the best use of my short life. The ends no longer justified the means.

Indulging a PETA protestor during the Royal Visit - courtesy Francis Vachon

 

Of television news:

I’m trying to think of the reporters I know who would do their job as volunteers. The people who feel so strongly about the importance and social value of the evening news that, were they were offered somewhere to sleep, three meals a day, and free dry-cleaning – they would do that for the rest of their days. I’m not saying those people don’t exist, but such zeal is scarce. People do the job for all kinds of reasons. A few are raging narcissists. Many have kids to feed and mortgages to pay. Most believe they are fighting the good fight, if indirectly. In my case, I discovered it was something I was good at, I could see the potential to get better, and in the meantime, people were willing to trade me a lot of money to put the other things on hold. But even though I had the disposable income, I never bought a television. I was raised without one, and once I moved out on my own I decided I didn’t want one in the house.

TV news is a curious medium. You don’t always know whose interests are being served – or ignored. Although bounded by certain federal regulations, most of what you see in a newscast is actually defined by an internal code – an editorial tradition handed down from one generation to the next – but the key is, it’s self-enforced. Various industry associations hear complaints and can issue recommendations, or reward exemplary work with prizes. There are also watchdogs with varying degrees of clout. But these entities have no enforcement capacity. Underneath this lies the fact that information is a commodity, and private TV networks are supposed to make money. All stations, publicly funded or not, want to maintain or expand their viewership. This is what I’ll call the elephant in the room.

Consider Fox News. What the Murdoch model demonstrated was that facts and truth could be replaced by ideology, with viewership and revenue going up. Simply put, you can tell less truth and make more money. When you have to balance the interests of your shareholders against the interests of the viewers you supposedly serve, the firewall between the boardroom and the newsroom becomes a very important bulwark indeed. CTV, in my experience, maintains high standards in factual accuracy. Its editorial staff is composed of fair-minded critical thinkers. But there is an underlying tension between “what the people want to see” and “the important stories we should be bringing to people”. I remember as the latest takeover was all but finalized, Bellmedia executives came to talk about “growing eyeballs” in the “specialty channels”. What they meant was, sports are profitable – so as long they keep raking in cash, we can keep funding underperforming assets like our news division. (The same dynamic exists at the CBC, by the way.)

Certainly it would be a poor move, optics-wise, to make cuts in local news. For some reason job losses and factory closures in the media sector tend to generate a lot of coverage. But at every network, the bean counters are looking at a shrinking, aging audience (fixed incomes are harder to sell to advertisers) and there is intense pressure to keep the numbers up.

Human beings don’t always like good nourishment. We seem to love white sugar, and unless we understand why we feel nauseated and disoriented after binging on sweets, we’ll just keep going. People like low-nutrition TV, too. And that shapes the internal, self-regulated editorial culture of news.

Take newsroom aesthetics as an example. I admit felt a profound discomfort working in an industry that so casually sexualizes its workforce. Every hiring decision is scrutinized using a skewed, unspoken ratio of talent to attractiveness, where attractiveness often compensates for a glaring lack of other qualifications. The insecurity, self doubt, and body-image issues endured by otherwise confident, intelligent journalists would break your heart. And clearly there’s a double standard, a split along gender lines. But in an environment where a lot of top executives are women, what I’m talking about applies to men as well. The idea has taken root that if the people reporting the news look like your family and neighbours, instead of Barbie and Ken, the station will lose viewers.

Looking tired in Chibougamau

 

The problem with the CBC:

Aside from feeling sexually attracted to the people on screen, the target viewer, according to consultants, is also supposed to like easy stories that reinforce beliefs they already hold. This is where the public broadcaster is caught in a tough spot. CBC Television, post-Stursberg, is failing in two ways. Despite modest gains in certain markets, (and bigger gains for reality shows like Dragon’s Den and Battle of the Blades) it’s still largely failing to broadcast to the public. More damnably, the resulting strategy is now to compete with for-profit networks for the lowest hanging fruit. In this race to the bottom, the less time and money the CBC devotes to enterprise journalism, the less motivation there is for the private networks to maintain credibility by funding their own investigative teams. Even then, “consumer protection” content has largely replaced political accountability.

It’s a vicious cycle, and it creates things like the Kate and Will show. Wall-to-wall, breaking-news coverage of a stage-managed, spoon-fed celebrity visit, justified by the couple’s symbolic relationship to a former colony, codified in a document most Canadians have never read (and one province has never signed). On a weekend where there was real news happening in Bangkok, Misrata, Athens, Washington, and around the world, what we saw instead was a breathless gaggle of normally credible journalists, gushing in live hit after live hit about how the prince is young and his wife is pretty. And the public broadcaster led the charge.

Aside from being overrun by “Action News” prophets from Iowa, the CBC has another problem: the perception that it’s somehow a haven for left-wing subversives. True or not, the CBC was worried enough about its pinko problem to commission an independent audit of its coverage, in which more consultants tried to quantify “left-wing bias” and, presumably using stopwatches, demonstrate that the CBC gives the Conservative government airtime commensurate with the proportion of seats it holds in the House of Commons. Or something like that.

Jon Stewart talks about a “right-wing narrative of victimization,” and what it has accomplished in Canada is the near-paralysis of progressive voices in broadcasting. In the States, even Fox News anchor Chris Wallace admitted there is an adversarial struggle afoot – that, in his view, networks like NBC have a “liberal” bias and Fox is there to tell “the other side of the story.” Well, Canada now has its Fox News. Krista Erickson, Brian Lilley, and Ezra Levant each do a wonderful send-up of the TV anchor character. The stodgy, neutral, unbiased broadcaster trope is played for jokes before the Sun News team gleefully rips into its targets. But Canada has no Jon Stewart to unravel their ideology and act as a counterweight. Our satirists are toothless and boring, with the notable exception of Jean-René Dufort. And on the more serious side, we have no Keith Olbermann or Rachel Maddow. So I don’t see any true debate within the media world itself, in the sense of a national, public clash of ideas. The Canadian right wing, if you want to call it that, has had five years to get the gloves off. With a majority Conservative government in power, they’re putting on brass knuckles. Meanwhile the left is grasping about in a pair of potholders. The only explanation I can think of is they’re too polite, or too scared. If it’s the latter, I think it’s clear enough why.

First stop after leaving Montreal on Tuesday

Coming out of the closet:

I have serious problems with the direction taken by Canadian policy and politics in the last five years. But as a reporter, I feel like I’ve been holding my breath. Every question I asked, every tweet I posted, and even what I said to other journalists and friends had to go through a filter, where my own opinions and values were carefully strained out. Even then I’m not sure I was always successful, but I always knew at the CBC and subsequently at CTV that there were serious consequences for editorial. Within the terms of my employment at CTV, there was a clause in which the corporation (now Bellmedia) literally took ownership of my intellectual property output. If I invented a better mouse trap, they owned the patent. If I wrote a novel, they got a cut. Rhymes on the back of a napkin? Bellmedia is hip to the jive, yo. And if I ever said anything out of line with my position as an “objective” TV reporter, they had grounds to fire me. I had a sinking feeling when I first read that clause, but I signed because I was 23 and I wanted the job. Now I want my opinions back.

I’ll say off the bat that my views don’t completely mesh with any one political party. I’m not a partisan operative and I never was. Fiscally, I believe a government should be conservative. Caution seems like a good thing in stewarding the public purse. At the same time, I believe we should be taxed according to our capacity and that revenue invested, sometimes massively, in projects for the public good. Under those criteria, I see no sense in buying stealth fighters more than a decade after the Cold War, or building bigger prisons when crime rates are decreasing. If we have that kind of capital to spend, it should go on high-speed rail or renewable energy infrastructure.

On what we call the “social issues,” I think a government ought to err on the side of keeping its mouth shut. If a woman needs to get an abortion or a gay couple wants to get married, one minister’s opinion shouldn’t be relevant. If a theatre festival wants to explore home-grown terrorism or an arm’s-length agency criticizes a military ally, there better be a damn good justification for yanking their funding. And when science debunks ideology, reason should be allowed to prevail in determining public policy.

A caution: there are a number of small-c and big-C conservatives that I like a lot. My grandfather, for example. Or any number of federal staffers and MPs. But those blinded by tribal partisanship might not like what I have to say.

Right now, there’s a war going on against science in Canada. In order to satisfy a small but powerful political base, the PMO is engaged in a not-so-clandestine operation to dismantle and silence the many credible opponents to the Harper doctrine. Why kill the census? Literally in order to make decisions in the dark, without the relevant data. Hence the prisons. Why de-fund scientific research? Because whole branches of the natural sciences are premised on things like evolution, a theory the minister responsible made it clear he doesn’t understand – and likely doesn’t believe in. Why settle for weak platitudes on climate change? Because despite global scientific consensus, elements of the Conservative base don’t believe human activity could warm the planet. Centuries of rational thought and academic tradition, dating back to the Renaissance, is being thrown out the window in favour of an ideology that doesn’t reflect reality.

Meanwhile, we’re wrapping up a real war, one that invites us to take stock of where we stand in the world ten years after it began. When I joined the infantry reserve, I asked about the possibility of volunteering for a peacekeeping mission (a practice this country invented). I was told by the warrant officer I spoke to that with all available resources tied up in Afghanistan, indefinitely, I could forget about wearing a blue beret.  One Conservative campaign ad told us Canada is a “courageous warrior,” and yet we lost our seat at the UN Security Council. The Canada whose values I thought I was signing up to promote and defend is increasingly unrecognizable from an international vantage point.

We have withdrawn from humanitarian projects because aspects might offend Evangelists back home. We have clung so tightly to our US allies overseas that we figure on lists of terrorism targets where we didn’t before. We are deporting people to be tortured and closing our borders to the family members of foreign professionals. We have become, in Mr. Harper’s characterization, an island. A sea of troubles lapping at our shores. In other words, we are closing the harbours when we most need to be building bridges.

On climate change, the conclusion I am forced to draw is that the current federal government has completely abdicated its responsibility. The message to my generation is: figure it out yourselves. The dogmatic refusal to accept that people have created this crisis and people must do what they can to avert it reminds me of the flat-earth crew. Except this time, we really are going to sail off the edge. We need to be recruiting international scientists, funding research, stimulating the green economy, legislating disincentives to fossil fuel use, and most importantly, reaching out and building alliances with the countries who are already taking a proactive stance. As an Arctic nation – a country of inventors, diplomats, and negotiators, we should be taking the lead in brokering global accords that might save the world as we know it. Instead we are closing ourselves off, alienating our neighbours, and looking inward, to our past achievements. In the interests of short-term political gain, and medium-term profits for energy companies, Conservative politicians are abandoning my generation and any that hope to come after.

Meanwhile, the people who are supposed to be holding decision makers to account are instead broadcasting useless tripe, or worse, stories that actively distract from the massive projects we need to be tackling instead of watching TV.

Next steps:

What I need is to better myself spiritually, physically, and intellectually, so I can effect meaningful change in the world around me. I don’t know yet where this impulse will take me, but I know I can’t go back to working parallel to the real problems, hiding my opinions and yet somehow hoping that one viewer every night might piece together what I wanted to say. I thought if I paid my dues and worked my way up through the ranks, I could maybe reach a position of enough influence and credibility that I could say what I truly feel. I’ve realized there’s no time to wait.

If storytelling turns out to be my true passion and the best use of my skills, then I’ll continue down that path. If elder care, academia, agriculture, activism, art, education, Budo, or as-yet unforeseen pursuits turn out to make the flame burn brighter, I’ll make the switch, or do them all. I’m willing to work with anyone of any religion or political stripe, if they’re sincere about doing what it takes.

Right now I need to undertake a long-delayed journey of personal discovery. Having given away all the possessions that didn’t fit into my truck, I’ve set out on the road again, heading West. I know I need to go home for a while. I need to surround myself with family and friends. I need to consult, meditate, and plan the next steps.

I’m broke, and yet I know I’m rich in love. I’m unemployed and homeless, but I’ve never been more free.

Everything is possible.

1,527 comments
    • A journalist should not sway the viewer or try, it shouldn’t be a job where one expects to be ‘heard’.

      • Kind of Blue said:

        A journalist is making an argument whether they choose to be explicit about their political opinions or not.

        Objectivity does not exist.

        • PAM said:

          Is there anything name truth?
          So we talk about political opinions…

          What are the political opinions of Kai?
          Please give us your values when posting that?

          • This isn’t about Kai’s political views. It is about how much of his own truth gets filtered out, before it gets to us. If you tried to say to me,”I think that when you wash the stink out of the washroom, the washroom smells better.” and the editor cuts out- that, when, wash, the, out, of, the, and washroom(first one). Then the message changes too, “I think you stink, the washroom smells better.”
            I would get sick of that too.

            • PAM said:

              I agree, you are totally making a point that is bearing truth!

            • Quit being vague. If I sound vague it is because I can not better say what I am trying to say. Object to what you are objecting to instead of trying to draw out more B.S. I like to go to the washroom in private. If I speak in riddles it is because I grew up in a world where riddles are common place.

            • PAM said:

              So your message is:
              Vague, BS, say better, trying, Washroom, riddles…
              Please go on digging…

              I am really enjoying this.
              What is the riddle mister Joker!
              Seems to me: you are Vague and giving me BS because you can not say better and you are trying to go to washroom to spit out your riddles.

              Riddles in the washroom???
              Please repeat…

              What are you talking about.

              Just repeating the nouns you used…
              Do you undertand?

            • PAM said:

              I really like how your comment is vague:
              This is not about Kai’s politics….
              So what is this about?

              So you say that this is about how truth gets filtered out…
              I agree, truth is not BS, it is a fundamental…

              We agree: it is stinking in the washroom, some BS is going on…
              No riddle here!

              Kai did say there is something stinking out there.
              Can we agree on this?
              No riddle here: we are going back to the words written…
              Can we stick to the facts here?

              Kai is tired of being used like a towel and decided to get away before they burn him and throw him like a towel…
              We do agree on this?

              Let’s stop riddling and start to stick to the facts and the text that was posted…

          • This is my reply to all your questions, PAM. (Miss Antagonist who distracts with words.

            But first, I must ask. Who(not where and which branch) do you work for? I repeat. Who do you work for? What are your political views? I will be strait. Answer what you ask.

            I am 1st Nation without status. The government made bieng First Nation and proud of it so hard that my Great Grandparents left the reservation. I live today in a country where my ancestors welcomed foreigners, with the idea of fair and equal treatment. But instead they were poisoned for it, at first by accident but then later deliberately, with small-pox, measles and mumps. They were rewarded coldness and disrespect for the compasion they showed, and homestead they shared. And now my people are treated worse than foreigners, because we didn’t just die off or conform. So, because I pay taxes I don’t mind if some day I pay a little more: I support every hard working Canadian who needs a little help. I support the New Democratic Party, because they take more from those who have more to spend. Again no riddles. I like the NDP, and hard working Canadians who are willing to pay a little more, because they realise that they will get more.

            Kai would be writing about his political views if he was allowed to, but he wouldn’t do it to sway viewers(I believe), but instead to give them something to compare against. What I think Kai is writing(wrote) is that financial gain has replaced social gain. Today it is about what is better for the wallet then what is better for anything else. Wal-Mart is all about killing the competition first, giving you a better deal second. They say it, show us their ad and we will beat it.

            I am an advocate for the legalisation and taxing of the Marijuana trade. Instead of wasting tax money trying to stop it, the government should tax the sales of it, and use those taxes to educate people about it and more dangerous drugs. I haven’t had a toke in over two weeks. But instead of funding the government, “weed” if funding the illegal drug trade/dealers. If it is the gateway drug then take control of it, because it won’t disappear. It is the gateway drug because more than half the dealers of marijuana are also selling something else. We don’t live in a free enterprise, because it doesn’t exist. Power corrupts. Kai was sick of feeling like a puppet so he cut his strings. He said what he could without getting in trouble. Kai is going to wait until his contract is finally done which is probably a year after he quit. So, he has to keep his mouth shut for a year before he can really say what he wants to, or Bellmedia may sue or take credit for and good or bad press that Kai could stir up. The fact is that Kai can’t give you all the facts. He says it. Read it again if you can’t see it. Like one of those 3D pictures if you look at it hard enough let your eyes relax the picture will pop out. Only in this case it is the underlying message of his essay. So then, if you read his essay with an open mind(relax your eyes) the meaning will come to you…… Eventually.

            Some people read his essay get offended then reply saying something like, “Good riddance.” because they were directly insulted by what he had to say. He doesn’t know this many people I am sure and wasn’t trying to insult you, but because he opposes your point of view you have to poke at and berate him smiply for having a point of view. I bet if many of you had a choice you would block his essay from ever being read, because its is all lies and descent. When I reality he is talking about himself with a small bit about how other parties maybe influences in in decision making process.

            • PAM said:

              I have been working in computers since 1978 (second term of college).
              I have been an independant consultant since september 1998 working all over the world: Japan, Germany, US, Bahamas, Canada even 6 month in Quebec.
              Hometown is Montreal.

              I am here because I tought Kai was raising very interesting points and I am tired of seeing negative comments.
              Seems some people do not see positive and reject in block because their mind is not opened enough.

              Even If I am not in politics, either near or far, I do concur with Kai’s assesment.
              As you probably know, he probably did some research of his own before reporting.
              The incisive analysis is unescapable.
              I see very few flaws.

              So seeing people asking him why he left his job when it was clearly explained and seeing people tellig him he should have done it from within when they do not live his life seems hard core bashing to me.

              Plenty of Ad Hominem attack makes me want to reply…

              Basically to answer a second time: I am just a computer geek…

              And after more than three decades working in tens of organizations (consultant) showed me the veracity of the words Kai wrote.

              Just impressed he sees this at such a young age…

              People see vanity, I see humility of a guy who is going after hapinees and shares candidly his toughs.

              So excuse me, RAD for intervening, but I can’t resist… BTW, PAM are my initials… I am guy…
              Do not assume, it makes an *** of U and me.

              Take care and I do appreciate your comments despite some abrasiveness, more details will allow to understand better.

            • PAM said:

              Interesting… The toughest bugs are the one that are not there…
              I keep searching for the bug… And I don’t see it…

              Until I realized: there is no problem only in my mind.
              Good for the humility…. Ha! Ha! Ha!

              I guess I was in that loop…

            • PAM said:

              Now that we have been introduced…
              I have the outmosit respect for you.

              We are taking the same language…
              It is a shame what Canada did to first nations…
              But let the bigone be gone.
              We need some of your wisdom…

              French canadians were marrying natives whereas anglo canadians where throwing towels at them (if you see what I wrote).

              I must admit that you are the bug that never existed.
              Your values are totally in line with mine…

              I was looking of ennemies and I found a friend.
              I would be honered to meet you one day.

              We agree on so many things!

              So PAM to Rad… let’s share our defense of Kai’s values against thosee who are trying to spin this thread…

              Just look at my posts carefully and see the message…

              The second wave has come in and they are much more subtle…

              But their objective is the same: discredit Kai!
              So please help me: two working together is much stronger than just one…
              We are stewart of this planet!
              Who else can do the job?

            • Kg aka BabyGurl ; Lovelessga ; and baby doll ; aka Bonnie and Clyde said:

              I could not have said it better myself and it is “me” whom is replying on this

              I haven’t been into politics much. So I can not speak in depth and as knowledgable as my collegue. However u explained how I felt to its entirety.

              Thank you.

              K

        • Ed said:

          “Objectivity does not exist.”
          Then why do we have judges?
          Or hockey referees?
          Or . . .

          • Spc said:

            Because the appearance of objectivity subdues the masses.

      • LOLOL !!! OMG – what a damning indictment of a once proud profession. I honestly can’t tell if you are engaging in sarcasm or really believe it. I fear greatly though, that it is the former…and that you are not alone.

        • Pat J said:

          “So much for Objective Journalism. Don’t bother to look for it here–not under any byline of mine; or anyone else I can think of. With the possible exception of things like box scores, race results, and stock market tabulations, there is no such thing as Objective Journalism. The phrase itself is a pompous contradiction in terms.” -Hunter S. Thompson, 1972

        • PAM said:

          Assume it is the later.
          When someone does a post like this, he means it!

          Are you really thinking he does not believe in what he wrote?

          Are you saying he is not for real?
          Then why are you even posting here…

          Asking the question is giving the answer…

      • Alec Forbes said:

        You’re daft. Journalism has never been objective. At it’s most neutral it is relatively balanced — but if it’s worth anything at all it needs to be rigorous in taking a critical view, asking hard questions. Real journalism is at least rational and able to cut through rhetoric. What’s being said here is that it now simply reproduces rhetoric. A journalist should expect to he heard, most particularly becuase they are the ones in our society tasked with watching the horizon for the stormclods. Nagat’s talling us that lightining srated striking a long time ago, and roof just came off the barn.

        • Anne-Marie said:

          “All the news you need to know” sound familiar? Notice it doesn’t say all the news so who decides what we need to know because right there you have bias.

          • Kimberley said:

            ABSOLUTELY Bang on!

          • Richard Andre Dubois said:

            If you see someone trying to eat hogweed or water hemlock, then they need to know that it is poisonous. That is news that they need to know. What he is saying is that he cannot sit back and watch the world poison itself, and have his editor cut out his cries of,”DON’T EAT THAT!” He can’t walk by someone getting the life beat out of them, and not at least call 911.

            • PAM said:

              Obviously, you are one of the hired gun to manage this disaster that hit CBC…
              Using 911 seems pretty cool but what is your point.

              Going back to your message:
              Hogweed, Hemlock, Poison, Need to know, Sit back, eat…

              Assuming you are a wizard in communication, I see you saying:
              this is like eat hogweed, Hemlock, poison,know to eat… So to you this guy is 911…

              Let me use your great skills mister communicator.

              CBC is a poison to your society.
              Political spin is the rule and we must feed Hogweed and Hemlock so the poison is dissiminated.
              CBC is the poison.
              CBC is the Hemlock and the hogweed.
              CBC is worst than 911 because it tells us lies.

              Let’s enjoy this political spin, mister Dubois…
              You may look like the real deal, but you are a disaster for CBC.
              The more you are spinning this, the more we can show your motives.

              I do undestand your skills and know that in messages the negative does not goes in the subsconscious.
              This is basic Erickson approach…

              So let deal with this:
              I could not see CBC not throwing Hemlock at Kayi becasued they hate themselves;
              I understand that CBC is not accepting that they can not deal with Kai so they need to hire people to try to destroy him at all costs.
              I do believe you are not the hired gun that can not believe what he is doing…

            • PAM said:

              Disaster for CBC: hire public relation firm to handle this.
              CBC feels in jeopardy and did spend a lot of money to manage this.
              CBC is Harper.
              Harper controls CBC.
              CBC has no values.
              CBC has lost their sense.

              BTW my father worked at CBC from 1950-1982 in the news dept.
              His initals are YBM…
              When the 1970 october crisis happened, he was in charge in Montreal.
              His ethics are way beyong and he is now spitting on CBC…
              In his tomb, he is telling CBC: you are dirt!

      • Wade B. said:

        I think Nagata’s point is that news organizations and their journalists are constrained from being objective by the commerical and political interests of their owners, who instill their biased world views into the news to benefit themselves.

      • Erin said:

        No, a journalist should not try to sway public opinion. However, the job of a journalist is to disseminate news of import in order to empower the public to make informed choices in their lives. If the editorial staff refuses to allow their reports to engage in any meaningful news distribution, then the media themselves are failing at their job. The news is not something that is meant to entertain, it’s meant to inform. I think Mr. Nagata has hit the mark. I hope he finds something meaningful in his life that will truly help the public understand what issues we face so that informed choices can be made, instead of blind following of the loudest man at the pulpit.

        • PAM said:

          I read: news media are failling to do their job…

      • Ken Burch said:

        Any time a journalist reports the news, if she or he reports it accurately, the effect of that report will be to sway the viewers. This is simply due to the fact that reality and truth are not neutral and will always, when reported, make some parties, some ideas and some individuals look worse than others. There is no way to report the news with the intent of not swaying people and still report what is actually happening.

        Any reportage on the 1960′s Civil Rights movement in the
        U.S. South or the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa
        automatically going to result in the viewer being likely to take a negative view of those fighting to defend the status quo, because the reality of the status quo was objectively unjust. Any accurate reportage on the Vietnam War or the Iraq War was likely to lead people to take a negative view of the American side and its allies in those conflicts, because the
        reality of the situation was that those forces in those conflicts were more often than not acting in bad faith.

        What the CTV and Sun News are trying to do is simply prevent their viewers from receiving any information that makes the political ideology they are allied with look bad. The same could not be said of the CBC, because when Canada had Liberal federal governments and various provinces elected NDP governments, the CBC always provided just as much negative coverage to those governments and parties as it did positive coverage-and this was to be expected, because any government, anywhere, will likely cause just as much negative reality as positive reality. There was never a time in which, had it not been for the CBC, Canada would have gone Tory for the rest of eternity.

      • Sounds like you just picked up a journal”ism” textbook and rapidly turn to “the right” paragraph… CHANGE is a-coming to journalism. (It’s called the internet.) FUCK the status quo. Aren’t you listening? (reading) to what Kai is putting forth?

      • PAM said:

        Ok
        I am going to start using your style.
        In your world: one sentence resume the word”
        I have the truth…

        If communications is never without values…
        What are your values?
        What do you stand for?

      • Nat said:

        Okay – truth be told I couldn’t actually stomach this masturbation long enough to read all of it. Once I got the “The Problem with the CBC” I moved on to actual problems. Ya know how my job doesn’t pay my bills and want not. The blitherings of a well paid 24 year old tearing off his shackles is not on my list of crap I care about. However I thought it might do him some good to hear this….

        GROW UP! Join the real world who don’t give a damn about principles in their job when weighed against paying their mortgage. Ya you show up….idealy you take pride in your work and do your best….but when you get fed up you don’t have the luxury of quiting.

        Oh and by the way, some of actually have a brain and don’t take what you splatter on the TV and call news as gospel. We are capable of understanding big business and special interests. ENJOY your fifteen minutes. I’m sure we’ll see you on The CBC soon enough collecting your pay check

        • Dan Perillo said:

          Was posted above but you should read this:

          http://members.shaw.ca/jeanaltemeyer/drbob/TheAuthoritarians.pdf

          Also it has been said many times that if you choose to have kids and a mortgage that is something that you have to deal with.

          Some people have higher callings and Kai might be one of them. Read the whole thing and stop thinking so narrow minded. Open your mind and think for yourself for once and not as a societal whole of “what is most important”.

          • Hans said:

            Dan, I couldn’t agree with you more. So many people across the western world have forgotten or don’t care about the truth, much less about making a difference and building a better society.

            They are quite happy to regurgitate the spoon-fed fallacies and outright lies found on controlled mainstream media. This is why you see slave mentalities like: “Join the real world who don’t give a damn about principles in their job when weighed against paying their mortgage”.

            Well sorry, but principles and values need to come first, especially for journalists, who we, the public rely on to hold our politician’s feet to the fire and ask the hard questions.

            What we need in this world is more people like Mr. Nagata who are willing to make sacrifices and stand by their principles. What a fresh breath of air that so many intelligent people across the globe are finally waking up.

          • Nat said:

            Well Dan – yes I did choose the life I lead….my point is a “higer calling” as you put it (HA! BTW how pretentious) is something you can’t walk away from. What what’s – his – face did was choose a job. Have a little boy, find a person that you can love the rest of your life and then do whatever it takes to make it last and never give up. You can’t quit that and blither on a blog about it to feel better when you throw in the towel and give up. You can’t give up. A “higher calling” is not something that you choose….it chooses you and if you quit it before the age of twenty five I think we’ll give it a differernt name. He quit a job – I think maybe his three thousands words would be better sutied to monster.ca not as news.

            • Nat said:

              And BTW to those of you who keep telling me to “man up”? I’m a chick okay? Its a short form.

              I think my point was vastly misunderstood. Its just that we all get disenfranchised with our jobs. But did he really think that he was going into the news business and that the truth would always win out. Again I say grow up. He wasn’t going to get infront of camera and change the world before the age of 30. He quit his job. If I quit mine for principles or otherwise it wouldn’t matter to anyone else other than the bank that is of course. If he wanted to stand up for his principles why didn’t he use this medium to tell one of the stories he wasn’t aloud to tell instead of goin on about how disappointed he was to find out what the rest of us already knew. The media has view points and coverage is largely awarded to those who agree or pay money. SPECIAL INTERESTS CONTROL THE MEDIA – RIP OUT THE FRONT PAGE. I knew that and you wanna tell me he didn’t?

              Now that being said I voiced a view point and was attacked for it. I think like a sheep? Please I basically agreed with the guy I just challenged the idea that he should have known what he signed up for in the first place. We all know what goes on why doesn’t he? He’s not a folk hero. He is a guy who didn’t like his job and quit.

              Just for the record I believe that working for every nickle I have for a family I love and a life that I believe is worth the rat race is just as important as trying to save the world on a larger level. I’m sorry guys I just don’t think this blog is what he is accomplishing.

            • Jo Luici said:

              So you have to look at reality and compare to what you can think up. We get it. You should get that checked.

        • ErinvH said:

          Nagata has a level of privilege that you and I gave up long ago: he’s unencumbered by family or mortgage or other things that tie him down. But we chose to give up that privilege and take on more responsibilities of that type. Why is his world any less real than the world of mortgages and loan payments?

          You’re basically calling him an irresponsible kid. It’s unfair on several levels, not least of which is the level where very few 24-year-olds have taken on anything like the level of responsibility he has held. But really, all it does is make you look like a bitter old man.

          • Dan Perillo said:

            Well said.

            There seems to be a lot of bitter old men and women in this comment section. People who feel like their values are more important than anyone else. Why should you choose what is important to another human? That is my main question for those who are bitter with Kai’s choices.

        • Kimberley said:

          Hey Nat…man up…if your job doesn’t pay your bills that is surely not the fault of Kai. Your aggression is misguided if your publicly blaming others for your own short comings?

        • Jean-Pierre said:

          I really think that that’S a dumb comment. One of my uncle once said to me that i would grow up and forget about all my principles. That i wouldn’t care anymore for others and that my own little world would be all that matters. Well he was right! For you not for me, it’s been ten years and i still care.He made a Bold move, and i’m proud of him! Keep your sour grapes to yourself, people with hope don’t need to hear that.

        • Richard Andre Dubois said:

          How does it feel knowing that someone else makes your decisions? You might as well come to grips with it Nat. You are a slave to Capitalism, a porch-monkey to the almighty greenback. I would soon starve then take food from a baby. From what I read I can deduce that you would have no problems doing that, and then telling that child to,”Suck it up. I’m hungry too.” How does it feel to have that rich hand up your backside telling you where to look and what to say, like some empty puppet. Pay your bills go ahead, but don’t forget the lube, it won’t feel so bad that way.

          • Jes said:

            Seriously.

            Clearly Mr. Nagata is somewhat privileged to be able to quit his job, ditch his possessions, and hole up with family. But at least he’s using his privilege to try to take on the institutions that seem to be dictating the way that guys like Nat think.

            I work a shitty minimum-wage job, and I’m glad there are people out there who are trying to get us to take a closer look at the infrastructure that leads to so many of us squandering ourselves for a few bucks. If we all just put our heads down, adhering on some silent agreement to plug away at bad jobs (not to the benefit of ourselves or society, but corporate interests), then things are just going to get worse, and we’ll all die in debt to the company store.

            Of course, we all have to pay rent, and I’m not saying everyone should quit their jobs. I can’t quit mine, even though it’s degrading and low-paying and ultimately feeds yet another terrible corporation intent on destroying the earth. I leave angry every day. But I do believe we should support those who do have the resources to try to pick at those aspects of the system that corral us all into such a deadened existence in the first place.

            • You don’t need to be privileged in order to realise that you are walking in the wrong direction then decide to turn around. If that is the case we are all privileged to be breathing. But we are not all that privileged because the air we breath now has passed partially through a car and/or factories/refineries before it gets to us. Gotta love the smell of carbon monoxide. But I detract. You are privileged enough to quit and like so many others today, you too can stay at an emergency shelter(which Ford is trying to stop funding), for now.

              It is funny to think that the very ideas and attitudes that allowed for “colonisation” is trying to be tossed not only out the window, but into the incinerator, which is then decommissioned and dismantled so that some-one who already has money can make and keep more money from the masses.

              In the late 1940′s to early 1950′s a lot of Canadian and U.S. Families made quite a leap from lower class to upper middle class, because the wives of our countrymen-Grandfathers still worked after their husbands got home. That didn’t settle well with those who were super rich because now they had to pay twice as much to house holds, so in the years/decades that followed inflation then determined that in order to live comfortably now both parents had to work. Or as you can see one solitary bread winner has/had to sacrifice values for dollars in order to pay the bills. Do the Wall toons need all that money? How about super geek for microflacid. I hope he ends up with a micro-soft not-so-hardware. Or how about the hundreds of millions or multiple billions that Hollywood-less owes to the Edisons for using his patented motion pictures, which they are now crying about, because sharers of the internet are taking their stolen/ owed money.(In the words of Nelson from some cartoon,”HA! HA.”) California at the time didn’t recognise the patent, so out popped Hollywood, then fake tits shortly after(Intended to cause other things to pop, and hopefully wallets out of adjacent pockets).

              Now the ones with money are making us dance for coffers(Dragons Den or Shark Tank). I admit I too have thought of putting some of my ideas on paper then dancing for them, so I have until recently to been blind to the musings penny pinchers because money means more now than family, history and home.

            • Jes said:

              I think it’s important to realize that there are different levels of privilege, and that it’s easier for some to follow their dreams than others. I support anyone in deciding to quit their shitty jobs, and trying to make their voices heard.

              But come on, it’s a lot differentto decide to become homeless and live in a shelter in order to stop compromising your ideals than to take your thousands in savings and go stay with family. There’s nothing wrong with doing that, but it’s naive to say the former person isn’t privileged over the latter.

              Yes, anyone can “decide to turn around”, but that’s a vague, symbolic statement. Do you mean “anyone can quit their job and do just fine, like Kai did”? Because I have to say I disagree.

            • How much is your pride worth? Are you telling me that no matter what you would work that degrading job? Don’t over pride your self be humble. I never once thought that I would end up living in a homeless shelter, but being ingnorant and proud can lead you to places you never thought that you would go, or need to be. The truth is everyone not upper class is a lot closer to homeless then they are to upper class. I know that I will find myself and where it is, that I am to go, and I am going to pay into the very system that takes care of me right now. The way I figure I am still living on what I payed into it so far.

              So in short. Yes! Anyone can turn around and do fine, like or unlike Kai. You just have to open your mind, to possibilities that you were too proud to consider. What would happen if you found yourself homeless, but because you didn’t support social programs there was no one there to help you, or the ones who will are few and far between, and everyone else wastes your time by looking down at you berating you and taking your drive away? Would you just fall on your sword? What would you do? I wanna know. If you wanna know about me some I just started a blog check it out. i really don’t care if you dont like it, if you do, then that is a different story.

            • Fab said:

              I really like your point of view Jes :-)

        • PAM said:

          So you must be working as a spinner…
          How does 24 years old (or 64 years old) has any bearing ont the debate.

          Your message is: you are 24 years old so you should shut up…

          Please repeat again so we hear you clearly!

          Anyone under 25 years old is worthless.

          I really like your perpective…

          I will leave to others to bash you!

        • PAM said:

          I like your upper case comment:
          Grow up.

          But in the sentence before you admit not reading.

          So who needs to grow up?

      • I am struck at the thoughtfulness and deep reflection of this young man. I can, I think, relate to his plight more than most. You see, I also used to be a broadcast journalist at a very young age (starting at 18, to be precise) – in then communist Poland. Young and idealistic, I landed my great opportunity at the age of 20 – becoming one of the co-anchors of a fast-paced, “western-style” news broadcast called Tele – Express. As a first such endeavour behind the Iron Curtain, we were given a considerable leeway by the communist government. They hoped that using our broadcast as a safety valve they will diffuse the unrest. So we were allowed to broadcast live and had full editorial control, frequently criticizing the government. The result was essentially an overnight stardom. We were watched every day by 18,000,000 people – almost half of Poland’s population. People recognized me on the street. High school chums wanted to be friends again. Most importantly, I was making a difference. I was pushing the envelope. Then, only a year and a half later, as quickly as it started, so it ended. The government in 1988 decided there was too much press freedom. The censorship was re-introduced in the last gasps of the regime. Our show was recorded, not broadcast live. Our editorials were censored and/or written for us by “somebody upstairs”. So I did the only thing that made sense, the same thing Kai did. I quit my job. I left the country (merely a year before the fall of the Iron Curtain) and headed for Canada, where I imagined the press free and untethered and people demanding and getting truthful, provocative reporting they deserved. What I found was exactly what Kai described; a medium calcified by self-censorship, political expediency and market pressures. Journalists more interested in landing a senate appointment than asking tough questions (Mike and Pamela, stand up, take a bow!), lazy editors, reporters who could not spell integrity, let alone implement it. And, with all the alleged openness to newcomers, nobody wanted journalists with – gasp! – an accent. So I toiled in Canadian broadcasting for another 9 years, before making the best decision of my life – quitting journalism altogether and becoming involved in the non-profit world. Took me much longer to come to this point, but my conclusions were the same: life’s too short to shovel manure. Now, each day I help change lives for the better through my efforts – a work that I am proud of and that brings me satisfaction. And the one-time broadcast career, all 16 years of it, feels like remote dream. Or a nightmare.
        Congratulations, Kai. I hope you’ll find your vocation.

        • PAM said:

          ARE YOU REALLY CALLING ME PAMELA?
          Or are you talking to someone else.

          PAM are my initials. you really want to call me Pamela…
          Like Pamela…

          Please do make my day and I will start to read your text…

      • Steve said:

        You obviously don’t understand what he is saying.

      • Skookum1 said:

        Well, huh, do you think people only learn to write so they can be the mouthpiece for a publisher whoDOES want THEIR opinions to be heard….actually “opinions” isn’t quite the right word – it’s “skewed reality” adn “pleasing the adevertisers”…….

        “Though shalt not speak. Though shalt not think. Though shalt not tell the truth. Thou shalt only write what I tell you. Or else thou shalt be fired.”

        I’m not sure if you’re a propagandist, mlsled, or just stupid.

      • Jo said:

        Sometimes, what you want to do is change the system from the inside out. When you realize that the battle requires more energy than you can give, it’s time to let go!

      • A piece of yourself must be apart of the work you do. Objectivity can only exist on the back of apathy. So you can’t have good journalism without a sense of the situation. A journalist should make their views clear, and the facts strait so that viewers can make a truly informed decision. Doing this properly serves not to sway but to educate.

    • nick said:

      so uhhh, you quit because of harper and the conservative media? well in that case, i won’t miss you.

      • sump said:

        It’s un-educated people like you that fall for Conservative propaganda. If you had any knowledge on how Conservative Policies work you would see that they benefit only the absolute elite of the world. The 5-10% of the worlds population that controls 90% of the worlds wealth. Conservative Fiscal policies are meant to destroy the middle class by briding a very large gap between the bottom feeders and the elite at the top. I suggest attending a university or college level Economics course before you blast someone who has shown a great level of common sense.

        • Doc McCoy said:

          It’s elitist “left-wingers” like yourself (I can make generalized assumptions about your character as well) that fall for CRAZY conspiracy theories. The leader of the conservative party is barely upper middle class let alone “the absolute elite”. Maybe you should go to a university or college level engineering course to devise a plan to remove your head from your ass.

          It’s pretty important to not apply the same left / right wing theories that exist south of the border … to our boring Canadian politics.

          • Anne-Marie said:

            Have to disagree with you Doc – not a conspiracy theory when the leader of the conservative party has stated that he doesn’t want a middle ground for people to choose from – which would be why he wishes to destroy the liberal party. It forces people to choose left or right. I think he will be shocked though because in the end I believe that most Canadians will lean more left if that is their only choice.
            p.s. clearly you’re not a Maritimer because around here I would say 6 figure plus income puts you pretty squarely in the upper end of society. For that matter in most cases living in Canada puts you pretty much in the elite category if you go by the rest of world.
            p.s.s. For the record not a liberal

            • Doc McCoy said:

              You are welcome to disagree all you want. I’m from Calgary … and I’ve ran into the PM at both Boston Pizza (with a security detail of two) and at the McDonald’s in the same neighbourhood (when he was just the leader of the opposition). Hardly the haunts of an elitist. I can assure you that while the neighbourhood is by no means a slum it is FAR from the HIGH end here in Calgary.

              Harper started his career as a mail clerk. Quit equating him with the elite. It’s ridiculous and everyone trying to make that assertion sounds ridiculous.

              Sorry, just doing some Google searches about this “destroying the middle ground” thing … can’t find it. Do you have a link to the quote?

            • Nat said:

              “I’m from Calgary & I’ve ran into the PM at Boston Pizza and McDonald’s” is not a point. The fact that the PM enjoys Big Macs really has nothing to do with whether his politics benefit the majority or the minority. Someone’s taste in food doesn’t indicate that they are a good leader, and cannot “prove” that they aren’t crusading for things which are harmful for future generations. I’m impressed you can use Google but manage not to find something that comes up on any search with “Harper- middle class erosion” — While you work on your search-engine skills, I sincerely hope you enjoy your “common-man haunts”, your middle-class neighbourhood, and the bliss of your ignorance.

            • Doc McCoy said:

              Lol … clearly reading is not your strong suit. The eating establishments were not supposed to get you to like him or indicate if he is OR is not a good person (to be honest, I don’t care), it is to indicate where he lives and eats. The accusation was leveled that Harper is a member of the ultra elite. That is undeniably WRONG. On many levels.

              As for MY ability to use google or my enjoyment of “common-man haunts” … is that YOUR point? ‘Cause that isn’t one either.

            • Doc McCoy said:

              Don’t see a single quote in that article from Harper talking about destroying the middle class or the middle ground.

              If there is truly a quote (as Anne Marie would have me believe) of Harper indicating anything at all resembling the following statement;

              “when the leader of the conservative party has stated that he doesn’t want a middle ground for people to choose from – which would be why he wishes to destroy the liberal party”

              I’ll buy what you are selling, ’till then …

            • Rod said:

              Hitler didn’t start out as the Fuhrer!

          • PAM said:

            Not sure how to qualify Harper.
            As you wrote he started his carreer as a mail clerk…
            Elitist stands for someone who only deals with elite.
            Has no bearing on the places he eats.
            I would think that every move of Harper is carefully planned.
            We saw the image builder behind him and they did a pretty good job.
            Nodoby was able to talk to Harper in public.

            The famous: Tu nous a menti Charlie Brown did the job.
            From then on, any new politician made sure they were not in public.

            I have the outmost respect for the image builder in Harper’s team…
            Because waht you see is not what you get.

            Would elitist apply to a man who worked in a think thank in Alberta.
            May be yes, may be not.

            What bugs me more with Harper: what is you see is not what you get…

            He was perceived as cold because he is indeed cold.
            Remember when he came in the reform party…
            Look at his image now: carefully shapen, a real decoy, almost cool and a composure that shows he is in control.
            Harper is the quitescence iof the image altough I must admit he has more content than Bush.

            Now the image is not the real thing.
            So let’s see where he will bring Canada…

            Trudeau was the idol of the liberal party…
            The real man, the Canada in liberty and face the future.
            Results:
            - on the constitution side, it is a failure (Quebec still not in and PET made sure Mulroney would fail because he was a envious man);
            - On the economy, it took Mulroney to trun the boat around (altough Martin reaped the benefit).
            After more than a decade, Trudeau left us with a country more divided and an economy in shambles…

            So let’s be clear: I hate Harper with all my guts and he smells putrid to me.
            Still I will see what he does for Canada.

            One thing for sure, Oil industry is paying him so on the green side, his decisions are affecting the rest of Canada (besides Alberta) and putting the whole country economy in trouble.
            But who knows, may be there is a logic to his behaviour that I don’t see.

            I was hating Mulroney and he turned out to be one of the best.
            I was almost in admiration with Trudeau and he turned to be the worst politician we had in the last century.

            History will tell us what Harper did: for now, it really looks bad… Hoping there is a logic behind this madness!

            • Doc McCoy said:

              “He was perceived as cold because he is indeed cold.”

              I see that he is not necessarily a charismatic speaker and might be a bit on the stoic side … but I’ve also seen him with his kids (this was part of the McD’s story alluded to earlier) and he was a very involved and attentive father. For the record there was no image consultant around.

              “One thing for sure, Oil industry is paying him so on the green side, his decisions are affecting the rest of Canada (besides Alberta) and putting the whole country economy in trouble.”

              Regardless of his policies … where do you get this stuff from?!? Not only do you have him taking bribes … (I can only assume that’s what you mean because I can assure you that any campaign funds donated to the Blue’s were going to the Red’s) but that the policies both hurt the environment AND the economy. Are you accusing the Conservative government of intentionally ruining the country environmentally and fiscally for some kick backs?

            • PAM said:

              I do understand your point but please go back to the original post and post your text as a reply.
              Regarding McDo… You are really spinned… Do you really think Harper goes to McDonald every day?
              And if he really does… What does it tell us.

              As for the bribe part. I need to get more info from my sources but please enjoy… I will ahve a fun time to go deeper in this process…

              For now, we are on the right hand and our words are so compressed that we can not have a full discussion.

              So please do bring back the challenge so we can have 10 words per line…

            • PAM said:

              Seems you are a bit naive…

              Who does finance the political parties.
              Liberal, Conservative… All the same approach.

              Did we learn something about companies bypassing the rules in Québec?
              I guess you will pretend that we are the only ones…
              No mister, they got caugh here.

              Seems it has been proven over and over that Liberals did indeed find some way to circumvent the law…
              Martin was shut down because of Chretien and Pelletier acts…
              More recently, those companies asking their employees to do a donation and paying them back…

              If you think that the Harper team is better… Ask the one who was in charge of Atomic energy of Canada, ask any diplomats (probably smoothly replacing all of them), ask about the Aftghan prisoners.
              There are so many scandals that plague the Harper government…

              Why was there an election… Is it that the Harper government broke the law and was getting a confidence vote…

              You really believe in this guy.

              What was the name of the think thank that proposed to split the Quebec and the West island (a Berlin wall maybe?) if Quebec was to become independant… Harper was still an influent member..

              Anyway, Harper represents less than 40% of the population who voted.

              He was so defeated in Québec that he lost to the NDP…

              As for corruption, let me rephrase…
              The Canadian government is in jeopardy because of mister Harper. He did make sure to make the machine fail…
              Just ask high ranking officials… Everyone under a minister if they think their troups have moral…
              Well, if you want to kill your cat, you just say he has cancer.

              Stephen Harper injected cancer to all civil servants of the Canadian Government…

              For corruption, we can wait a little bit more: after all this is their first majority…

              But it might never be that it reaches Harper…
              Chretien and Pelletier got out of it without a scratch…
              But we all know. Gomery gave us enough infiormation…
              Either Chretien was the pure guy he showed us… Or the organization moves were unknown to him (despite orders coming from the prime minister office).
              To me Chretien was a political beast for whom the ends justfiy the means.

              In a political world, the chief is always protected…
              We will know more about Harper in a few years… But it really smells bad.
              Hey… Maybe his acts on the GW side will endup causing the split of Canada.
              Alberta wants to go and if 2015 is choosen as a base year for a cap and trade, Quebec would loose tens if not hundreds of Billions.

              As for policies that hurts the environment, we can easily agree ont this.
              Now the picture is the following… With increase pollution, Canada will be hit with a carbon tax by some countries.
              Meanwhile we are not moving ahead while other countries are forcefully walking toward the new energy…
              I must admit, I don’t really care, being from Québec, I think we are in the right direction despite Harper (we did not vote for him!) and we are already almost reaching Kyoto protocol levels…

              Why the Canadian dollar is at 1.05 instead of .85-.90 cents?
              Part is caused by the decline of the USD…
              But also because demand for Canadian dollars is higher to fund Oil economy in Alberta (also Potash).
              This makes all companies in Quebec, BC, Eastern provinces, Ontario less competitive.
              We pay less for machinery but we are selling for 10-15% more.
              This is causing a lost of hundreds of thousands of jobs (if not millions).
              I have already explained that…
              Look at 2010 CAD vs Euro: http://www.x-rates.com/d/EUR/CAD/hist2010.html
              We loose job in the manufacturing sector and the new jobs in Oil can not compensate.
              Especially once the plants will be built and the pipelines in place.
              Everybody but Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland…
              All other provinces would be much better to use the USD as a currency. At least we could compete on equal term with our biggest trade partner…
              Meanwhile, the citizen of those three provinces would see their CAD go up and could turn in to Saudis…

          • Miskitta said:

            Oh wow! Are you ever dim! You sound like a tube-fed fundamentalist propaganda drone.

            • PAM said:

              Dim like your comment: few words with no meaning.
              You are doing Ad Hominem attacks…
              Of course, you will need to refer to Wikipedia to understand.

              Please read in Wikipedia the meaning of Propaganda and drone.

              You are indeed a real propaganda drone.

              You are a tourist to me.
              Go back and learn the trade!

          • Richard Andre Dubois said:

            It’s is not propaganda or consperacy theory, so much as it is statistics. Not everyone wins the lottery and if you look at the 5/6,5+/6, and 6/6 numbers you can figure that 90% of the pot goes to the top 1%(or smaller fraction yet). BAM. Where does the money go that you pay to mortgage. Interest, ok. That money goes to the share holders as profit for the bank, and the bigger share holders get more of the profit. They are people who already have money, and now they don’t have to work hard because their money is working hard for them. They could have worked hard for their money that now works for them, and all the power to you, but even if one in ten of those share holders has money inherited then they didn’t work for it, and now they are getting money with out even trying. The right wing way of thinking is not as they say it is. And if you are to obtuse to see that then I have no sympathy for you. Go ahead say it. I know you want to. “Let them eat cake.” See where that takes you.

            • Doc McCoy said:

              I totally agree with your numbers.

              I totally object to my being obtuse. And I will go and eat cake … and so will a bunch of the welfare state because we’ve adopted a social and economic system by which cake is less expensive than the bread that French didn’t have from where your quote is taken.

              The conspiracy theory is that Harper is “working with them”. No more than any other party.

              Just for giggles though … you should imagine a world in which instead of lending you money (which you can take the rest of your life) to pay back and be building upon your own equity … you have to purchase the property out right. Imagine how your distribution of wealth pie charts would look then.

            • It’s no conspiracy theory, because it is not hidden. harper is just to stupid to see the damage that he is doing. He thinks that he is stimulating the economy by appealing to big conglomerates whom he thinks will employ thousands, all the while not realising that if you hire thousands then lay of half or more you are really only hiring hundreds. He is to abtuseto see this. Lets lower taxes for those who make too much, that way when they have too much money they will want to share it with us. Truth be told the only money they give away is money that gets them more taxes back. They can never have too much money, because they don’t like sharing. No conspiring. Just plain stupidity. Raise taxes on companies which make mega millions so that the smaller guy can catch a break. I don’t care if the government raises my taxes a little bit because I am gonna complain about them either way, and do you know what so are you.

          • Doc McCoy said:

            @Pam. I certainly hope he doesn’t go to McD’s everyday lol. My point is not that he goes to McD’s everyday. It’s that in a semi-private situation he was hardly “cold”. My personal experience was simply used to rebuke your comment that “He was perceived as cold because he is indeed cold.” I’m around people all day that are not great public speakers and act completely different behind a podium than they do face to face. This doesn’t surprise me.

            I’m not spinning anything by the way. While the general idea of the Conservative fiscal policies I agree with, I am in opposition to many if not all of their social policies. My vote goes to the politician in my riding that can represent my perspective best in Ottawa. Don’t really care what party they’re from.

            • PAM said:

              It is not because someone smiles to you and shakes your hand and even sign an authograph that he is a enthousiast person (or warm).
              If is not because a person does not look at you that he is cold.

              To me, body language and facial expressions of Harper shows a person that has a lot of vanity.
              You had a five minute encounter with Harper in a McDonald.
              I have spent hours looking at him, reviewing the debates is slow motion at some point.

              Sometimes, you need to look very carefully to see what is really happening.
              To me as a hockey fan: the goal by Weber assisted by Cammy and Hamrlik was a goal plan by Gomez…
              Gomez never got a point but he was the reason why this happened.
              This is just to explain that it is possible that my judgment based on hours of looking at Harper carefully and years at looking at his decisions.

              This guy has an agenda and does not care that he destroys the whole civil servants morale (all the way to the diplomats).
              Everything in this guy is about showing an image…
              It has always felt phony to me…
              But hey, you might be older than me and have met more people than me.

              You might have more communications skills than I have.
              As you don’t know me and I don’t know you… Let me just say you this: 23 years ago, at about 30, I have learned that people talking is often lips service. First impression is much more revealing… Unless you are not calm inside…
              Turns out that my first impression, when I was calm, was always right.
              Camera is enough revealing to me but may be because you heard his voice and shook his hand for a minute you know better…

              BTW, I am a real right wing guy… Except for social policies…
              Seems Québec is having a better score on handling their young delinquant than the model Harper is proposing…
              I am for competition, no holds barred, no lobying, no political party contribution allowed…
              Now, you might think that political contribution are the only mean and that someone who gives a million to a party does it because he is a true believer…
              To be frank, I really don’t know.

              But all my guts is telling me this guy is about vanity and phony…
              Frankly, I will trust my guts before you who met the monster in a McDonald…
              I will trust his actions before his lip service to make up my mind about him…
              I guess I have more memory because of all the things he does that horripilates me.

              BTW, he is not a monster… He is just a true leader who owns the truth….
              Problem: people who owns the truth have done pretty well in the past: Pol Pot, Hilter, Gengis Khan, Mao, Ben Laden, Bush.
              All great leaders who really knew, who were not flip-flop…
              Perfect man with true leadership.
              Not saying Harper is that bad… Just that he owns the truth (him and his office).
              Makes the sheeps feel secure… But not me!
              Seeing this guy in power forces me to accept the results that will plague Canada…

      • mmj said:

        I didn’t get that from his article at all. He covered a lot of ground, but I don’t think he ever once said he was quitting because of Harper. His article was a lot more complex than that. Talk about “right-wing narrative of victimization”!!!

        • PAM said:

          You are right.
          He did a very good analysis.

          After all, he talks about example that he lived.
          His move is based on many aspects…

          It is not a one time decision.
          It is a decision based on many past experience.

          He is just saying:
          Hey guys, I am leaving because I do not find a place where values are upheld to his ethics.
          I leave because I have values…

          Then he just calmly explains why.

          In his explaination, he never talks about people but values.
          No name is mentioned.
          Quite a diplomatic text.

          Now, we as nobody, can infer more from his text.

          For example, I do blame part of this process to both Chretien and Haper.
          Both are two sides of the same coin: Great political beast with an agenda where the ends justify the means…
          But he never talked about Harper…

      • Exactly, good riddance..

        The only type of reporting this “journalist” considers objective would be that which pushes his agenda.

        • xorbtiman said:

          Sorry Jeff but you missed the point completely. He’s saying that most TV broadcast journalism in Canada today is mostly “head in the sand” type ignoring a lot of the real social issues that are not relevant to the big corporations money making agendas. They concentrate on a lot of sensationalistic reporting. When was the last time you had a follow-up story about someone that was injured in an accident to find out how they survived….or if they survived? It doesn’t sell so it’s of no consequence.

        • PAM said:

          So you want to get rid of others when they disagee?
          Given your comment, what is your agenda?

          What is Kay’s agenda?
          If you send a one sentence spinning, you should be able to present you case…
          Go ahead?
          I do undertand.. Good riddance…
          Of course you won’t be able to present your case.

          • who said:

            This bitch is high.

            • Jean-Pierre said:

              And you’re low!

            • PAM said:

              Wow! so much intelligence!

      • xorbtiman said:

        @ Nick…no he never said anything of the sort….you need to read between the lines.

        • PAM said:

          So what is between the lines?

          • Richard Andre Dubois said:

            Let me spell it out for you. (You know the alphabet right?)

            He was sick of being told what to write. He values his own opinion over money.

            How much money would you need to take it up the rear?

            He quit so that he can find himself and his own opinion again, because it was getting lost in the buffalo chips. If you want to know what he really thinks. Wait. Let him figure it out, and then he will tell you. Patience is a virtue, I hear, read, say and believe. Money is between the lines,(Heck it is between every word) and he just finished saying he doesn’t want money that comes from hiding the truth, because it is dirty. Let me wipe my ass, and then see if you want to shake it.

            • PAM said:

              Let me spell it out for you…

              You know the alphabet so here are five letters out of 26:
              I AGRE (did not write the second E…)

              In Japanese: Wakari masu or Hay! So desu!

              In french: nous avons un accord parfait sur les motivations de Kai.

              If you need, I can add chinese, thai, spanish and portugese.
              But for the first two I need to add an new IME to my laptop…

              You get the point I guess!

      • os said:

        I think people are reading too much into this. Politics aside, Kai was someone who didn’t like his job, so he quit. Period. This should be allowed for anyone, media or not. You don’t like your job. You don’t need to do the job. So then quit. End of story.

        • Rockmaven said:

          I agree with this. I think what he wanted to say is that as an individual he believes he can use his talents in a way that fulfills his personal need and his need to contribute to the world somehow. To each his own. I don’t think he meant to attack the profession or other journalists. He just cited why he doesn’t feel it works for him at this point in his life. If anything i comend him for his courage to nake a decision for his own happiness. Too many of us go on self discovery too late in the day.

        • Richard Andre Dubois said:

          ‘I HATE YOU! – don’t leave me’. It’s a book. Read it. I only went half way through and it blew my mind.

          We are in a world where there are an increasing amount of people who don’t know who they are, because someone else is trying to tell them that. Aptitude tests this, bell curve that. Trends and popularity. What the hell is “viral” supposed to entice in thoughts(Are not viruses bad?). There is no wonder that the youth are using bad for good and vice versa, because they can see through the clutter with out knowing. Having lots of money really would be “sick”, if it came at the expense of others.

      • Sphievphen Phappenschepper said:

        Hey Nick! How much do you folks get paid by the Harper govt. to troll the net and post comments? Isn’t it great that they don’t make you reply to any responses you get, just get the WORD out brothah!!

        I’m in a similar position to what you yourself were in recently, desperately needing employment and will do ANYTHING for money…really!! ;) Hook me up!

      • Ken Burch said:

        No, that wasn’t what he was saying at all and you know it. He was saying that he felt the CTV work culture made it impossible for him to be an honorable journalist. Why, in your view, is THAT an inadmissable position?

        Clearly, any journalist that follows CTV policies ceases to be functioning as a truthful member of her or his profession and reduces herself to the status of a propagandist for the status quo. Why SHOULD Nagata have agreed to fatally compromise himself in that way? It goes without saying that none of those who do can be trusted.

      • The neoConBot crazy Christian Right-Wing Trolls just can’t help it:

        RWA: right-wing authoritarian followers

        snip snip So a right-wing authoritarian follower doesn’t necessarily have conservative political views. Instead he’s someone who readily submits to the established authorities in society, attacks others in their name, and is highly conventional.

        http://members.shaw.ca/jeanaltemeyer/drbob/TheAuthoritarians.pdf

      • PAM said:

        I agree but there must be something else.
        We now have a free man ready to give society more.

    • Travis Fimmel said:

      I am glad that Kai Nagata is no longer a reporter for Canadian media. Clearly he wants to be a political pundit and not a reporter of the news. That is just as well because he is obviously a poor reporter – saying that Canada “lost” a seat at the UN Security Council. That is incorrect – even in his post-reporter status. Canada did not have a seat at the UN Security Council at the time.

      It is NOT the job of the media to hold the Canadian government accountable. That is the job of the opposition parties. The job of the media in Canada, which Kai Nagata cannot understand, is to report to their customers what is happening.

      Now that Kai Nagata has revealed his political bias, which is based on his lack of ability to think, I am so thankful that this commentator wannabe is no longer standing in front of a Canadian media camera and seething about not being a pundit instead.

      P.S. It is normal practice in Canada – and most countries – that if you work for and are paid by a company, then the company owns the intellectual property that you worked on and were paid for. But – once again showing just how poor of a reporter he was – Kai Nagata did not know that.

      • Louis said:

        Wrong. In dictatorships and totalitarian states, it is the job of the media to “report to customers” — in other words, to toe the party line of the state. One of the essential elements of free democratic states is an unfettered media that has an absolute obligation to hold those entities holding power over the people, including the government, to account.

        It certainly IS the job of the media to hold the government accountable.

      • John Victor said:

        Canadian Media (a.k.a. Travis Fimmel) did a good job of taking a few irrelevant issues and labelling Kai as therefore irrelevant (despite the illogical leap) and completely missed everything of import that he was trying to get across.

      • Leslie said:

        To Travis
        It actually is part of true journalism to deliver the truth to us and to ensure our governments are covering things up. Clearly you are the one in the dark, distracted and not understanding which way this country is clearly headed!!! Do your homework!

      • Joe said:

        Travis, as soon as I read “which is based on his lack of ability to think,” in your comment, you lost all credibility.

      • Ell said:

        Travis, you’re wrong. In Canada our democracy is built on a large system of checks and balances to hold the government accountable. These include but are not limited to media, universities, electorate, opposition, the senate etc.

      • ah travis, your comment doesn’t live up to an actual intelligent and thought out reply so ill say this, your a f***ing idiot and i will pray for you to your jewish zombie

      • Really, Travis – who has an inability to think?? Kai is pointing out that because something ‘is’ doesn’t mean it’s ‘right’ – as you suggest in your PS. For example, just because a contract states it owns your intellectual property, doesn’t mean it’s ethically right. What right does a corporation have to exploit its employees and extract their ideas and claim them as their own without giving proper due and acknowledgement to the originator?? Sounds like you like your rules and would flourish under a tyranny – oh wait, you are, you’re revelling in a Harper government. Enjoy it while it lasts, because it won’t last much longer my friend. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Harper’s days are numbered :-)

      • DURR said:

        You are an idiot. Did you even read the article? Or did you just pick out whatever fit your agenda? He left because the network he was working for PREVENTED HIM FROM BEING A REPORTER WHO OBJECTIVELY REPORTS. Because they instead want to serve JUNK FOOD TV.

      • PAM said:

        I really like the political bias approach…

        Are you saying that Journalist should stick to facts and have only ethics?

        Because as far as I can see:
        - Kai has ethics;
        - Kay sticks to facts;
        - you have a political bias.

        So you must be talking about yourself…

      • PAM said:

        Clearly all your post contains no facts.

        Judgement is your motto.
        Mister, I can see that you own the truth…

        Still no facts… Please argue with examples…
        Impressions are good when they are backed with a plausible explaination.

        On the other side, Kai is presenting facts, stories.
        He could probably prove to you every word he wrote with names, dates, quotations, recordings.

        But hey, you are cool, you know better: you own the truth.
        I really hope you have no child…
        Certainly not now…

    • Danielle said:

      When you come right down to it, the core issue isn’t politics or even journalism. It’s feeling comfortable in one’s own skin. Whether you agree with Kai’s feelings about politics and journalism, or not, imagine yourself in his shoes. How long could you continue doing a job you no longer enjoyed? If Kai felt he could no longer be a committed employee – for ANY reason – then he made the right decision by leaving.

    • PAM said:

      Enjoy your time off.
      There will be something for you when you come back.

      Many investigative reporters are needed in TV5, BBC, PBS and elsewhere.

      I am also enjoying very much toying with your detractor in Fox news style.
      Just found a new way of dealing with them…

      Just use the same style… It is easy…
      Even better, raise the bar so they don’t understand the underlined message.
      It is so easy to send a message to someone who can not read and understand properly.
      After all they are not interesting but we can still enjoy having fun with other members of the board..

      If they raise the bar and go to the facts, then the conclusion will turn around to be similar to you.

      Still in GW, I think PeakOil will present the opportunity for us to turn things around very fast.
      Some countries will seize that opprotunity (Québec, France, Japan, Germany, China) and will position themselves really green in the energy field.
      Then country who are left behind by leaders who think they own the truth will have to deal with a new world order where they no longer can dictate the rules.

      Mark my words, once the number of green country will reach a critical mass, WTO and GATT will have to adapt.
      Like the supreme court, they do react to new trends eventually.
      For example, if China ends up having 30% of their energy in green… They could relax their currency while adding a carbon tax for products coming from polluting countries.
      For now, they are trying to position themselves in a world where ressource are getting more scarce…
      In this great dance of the nations, the ones with more vision and less greed will endup winning.

      Change from inside: I am sure that many insiders did that fight before the 2008 collapse or any other collapse.
      Did it prevent the crisis to occur?
      Does that mean that no insiders tried everything they could to prevent it to happen?
      If your left arm has gangrene, you need to cut it.
      Do you see organizations cutting their left arm?

      People who think you can change from within do not understand how shark organizations are working.
      To change from inside, you need to reorient the whole executive staff.
      But these guys have grown and succeeded being sharks…
      Why would they change?
      If you are too loud, they will use Fox tactics (ad hominem) and paint you as a black sheep.

      First change yourself (you seem to have done a pretty good job) and then build an organization with dolphins as partner.
      Finally, start to compete.

    • PAM said:

      Seems a few are talking about the devil in person: tax.

      First off, history tells us that GST was implemented by the Conservative (Harper is a conservative) to improve the economy.
      I prefer more tax and less income tax (we should all go to Bahamas…).
      Then the liberals promised to remove it. Either they knew they were lying (my guess) or they saw it was not possible to do. Need some insiders here…

      Seems economist have a strong desire to remove regressive taxes and to put in place progressive.
      Tax can either slow your economy or help it (or less injure it).
      Income tax is not the best one. Import tax have a lot of benefit but it also makes a country less competitive unless it is totally geared toward exports.

      There are two economic way to handle the global warming:
      - Carbon tax;
      - Cap and trade.

      Carbon tax is by far the best economic model (just ask top economists).
      Also very simple: you measure (like money) and then you tax.
      It also means that you can easily tax imports from polluting countries…

      Cap and trade is very difficult to put in place:
      - complex bureaucracy;
      - Cap allowance must be very precisely measured (tens of thousands of experts to calculate the cap and millions of hours in court);
      - If you give Cap that are too big, you end up doing the reverse: making more GHG;
      - On a global scale, the trade will be very complex to handle: another wall street + Nasdaq;
      - a lot of cap and trade specialist will be paid very high salaries (millions);
      - decreasing the cap will increase the lobbying.

      Seems to me, that a simple tax is better than building an empire of trading.

      Now if your name is Wall street, the Cap and Trade is the answer… The rich gets richer and the poor… Well there is still something more we can suck out of these guys.

      With a model of Cap and Trade, Alberta (Harper anywhere) will win and the rest of Canada will loose.

      Where does the pipelines from tar sands goes?

      Now let’s see:
      Cap and Trade: use 2015 as a reference year and all efforts of Québec (now almost at Kyoto level) are wiped out.
      Use Kyoto protocol (we signed it) as a reference and Alberta ships Billions in Québec…
      Currency: remove the demand of Canadian dollars for Alberta petrol and the Canadian dollar goes down to 85-90 cents: 1 million jobs created (vs how many in Alberta: 10K, 100K). It would cost us when going in holiday… But one million more taxpayers, not on unemployment or social welfare must have some benefit… At 30K per year… you are looking at 30B more in GDP…

      I am sure I am not alone thinking this.

      But hey… I am not an economist and not listening to Fox news.
      It is not possible that I am right…
      BTW, I am totally right wing… Less government but better government…

    • starbbycat said:

      great read … have been thinking about CTV news & its blantant support of the conservatives over the past several years – also thinking/wondering about the effect of BellMedia taking over – admire your guts to follow your heart. frick though it is scary to think about all of this – became interested in politics right around 2005 or so with the federal election – saw the defeat of the Liberals with the Conservatives taking a minority – eventually since have lost heart for it – it seems a very nasty business – it is scary to see the likes of Stephen Harper with his majority with absolutely no control over what he does or turns Canada into – doesnt look good when things like the Census is tossed aside – why let the facts get in the way of what we want to do – sad to see people towing the party line with little thought as to the consequences – hard to see how nasty we are becoming to each other – day by day the kinder gentler thoughtful smart Canadian is being replaced with the tough as hell find your own fricken way chump, way stooopid between the ears, blindly led by the powers that be that use and abuse for their own benefit. God help us all.

    • PAM said:

      Going back to history…

      We must learn from history.

      So if Kai is the target of a communication firm, we must make sure to bring the debate to the real perspective…

      First message from the public relation firm hijacking this thread must be answered properly.
      You really want to work from within????????????

      So let’s go: you asked for it, you are going to get it!

      Since Jean Chrestien days, CBC has been hicjacked and controled by politicians trying to limit the damage.
      This was way back in 1995 when the referendum was almost lost.
      At that time, a new person was named at the head of CBC…

      The first person who was in charge of this was Abram (should be written like the original Abraham) Rabinovitch.

      As executioner, he was in charge, almost a decade ago, to make sure CDC would not present positions that are against the government.

      The leashe was long enough to allow journalists to do anything but the focus was to prevent anything that would encourage or trigger anything in the independance fervor.
      How do I know that?
      Well I do not…
      But event that unfolded and the result shows the intent.
      Executives are given a mission and do not divulge it.
      But the result shows the intent.
      It is that simple: look at Radio-Canada in 1993 and now!
      What has changed in editorial?

      In the Harper era, this has increased much more.
      We all have seen the diplomat complaining about the Harper governement.
      How about the falk river story?
      You need more… Please do challenge me!

      So we have a government, that is removing the ability to his journalist to tell the truth.
      If this does not fit the agenda of the government, it must be manged and firm are hired to do that.

      What we see here is a concerted effort to pass a message:
      you should have done it from within.

      There is a subsidiary message but it is not important.

      So I am giving a warning to the message specialist who are trying to hicjack this….

      You really want to go there?
      You really want to do implicit attack on Nagata san?

      Please be my guest… I would love to go this way.

      The more you are going to play this game, the more I will attack the organization you are trying to defend.

      So basically: back off or I will make sure real issues are revealed.

      This hijacking has gone enough!
      Back off or I will show you how people with true values are able to bring things in their real perspective.

      I repeat: back off!
      To me the next step is to show that CBC is being hijacked and controlled by the government.
      Case seems clear to me.

      I hope I have made myself clear.

      Intelligence would be to stop the hostility, regroup and reevaluate…
      If you continue on this route you are making my case easy…

    • PAM said:

      After so many post doing a spin on this thread…
      The message from the hired gun is clear:
      Work from within.

      So basically… everytime you see this, it is a spin by hired gun.

      Real question is: what are the messages they are trying to spin?

      Second question: how much money is spent in this exercice.

      Funny part: with all of us together, how can we make sure this situation goes out of proportion?
      How can we make sure the spinners are caught in a loop such that they are spending way too much money to handle this?
      How can we make sure they are failling while spending ever increasing money on this board?

      So the message is: work from within…

      Let’s agreee: within is corrupted to the bone and should be cut…

      The argument used in the spin is our instrument.

      Feel free to do Ad Hominem attack (attack the messenger)…

      I will enjoy this run!

      So the message is:
      Can not work from within when it is corrupted.
      Kai never said that,,, Now you are saying that Kai should work from within.
      WITHIN IS CORRUPTED.
      Now deal with this!

    • PAM said:

      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH

      Harper wanted to split Québec back in 1995.

      Harper did not speak to one citzen during last campaign: all his meeting were organized.

      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH
      HARPER = Goerges W BUSH

      Actually, I am wrong… Harper is worst than Bush!

      • Richard Andre Dubois said:

        I agree Harper and Bush, both suck ass. You can see it in their face. you could put you hand in front of their nose and completely block their vision. Their point of view is so narrow, that they can not accurately see around certain objects, or see easily judge how quickly things can/are happening.

      • Doc McCoy said:

        Facepalm.

    • PAM said:

      Again I see the marks of a public relation firm..

      I woinder: how can you do this job?

      How can you deny truth and still go back home with your child?
      Do you have any child?
      Furhermore… Do you ever want any child?

      Because Kai is trying to protect them…

      How can a public relation firm not understand… Let it go!

      The more you attack Kai, the more people will agree with him.

      You are basically creating more trouble.
      Go back to the customer and tell him: this is going to cost us 10 times more…

      My goal is to blow this out of proportion… So you are making my day!
      Please enjoy attacking Kai from every possible angle…

    • Jamie said:

      Couldn’t agree more on your opinions – Glad to see the new generation taking up the fight and not completely blinded by the powers that be. I remember the movie NETWORK as a kid and even then I knew we were heading in the wrong direction – We need to keep our eyes wide open, not wide shut. I will be listening for good things from you and hope I can help in some way in the future!

      • PAM said:

        So let’s help Kai in his fight and fight back.

        WE ARE FREE PEOPLE.

        The people attacking him are just puppets…
        We do understand that!

    • richard said:

      You’re not alone, I myself have been trying to share this view w/ my friends/family for years. Its always heart warming hearing others share the same view. (lots of individuals who’ve commented included)

      to all the older generations out there.. some of us younger generations ‘get it’

      seek information vs in-formation

      all the best

      • PAM said:

        He is not alone but a public relation firm is here trying to discredit him…

        Of course he is not alone. We are all united with him.

        His words are true and he diserve our respect, help and support.

        Let’s start by chasing those haters away.

        To do that you have to bring things back to the essence.
        Seems simple: yes it is!

        Every stupid comment should be followed by a deep analysis where you try to find the people who gave the contract to shut him down!
        Even better, can you imagine some of us going on other threads…

        After all, War was waged on Kai!

      • PAM said:

        Well… I am a bit older (53).
        But seing such a beautifull mind like Kai showing me this gives me all hopes for the future.

        We are not alone… We are the majority…

    • PAM said:

      So guys are you with National.

      The coordinated way attacks were made on this board against Kai seems like a public relation firm is here.
      The coordinated way attacks were made on this board against Kai seems like a public relation firm is here.
      The coordinated way attacks were made on this board against Kai seems like a public relation firm is here.
      Their mission: handle the damage and shut down Kai.

      My guess: National or a newcomer with the same culture…

      I can see National reevaluating their approach…
      I can see them talking: are we creating a monster….
      Sorry, you are not, the monster is us showing you off…
      The monster is people on this board all teaming up against you.
      The monster is the offense you are doing by attacking Kai…

      Guys: A few of us just are wish you keep on attacking Kai!
      This is so much fun!
      Honest people on this board just want so much to have this battle.
      Reading all the post, there are may of us…

      Your only option: fail here or fail elsewhere!

      Do you really think you can spin the truth the way you want anywhere?
      To us lobbist and spinners like National are the most dirt there is to be seen.
      Is that clear enough…
      Can we say it again: Do you have any ethics?
      What the hell are you doing attacking this guy?

      You are so worthless that playing with you using your own tool is just fun.
      We will enjoy your stupid post and use them to make a bigger debate…
      For every hit on Kai Nagata, the goal is to shoot back with 10 to 100 times the strength you used.
      So please use this as a motivation…
      We are not alone and our mission is to bring truth to this baord.
      This almost spiritual: We need to protect Kai from the spit of dirty people.
      So everytime you do spit: we will hit you 10 times more.

      We are nobody so we have nothing to loose…

      Give us your best shot… We want this challenge.
      This is us, nobody going after you guys.
      Almost like a crusade…
      The only difference: you did start this war and we are just defending Kai…

      Here, we have the same rules.
      Internet has made this an equal opportunity ground.
      It is not like you can flood the TV with adds…
      We are equal here! So you can not use fear as a tool.
      There is no fear in this realm: works for you guys and works for us too!

      Basically, the approach is the following:
      - when post makes no sense, destroy the logic if it is flawed;
      - when post are showing true insight, try to find the intent behind the words… then attack the source of the intent (In this case CBC executing private consil orders).

      How do you defeat that:
      - Make a plan within a plan within a plan etc…
      - Lie, cheat, attack the messenger (Ad Hominem).

      Here is a winning proposition: tell the truth.

      The original idea was: you should have worked from within…
      Not bad but this is a totally flawed conclusion and is so easy to destroy that it is not even fun.
      This may not work perfectly and needs much more efforts but you migth end up find new perspective: We all win!

      You have many path:
      - Attack Kai on other places than his own board (seems not so bad);
      - Do a plan within plan within plan attack: seems like a lot of money to me: Go see customer and ask for a few 100K hoping you can win this;
      - Try to find a way to attack him on truth and fundamentals (seem the toughest path to me: do you agree?).

      I love when a public relation firm is going after a true good person on his own board.

      You do undertand that you are fighting a war in ennemy territory? You are commando team that has been uncovered.

      Go back and regroup and undertand: you can not come here.
      The interesting part: now that you have been uncovered means that you tactics can be used against you…

      So now anyone on this board can go and bring this war on the CBC site…
      They shut you off: create another email…
      They shut the thread: create another one…
      They shut the site: go on CTV, PBS, CRTC… Use your immagination…

      Thank you for showing us the path!

      Do you understand that nobody wants to see you here?
      Do you understand that every bad comment on Kai is just adding hatrid against CBC? Is that the objective?

      So basically, any hatrid can be chanelled back to CBC and Harper…
      Because you undertand: you are using hatrid as a tool…

    • PAM said:

      33 strategies of war.

      Strategy number one: Declare war on your ennemies: done!

      Strategy number two: Do not fight the last war – Done, we are now at war.

      Strategy number three: Do not loose your presence of war: The public relation firm is reevaluating for now… For now… They will come back.

      Strategy number four: Use a sense of urgency and desperation – If a war is won against Kai… We will all loose.

      Strategy number five: avoid the snares of group thinking – Do you really think internet is group thinking?

      Strategy number six: Segment your forces – Well we are all alone deciding here!

      Strategy number seven: transform your war into a crusade… We have all the elements here…

      Strategy number eight: Pick up your battle carefully… Here is an easy one, going after CBC, CTV or CRTC is much tougher… Does not mean it is not winnable but it need to come from all directions.

      Strategy number nine: The counter attack – Here we have seen a concerted effort to attack Kai… The counter attack needs to bring this to other boards, offices, PM office…

      Strategy number ten: Create a threathening presence – Seems that the public relation firm is starting to back off… I just can wait to see them coming back with all of us against them.

      Strategy number 11: the non engagement strategy: we are seing the public relation firm using this one… Bashing against Kai has decrease (may come back), they are indeed reevaluating the approach.

      Offensive warfare…

      Strategy number 12: loose battle but win war: if we loose the battle on this site, it does not mean we loose. We need to bring war to the ennemy!

      Strategy number 13: Know your ennemy… Anyone thinking the public relation firm is the ennemy will loose, the real ennemy is the people behind… Make your guess…

      Strategy number 14: Overwhelm resistance with speed and suddenness. Can you imagine you guys teaming up on the CBC site in the next two days?

      Strategy number 15: control the dynamics… There is no way I can control anyone on this site… So you guys need to decide where is the next step… Personnally, I like CBC but anything will do as long as we agree.

      Strategy number 16: hit them where it hurts… They are attacking kai so we should attack CBC and PM office (private counsil).

      Strategy number 17: Defeat them in detail (never be intimidated by your ennemy): So we need to go after Harper on the long run.

      This is just half of the approach…

      War has been brought to Kai.
      We are able to reply.
      No need of a leader nor of a ruler.

      Just need to agree on:
      - situation being brought to us;
      - imagine we can do better.

      Guys and gals, this is your call.

      16 more strategies in the book.
      But we have enough to avoid 23 to 33: Dirty warfare…
      These are the tools of our opponents:
      23: wave a seamless blend of fact and fiction
      24: take the line of least expectation;
      27: seem to work for the interest of others while furthering your own;
      28: give your rivals enough rope to hand themselves (Sorry, I did used that one…)
      33: Sow uncertainty and panic through acts of terror (Did use that… can you imagine this thread on the desk of the CBC or PM office?)

      what is most fun… as I was presenting this approach… I ended up with 33…

      Can you imagine this thread on the desk of the CBC or private counsil CEOs…
      They would understand the danger…

      So now I am waitng for the replies.
      Obviously will fall into one of the 33 strategies…

      I want to avoid war at all cost…
      But attacking Kai is like waging war on me…

      Please do make my day!

    • Richard said:

      “People do the job for all kinds of reasons. A few are raging narcissists.”

      Yes, I guess so. And some need to grow up and stop pretending they know all the answers that people with VASTLY more experience don’t. The world is awash is white-bread leftists, do we really need another one?

      • PAM said:

        So how old are you my friend.
        At 53, I still think that Kai, at 25 is way beyond you an me…

        Please show us, master narcissist!

        Please give us an example of white-bread leftists…

        I am just waiting for you to show us, You are the one… the only true one.

        The mega narcissists…

        Read again what you wrote!

      • PAM said:

        You are so talking about yourself that I can wait for your reply.

        Come to me, you master of all.

        You are the illumination…
        Please do show us the path so we can follow and know who we need to attack.

        Please do show us.

        Now… How do you feel?
        You really want to go down that road?

        Please give us a name of a white-bread leftist?
        Please give us the name of the game you master?

        You are so great…
        Indeed, I now uinderstand how you own the truth and want to follow your leadership.

        I need a master like you to show me the way to true revelation…
        I need truth in my life and I am sure you will bring it to us.

        All the previous sentences were meaned to lure you.

        All I am waiting for is to be sure you come back so we, as a team could prove that every word you said is a lie.

        You did decribe yourself and I really enjoy giving you back your own words…

        I can not belive that you can not understand how dum-dum you look…
        I can not see how you can not see how much you are destroying yourself…

        Are you for real or just another useless spinner trying a last attempt to attack Nagata san.
        BTW, san means Mister but you can now understand that concept… Respect is not word that does not mean nothing to you.
        Start with you first: Do you respect anything about yourself?

        It is so easy with bashers like you that it is not even funny…
        You are so much hating yourself that it shows in every sentence you are writing.

        I guess you must have a miserable life and want to bring everone down to your level.
        Well done my friend: you have showed us that you are indeed that low.
        Interesting: a narcissist that hates himself… They are all the same after all!

      • PAM said:

        Do not take the last post personnally…
        It is just about what you wrote.

        You are certainly better than what you are showing us.

        It is just that you showed us the dirtiest, worst, ugliest part of yourself.

        I am sure that deeper, you are a true beautifull being.

        It is just that it is hidden behind all that rage and that hate…

        Go back and breathe in…
        Air is good because it brings oxygen to the brain.
        Obviously you are not breathing enough…
        Or you are breathing too fast!

  1. Congratulations on your freedom! Thanks for your hard work and I hope you find your passion. It certainly would be nice to have a Canadian version of “Pro Publica”…

    • PAM said:

      What is Pro Publica?
      Anything geared toward truth and against Fox is good to me.
      Fox is the quitescence of lying and manipulation.
      Anyone using this as a guide is just stupid!
      Feel free to challenge me!
      Just go ahead make my day!

        • PAM said:

          Thanks for a great site I did not knew.

          Like the russian in 1972: I come here to learn.
          Difference: I know they have plenty of Bobby Clarke in their team…

          So who learned more in 1972: Canada…
          This epic changed hockey in NHL for good…

  2. François Larouche said:

    What a text. What a great act of courage. You demonstrated great respect for youself.
    Good luck.
    Frank

  3. Serge Laplante said:

    We will miss this guy, really.

    • PAM said:

      He is not gone, just becoming free!
      Such understanding is great.
      Do not be sorry… See the opportunity!

  4. Vahan said:

    How about you become our Jon Stewart. We definitely need that type of satirical look at anything foolish. Too bad Bell owns Comedy also. There is always YouTube. Funny how progressives are considered more left leaning, yet we are o.k to hit both sides if they are truly foolish. It is going to get uglier out there with Sun News pretending to give people news. Hopefully Canadians are more in tune with being lied to.

    • Valerie said:

      Here! Here!

      I’m thinking you need to talk to Corus. Maybe get yourself a “Daily” show on HBO Canada? If ever there was a Canadian media company that’s not (as) beholden to a given particular political sway, it’s gotta be Corus – maybe?

      We need a satirist (or just straight-up commentary) that doesn’t pull any punches and your views seem to reflect almost entirely my own. It gladdens my heart to know I share the same sense of normalcy as another fellow Canuck. I truly believe there are a lot of us out there (though where they were during the last election…?)

      We middle-of-the-roaders need you. I beg you not to quit media. It *does* seem to be your passion. Having opinions shouldn’t preclude you from being in a position to share them. Don’t give up! Please! With a cherry?!

      • Irish84 said:

        Lol as an employee of Corus (who works in News) I can assure you Corus is at least as beholden to its share holders as Bell and Rogers. They’re all the same which is the greatest issue facing news in this country.

        Majority of journalists work for 1 of these 3 companies and if there’s a news story about one of the sponsors I can assure you, you won’t hear about it

    • Becoming our Jon Stewart is EXACTLY what I was going to suggest. I wholeheartedly concur with your idea.

    • PAM said:

      We have a Jon Stewart.
      What we are needing is a Kai Nagata…

  5. Alex J. Glass said:

    Ouf, what to say? I found that the transition between John Grant and you had gone so well, after having wondered how someone else could take on his responsibilities and pull it off.

    Maybe there is a gentle voice in your soul, giving you an outline of what you might feel passionate about, in future. Twenty-four is certainly a good age to evaluate and realign, it’s a time when people will understand better than if you had waited for a long time before making the same decision.

    I hope that your colleagues, being in the information industry and all, will read your message carefully, because they have ample food for thought.

    I wish you well. My field is written French and I’ve frequently had to apologize for it, because too many people think that they know how to write, and when by chance they seek out someone to polish their material, it’s under the disguise of lacking time, instead of lacking skills or knowledge. I, too, am probably richer in love than in goods, but my faith is strong, which helps a great deal.

    Alex J. Glass
    de Montréal

  6. prin said:

    I vote either Canada’s Jon Stewart or the next PM. Yes. I’d totally join the party.

    • Skookum1 said:

      What party, and why bother with a party?? the party system, and the parliamentary system, have failed us miserably and have been revealed as both farce and sham. I’d go for the Canada’s Jon Stewart thing, or Canada’s Amy Goodman….but getting airtime in a tele-universe controlled by Big Media? No, Big Media has to be killed with a stake in its heart and a beheading, like a combination vampire-zombie. They’re trying to take over and control the internet, and in BC have begun disabusing bloggers who have held the torch going for the mad, depraved years of Campbell’s “Golden Decade”, in which CTV was NOT fair and balanced and was part of and an exacerbator of cover-up after cover-up in re BC Rail, BC Hydro and lots more, and have participated in a lockdown of courtroom access/rights for independent journalists…..we need a New Media, we need to kill the political system which controls cable licensing and allows Big Stupid Money to have its way and push Big Stupid Garbage at us and “thought control” and newspeak are now the common order of the day; even when masked as cooking shows and the ideological push for rank, brutal capitalism that Dragons Den represents.

      Nagata’s very right that consumer-rights “journalism” has replaced investigative reporting on political matters, and that’s a really nasty problem for any civilzed democracy. Red herrings about ponzi schemes instead of taking on the disbursing of government contracts and crown/public assets to political backers etc….or examing the system of payloa and graft and patronage and pork barrel that is what the parliamentary system is DESIGNED to do.

      We do not have a democracy in Canada, really never have; we do not have a free press – we have a bought and paid for press…

      As for the post somewhere above telling him he’s not allowed to have an opinion; well, who does then? Only the network owners????

      The whole situation reminds me of the classic ’70s film Network – with the fatalistically deranged broadcaster telling everyone to throw their TV sets out the windows, yelling “I’m mad as hell and can’t take it anymore”.

      Yes, Mr Nagata, keep writing; wherever you do it from, in whatever venue you can find where you are allowed to express your conscience and not subdue it as part of your job conditions. You are not a slave, even though they want you to be one……

      Big Media must die, and it is us that must kill it. Somehow…..

      • prin said:

        Well, there has to be a party so we can elect him… I’d hope it’d be a new one. Left in some ways, right in some ways and rarely center.

        The parliamentary system only fails when those who represent us aren’t elected fairly and when the people who choose to run do it for entirely the wrong reasons.

        Nobody does it for idealism and nobility these days and in consequence, people don’t feel the need to participate in the same ol’, same ol’.

        • MarkBP said:

          Kai’s description of where he stands sounds a great deal like the Green Party

      • The system by which representatives is broken. Canadians would be best served if we had representation by popular vote, which means if only 40% of the country voted for the government then only 40% of the seats in office would be given to them. That would allow for alot of the under represented parties a seat so that their’s and the views of those whom they represent would be heard instead of buried. That way the government would have to do things that appeal to more of the population. I am willing to bet that more people would vote if this system were used in future elections, because then even if they are the only house that doesn’t vote for a particular party in a 3km radius their vote would still count instead of first past the post.

      • PAM said:

        Do not throw the baby with the water…

        The system is good, it is just that we endure that people are corrupting it…
        If laws and rules are the same for everyone, we are much better.
        If we use common sense instead of fear (cover your ass) and power to build those rules we are much better.
        If laws are based on science and solid facts instead of ideology, we are much better.

        The system is not the problem… It is just that some are thinking this is a game and they are players.
        They should think: this should be fun for all of us, not only a few.

        Nash presented an approach that is at the base of GATT and WTO: but players are corrupting it…

        Whatever the system, it should not be based on personaltiy (vanity) but values, ethics and principles.

        In this, we have all failed to uphold our values…
        Because, let’s be fair, most of us have values.

  7. Elise Moser said:

    How great. Good for you! I can’t wait to see what you do next.

  8. Viktor said:

    There is no consensus. It’s funny that we humans think we matter so much as to presume we can influence the cyclical nature of climate.

    If we wanted news from hacktivists we could get those from youtube.

    • Earl Dunbar said:

      This is a piece long overdue. Not for you, Kai, but for journalism, especially TV, as a whole. Bravo.

      Viktor: It’s funny to think that humans CANNOT/DO NOT influence global climate. To think otherwise is hubris and denial.

      Belinda: I think you really misunderstand.

    • You’d prefer to get your news from the same large, faceless companies who charge you for it on your television, or who bill you for your cell phones? These companies who answer to the profits of their stockholders and not the public interest?

      I’d rather get my news from the front lines, from a voice that has true passion for the news and for what it means to be a citizen of this country any day.

    • Darren said:

      That’s right, Viktor. Humans had nothing to do with the “natural” erosion of the ozone layer. CFC’s? Pff…

      With regard to climate change, there is evidence that human beings *may* be contributing to climate change in a bad way. You say not. Wouldn’t you like to know for certain, beyond your “this is what I think and I’m right and everyone who thinks otherwise is stupid” position? That’s what science is for. That’s why we need climate science. Not to prove that humans are ruining the climate, but to determine if that is indeed the case and, if so, to what degree and how we might go about correcting things.

      To state that people are presumptuous to think that they matter so much that they can influence the climate is a presumptuous, arrogant and ignorant statement.

      • Also Scientist said:

        Daren, the science you note has already been going on for decades with little OBJECTIVITY shown by either of the opposing sides in the relevant debate on what remedies might actually help. Of course, financial reasons as always. Well, the simplest remedy available to us all right now is voluntary population control world-wide. In addition to all other environmental efforts that only MIGHT help, this one WOULD help. But no, that would damage our economy and, furthermore, our environmentalists much prefer the opposite – let the population grow and then carbon-tax it for environmental “reasons”. Never mind that it will do nothing for the world’s environment, we want to show our dedication to it, right?

        • Also, also a Scientist (a realistic one) said:

          That’s an incredibly lazy reply. Everyone knows it boils down to overpopulation, in the end, but you offer no more reasonable solutions than the carbon-tax you decry. Anyone can criticise, but how many people actually have original ideas to improve our lot?

          How would YOU implement population control? Hmm? Voluntary? Riiiight.
          And enforced population control has worked out so well for China. /sarcasm

    • Jonathan said:

      “Matter”? Your choice of words is wrong.

      It’s not a question of whether or not we “matter.” It’s a question of whether or not their are enough of us to make an impact with our industry. Have you totally failed to look at the world around you?

      • PAM said:

        Let’s suppose 1% of the Canadians all work toward a better ethic in any political party they want for 5 hours per week during the election period (6 weeks).

        Let’s suppose one of of ten on this board goes to meet the political staff for one or two hour per week using wethics as a guide…

        What happens?

        We do matter, so we should try something…
        Keeping the outmost standard as our guide.

        Working from inside is a matter of keeping our calm and focus and ethics…
        Does happen in political parties…

        Leaders a la Harper and Bush who owns the truth and knows better are things of the past…
        In the future, leaders will be the ones asking the right questions…
        Vision is about asking questions and sharing…

    • Kat said:

      Wow….actually retarded…and that’s what you took away from this whole commentary, huh?

    • rwerkh said:

      Viktor:

      There is a consensus.

      Of course we can sway the climate – but thank you for illustrating the right wing belief system discussed in the article.

      How can you be so stupid to believe humans do not affect the planet with their actions – that is just plain craziness.

      There is lots of data on how climate is modified on many levels by human activity.

      You sir are either amazingly stupid, or delusional.

    • PAM said:

      So your pretention is that we can not affect nature?
      So how about throwing 100 nuclea bombs on the planet?
      Would this change the planet?
      Well I have to agree: one million years from now, it would be solved…

      Now is the real question:
      Can we affect nature?
      If we can, where are we going?

    • PAM said:

      Seems science is telling us that CO2 is vibrating when light comes in, and bouces off in infrared emitting energy in all directions.
      Seems science tells us that GHG are have a logarithmic impact (hence the reason why going from 280 to 560 ppm of CO2 is the same as going from 560 to 1120 ppm).

      Did you know that?

      So let’s forget everything and assume you can understand facts that are simpler…

      We can nuke all of North America… (or any other continent) so much that there will be no life for at least a few hundreds (Nature is strong) or thousands of year…

      Do you still pretend we have no impact?

      I agree, if we kill every human on this planet, it will recover. In the life cycle of a planet (Billions of years), we are nothing…

      Is this your model?

      Let’s try again, we still have some smallpox in reserve (for scientist… You know the ones who created Frankenstein…).

      If we grow enough, we could send so people to dissiminate it every where killing nearly 20-25% of this planet…

      Do you still pretend we have no impact?

      Do you work in a cubicle every day?
      Does this makes you feel secure?

      What do you know about Global Warming?
      What is the rate of Artic summer ice decline? (about 10% per decade and increasing)
      Was the melting of Groenland and Antartica included in the 2007 IPCC report? (no, just glaciers on mountains and sea expansion due to temperature)
      What are the ice mountains glacier that are not regressing? (Less than 5%)
      What is the impact of earth albedo on reflection?
      What is albedo? (color of the earth: Mirror is 1, Black is 0)
      Why do model predict Antartica is going to grow? (warmer means more humidity in the air, makes Antartica grow)
      Where is the dryest place on earth? Sahara? Namibia desert (oldest desert on earth)? (Antartica)
      What is the most important factor for sea level rising in the last IPCC report? (Increase in temperature of the sea cause an expansion of the sea, Glacier melting is the second one)
      What is the probable impact of the melting of the Himalayas on agriculture in India and China?
      What did the chinese authority did about that on the Mekong tributaries?

      You seem to know better.
      Could you answer one of these questions?
      I mean just one…

      Now I will ask you to prove your leadership…

      Please ask one question…
      Just one to show your point…

      You seem to need more details…

    • Victor, my not so friendly neighbourhood retard. You forget about the atom bomb I am sure that if they all went off then the world might just be different. Nuclear winter, radioactive fall-out. Do you remember Chernobyl? Humans couldn’t possibly have done that, because we can’t possibly have an impact on something so grand as the Earth. What does your lower intestine taste like?

  9. Amelia T said:

    He sounds like Stephane Dion, circa 2008…

    • Parliament_Nil on twitter said:

      You say that like it’s a bad thing! This is exactly the point: If someone’s not “TV-friendly” for whatever reason (in Dion’s case, specifically, his English), they are not fit to serve slop to swine. Never mind that most Canadians actually agree with the guy, once you take his name off the page, or his second-language yammering from the two-minute blurb on the evening news. I bet his English trumps your French!

      This kid has ones made of the same granite as the Canadian Shield, and twice as large. He just renounced a career in broadcast journalism where he could have lapped up the money indefinitely, and there’s little doubt he knew the consequences beforehand. Which CONservative has ever been this brave? Gerry Nicholls? Ezra freaking Levant??? Pffft!

    • PAM said:

      Please do enjoy some time to present your case about Dion…
      Please present specifics and be ready to defend…

      If you are for real, you will try to live up to the challenge I am presenting you…

      Rely on facts not impression!

      Harper is all about impression and spin…
      Dion is about something else…
      I may not like him but I have to give him what belongs to him…

      So let’s have fun:
      present either Dion or Harper..
      Choose your fight… I am yours for a while!

  10. Ange-Aimee Woods said:

    Oh Kai, I laughed, I teared up a bit — and then I teared up some more when I realized you clearly don’t have student loans. No freedom 38 for me. Don’t hop in your fancy pick up truck yet. I want to buy you a beer.

    • Marke said:

      Maybe, Ange-Aimee Wood, he was fortunate in that he was able to pay his student loan off. He did say the job was high-paying with a lot of perks. Maybe more than enough to pay for ‘his fancy truck’ too.

      We live in a world of payback, Amelia and if he should ever want to get back to working for the news media, he’s taking a chance writing the truth about news and journalism practices today and more especially if he continues to do so. Should he write a book, news media baron, Rupert Murdoch, dubbed by Forbes magazine as ‘the man who owns the news’ will make sure it is never published. And not just in Canada (why else the secret meeting between Harper and Murdoch last year). His often unwilling cohorts are politicians, police of Australia, Russia, U.S., Italy, Germany, United Kingdom, France, India . . . for a full list check http://ketupa.net/murdoch1.htm

    • PAM said:

      So you have student loans?
      Or you want to say something about student loans?

      Anything specific about what Nagata san wrote?
      Are you just a tourist here?

      • why why why why said:

        Why do you comment on anything and everything ?

        • PAM said:

          What is your point?

          I have many comments because I want to support this guy.

          Here we are on his site…
          And I see some bashing going on.

          So I am trying to grow the flowers and bash the bad weeds.

          I will be gone soon.

          But today, this is my site sire!

          Goes back to intention:
          I think this guy is great is diserve our best efforts…

        • PAM said:

          The reason why: I want to make sure this thread is not hijacked by a public relation firm.

          Some of the comments on this board are either from:
          - Political activists;
          - Public relation firm;
          - the rest…

          So I am trying to target the public relation firm that are attacking Kai…
          I feel it is kind of unfair that a big public relation firm would be allowed to hijack this thread.

          So I am chasing after spinners.
          It does cause me a problem because sometimes comments are legitimate.

          But I do feel the spin on this.
          I ahve explained my postition in previous posts.
          Please refer to them to understand my motives deeper…

          • Pam Anderson said:

            Pam…. Kai is a quitter…for whatever reason. Wasted his time… which is his choice. I think Kai should volunteer for rest of his life in Africa…help those with Aids and stuff.

            • Tell us about you then. Kai just finished telling us his story, so tell us yours, so that we can understand the validity behind your words if it exists in this case. You speak(type, whatever it may be) from a pessimistic and judgmental point of view.Don’t get mad because you lack the courage that Kai has, and because you lost yours long ago at the hands of those whom you wished were your peers. You make it sound as if your feces doesn’t stink. Don’t try and bring him down for standing up for what he believes in, and for sticking his neck out. Kai is not a quitter he just knows when its time to leave the table. And you simply can’t stand someone voicing there opinion then walking away. So just walk away or you can deal with me, and PAM who seems to be a stand up fellow. So come share with me. Enlighten me, even. Ha ha if you can.

  11. Freda Guttman said:

    I wish more people would do what you have done. I’m convinced you’ll find your way to do what this world needs. People engaged to save us from ourselves.

  12. Andy said:

    Cool! I love how you roll!
    May you find the peace and fulfillment you seek.

  13. Well said Kai! Best of luck to you on the next part of your journey. Being true to yourself is the greatest freedom there is – I’ve recently discovered that myself.

  14. alx24 said:

    As a current j-schooler heading into my last year, this post has really got me thinking about a lot. Thanks for sharing. Best of luck to you.

  15. Glenna Miles said:

    You have had a Brigette moment. The young must speak to the young to get this message across. We are all on the same Planet. The Rapture is not the answer. We don’t need to fear terrorist attacks as long as we have a Harper Government as he will do the most damage in a shortest amount of time with the most negative consequences to the most people. The under 45′s are going to have to live the longest with whatever Harper wreaks upon us. Your actions speak louder than words. Bravo!

  16. Asked to give a toast before the prestigious New York Press Club, John Swinton, the former Chief of Staff and editorial writer at the New York Times, made this candid confession at a banquet held in his honor in 1880, nearing the end of his career:

    http://knol.google.com/k/j-y/we-are-intellectual-prostitutes/gcybcajus7dp/19#

    “There is no such thing, at this date of the world’s history, as an independent press. You know it and I know it. There is not one of you who dares to write your honest opinions, and if you did, you know beforehand that it would never appear in print. I am paid weekly for keeping my honest opinions out of the paper I am connected with.

    Others of you are paid similar salaries for similar things, and any of you who would be so foolish as to write honest opinions would be out on the streets looking for another job. If I allowed my honest opinions to appear in one issue of my paper, before twenty-four hours my occupation would be gone.

    The business of the journalist is to destroy the truth; to lie outright; to pervert; to vilify; to fawn at the feet of mammon, and to sell the country for his daily bread. You know it and I know it and what folly is this toasting an independent press. We are the tools and vassals of the rich men behind the scenes. We are the jumping jacks, they pull the strings and we dance. Our talents, our possibilities and our lives are all the property of other men.

    We are intellectual prostitutes.”

    [It's worth noting Swinton was called "The Dean of His Profession" by other newsmen, who admired him greatly]:

  17. June 2008: The Press Vs. The People
    Media ownership in Canada one of world’s most concentrated

    “Canadian media are now big business, driven not by public interest, but by financial interests. Their main clients are shareholders, not viewers, readers, or listeners. The results are fewer diverse sources of local information and less public dialogue, which undermines the health of our democracy. A handful of locally-owned and independent media remain. They are an endangered species.

    http://www.policyalternatives.ca/publications/monitor/june-2008-press-vs-people

  18. Who Killed Canada
    Media Ownership and the Radical Right in Canada


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiurWhmOIgk&feature=related

    Part 1, 2 & 3. Note: each video about 10 minutes long

    No time for video? Read review instead:
    http://pushedleft.blogspot.com/2009/11/under-steve-harper-we-are-no-longer.html

    Mr. Hurtig begins by discussing the Canadian media and how we now have the greatest concentration of media in the western world. In fact, he states that this would simply not be allowed in any other western democracy.

    And since these same media outlets control newspaper, television and radio news; we are essentially only being given one voice. There are few or no alternative views. As stated in the video, a healthy democracy should foster a healthy and independent news media.

    http://pushedleft.blogspot.com/2009/11/under-steve-harper-we-are-no-longer.html

    • Pat H. said:

      Great and informative posts, Nadine. Thank you!

      I hope that Kai has a blog. I’m going looking for it.

  19. Hugh Cawker said:

    Thank you. This is a beautifully written and reasoned piece, and says many things that I wish others in the media had the courage to say. You’re going to have a great life!

  20. Thank you for your thoughts about this great job we make and trying to make a better understanding of our world.
    Take care.

  21. You’re awesome. This posting is why I wanted to be a journalist, and why I no longer do.

    I once believed journalism could save the world, but now I think it’s down to blogging and social media, because corporate entities and political hacks have pwned the media. There is no free statement or greater good behind it today.

    But I’ll shut up now, because you’ve put it incredibly. I hope the road is good to you. There’s a town in BC, Nelson, the natives referred to as the Valley of the Lost Souls, which we hear much of in many cultures, but the legend has it that those who are broken or fragmented in body or soul should go to the Valley, and the river will heal them, but a part of them will remain to heal the next soul on the journey toward healing.

    It’s a pretty amazing town. You know, if the road takes you there. Best of luck. Thank you.

    • Carol Bell said:

      Seems to me that Nelson would be an ideal location to re-group and get on with it!
      From the Valley of Lost Souls.

    • Natasha said:

      Steff I agree with you. Save our nation from this ‘radical’ government!

    • Skookum1 said:

      Actually I’m pretty sure you mean Winlaw, and the Slocan Valley, which is NW of Nelson, and it’s the Slocan River that’s meant…..denizens of Winlaw introduce their town (well, not really a town….) that way……in my case when I was told that, my reply was “but I’m found”……people go to the Slocan and other parts of the Kootenays, and certain other valleys and islands in BC, to GET lost. To give up. And giving up is not a solution.

  22. Belinda said:

    You’re a former pretty boy talking head in Canada. Could you be less important?

    • Your a pretty much nameless (first name only) poster on a blog… could you be less important?

    • Hugh Cawker said:

      I believe you have just demonstrated that you can be.

    • Susan said:

      Belinda – you’re mistakenly under the assumption that everyone WANTS to be important to the masses. Your comment sounds like a projection of your own self-loathing.

    • Very confusing response. If you think he’s “pretty” that’s your fault. But do you loathe “pretty boy talking heads” or do you like that they exist? Kai just quit that position you loathe, so you should be glad. It feels like you just kind of accept the pattern overlaid on the world by the culture & media, but don’t see the bigger picture. Very confusing…

    • xorbtiman said:

      No you all missed the point that Belinda was trying to make….simply put, she’s a “man hater”. She has to rationalize her thought process by belittlling others so that she can elevate her own narcicistic view of herself vis-a-vie her interpretation of her world around her. She’s a cretin with sub-human intelligence however it’s not her fault because she’s a product of today’s mass media marketing brainwashing.

    • PAM said:

      So what are you?
      Someone who knows other people at first glance?

      Well lookig at you result si quite easy!

      God I love this Fox way of replying.
      It is so easy to show a tourist he is nothing but dirt!!!

  23. Oz Melo said:

    May the force be with you. Godspeed.

  24. … it’s not quite so dire here in Australia – but close, close…
    … I constantly, and sincerely, apologize to foreign (esp. US and UK) friends for Rupert Murdoch, as he was ‘one of ours’… Murdoch’s interests control almost every newspaper in Australia, and those he doesn’t control (the Fairfax Press) seem to want nothing more than to emulate him and his practices…
    … the Great Shame that we in Australia are currently heaping upon ourselves is the illegal (illegal by definition of Australian and International Law) and immoral mistreatment of Refugees… and this racism and isolationism is fostered – as it is fostered in the US and the UK, maybe Canada, too, I don’t know – by the editorials of Murdoch/Fox/Sky apparatchiks, the cowardice of both the journalists who see the cards being dealt ‘from beneath the deck’ and the politicians who were voted in by thousands and yet give their ears to only one (or two), and our own apparent deliberate efforts to look the other way, even from the most obvious of abuses…
    … the British, bless their cotton socks, have for at least this one moment decided that the Murdoch ilk has indeed crossed a line in the behaviour of Rebekah Brooks, Andy Coulson, and others at the “News Of The World”… Brooks explained to staff yesterday that the paper was ‘folding’ [my witticism, not hers] because advertisers consider it ‘toxic’… and yet PM David Cameron owes Murdoch a great deal, so it will be interesting to see when the Sky brand is less odious enough to shower favours on again…

    … thank you, Kai, you thoughts were elegantly put…

    • The bugger, bugged
      Hugh Grant
      Published 12 April 2011

      More than that, he was Paul McMullan, one of two ex-NoW hacks who had blown the whistle (in the Guardian and on Channel 4′s Dispatches) on the full extent of phone-hacking at the paper, particularly under its former editor Andy Coulson.

      This was interesting, as I had been a victim – a fact he confirmed as we drove along.

      He also had an unusual defence of the practice: that phone-hacking was a price you had to pay for living in a free society.

      http://www.newstatesman.com/newspapers/2011/04/phone-yeah-cameron-murdoch

      Him [...] Cameron must have known – that’s the bigger scandal. He had to jump into bed with Murdoch as everyone had, starting with Thatcher in the Seventies . . . Tony Blair . . . [tape is hard to hear here] Maggie openly courted Murdoch, saying, you know, “Please support me.” So when Cameron, when it came his turn to go to Murdoch via Rebekah Wade . . . Cameron went horse riding regularly with Rebekah. I know, because as well as doorstepping celebrities, I’ve also doorstepped my ex-boss by hiding in the bushes, waiting for her to come past with Cameron on a horse . . . before the election to show that – you know – Murdoch was backing Cameron.

  25. Casey Gemma said:

    Bravo sir. Eloquently worded, and your insider perspective confirms many of my suspicions about the world of spoon-fed news media.

    Go forward and do something game-changing. You certainly seem to have the mind and fortitude required.

  26. Richard Blake said:

    You are doing the right thing!
    Best of luck.

  27. bertrand e cabana said:

    down here in stateside news it is also the usual unimportant garbage fed to us with all the important stuff being hidden so we dont find out we are being lied to. our government has become one of incessant threats and dismantling of the constitution. so kudos to you for having the kahonas to tell it like it is.

  28. DP said:

    I feel like giving you a one-man standing ovation. Instead I’ll say: You are the future. I have tremendous respect for your decision. I’m inspired, and I can’t wait to see what your future holds. I’m sure you’re asking yourself a lot of questions right now. When you find the answers, I believe they will be everything you hope for.

    You’ve got what it takes.

    • I would like to believe Kai is the future, and maybe through the internet his kind of enlightenment will spread. But remember that iconoclastic folks like Kai and myself have existed for all time, and have rarely been able to upend the institutions set up to define reality. In large part, because the society is addicted to the stuff, and don’t know or care that it’s poison. And, because they can always find more young, idealistic, and insecure people to play the talking head role. Here in the US we have an increasing number of pretty erudite people who are nevertheless completely narcissistic whores. You only have to look at their smarmy faces.

      But you know, there’s a growing dumb segment of society that can afford the 500 channel package, but which doesn’t care for facts, nuance, truth, beauty, or… anything at all really. As meat-loving sports fans and jingoistic knee-jerk patriots, their only concern is to be on the coarser, tougher team. They don’t have time for girly or geeky things like science or art. They admire the cleverness with which the FAUX news media frustrates and explodes the heads of reasonable people on the other side. It’s a purely voyeuristic / vicarious enjoyment of the act of being gleefully dishonest and obstinate and sticking it to the other guy. Pure and simple.

      It amazes me that people’s mirror neurons could be firing uncritically when Sarah Palin, Bill O’Reilly, or Charles Kuralt are on the screen puffing themselves up like dirigibles. The implication is that there are enough mean-spirited people watching regularly to keep them on the air. Untold psychological damage there…

      When you don’t have much brains and all you care about is jollies, this is sort of what you’re left with. One feels that the reason the Right hates intellectuals and wants to de-fund anything that raises people up is that they understand that more brutes and bigots means more support for their oligarchy.

  29. Travis said:

    If you make it to Vancouver, I’ll buy the beer.

    • Greg said:

      I was going to offer the same! Thanks for the thoughtful article, Kai.

  30. I must say I am impressed by your courage, I have been there myself, leaving a good job for something unknown, being homeless, being broke. You will make something of yourself yet and I look forward to seeing what it is.

  31. Just admiring the courage and honesty of this young media colleague, who took a stand based on principle and integrity and defending the public interest–things that have become practically extinct under the oppression corporate media regimen

  32. Azzano said:

    Undoubtedly the most eloquent and thought provoking piece I’ve read in weeks. Been getting that sinking feeling that people have become far too apathetic in our country, and seeing boldly-written things such as this makes me feel like perhaps there’s more hope after all than I had imagined. Please do us a favor and run for office–you’ll have my vote for sure.

  33. Mark W said:

    You have written a great, well thought out, explanation of your thoughts and impulses that will likely offend many “Evangelicals” in North America. However, I hope that doesn’t deter you from continuing to explore these aspects.

    I welcome you to the RoC, and invite you to visit if you make it out to Alberta (where we could certainly use your perspectives!)

    Thank you for your refreshing point of view!

  34. Matthew Cope said:

    Bravo. Brains. Principles. Guts. It all needed saying.

  35. Brian MacPherson said:

    The journey starts beneath your feet.

  36. It is such a relief to see that a 24 year old and a 64 yr old can see and be profoundly disturbed by the same things happening to our potentially amazing country. Bon Voyage on your road to the future. I hope that public service (of any description) is in your future. You are needed more than you can know.

  37. Thank you. You’ve got guts but you already knew that. I’m glad our paths have crossed in life.

  38. Kai, I read your thoughtful words and feel inspired by your actions.

    Thank you for giving your perspective, as truly that’s what actual journalism is.

    I will be sharing this with my family and friends, as that is the least we can do if we feel strongly about the subject matter. Hopefully others will do the same and perhaps an informed discussion will be had by many Canadians about our path as we move forward.

    Not sure how far west your travels will take you, but pls know there are many on the Canadian left coast who will be raising a glass in your general direction.

    Kudo’s.

  39. All the best, Kai! Took a lot of courage to walk on to your own beat. Success waits for you in another form.

  40. Bill Smith said:

    So, in short, you’re getting into politics on the left-wing you always quietly supported by slanting your work (ref. “indulging” PETA protestors). Now that the NDP is surging in Quebec you figure it’s a good time to capitalize on being a QC journalist by getting into the game.

    • Pat H. said:

      Nice, Bill… aren’t you the clever, prescient one?

    • How is “indulging” PETA protestors left wing? The implication here is that he clearly thinks PETA is bunk.

      • It could also be interpreted as tongue-in-cheek irony. The news media never “interviews” Peta, only “indulges” them. Because the conventional / institutional wisdom is: Peta are officially weird, kooky, kinda hippie, not mainstream.

    • You’re probably right. Had his views been less left-leaning he would probably not have been disillusioned by his job. But then, the politics of the Right seems to embrace the ulterior motive.

  41. CW said:

    This is an inspiring and depressing read – Journalism schools need you to lecture.

  42. Laura said:

    I read this with great interest. I agree and advocate against a lot of the things said. I wanted to tell you that many of us are fighting the mainstream media models by creating other types of programming that more adequately reflect the various communities in Canada.

    At Concordia University Television (CUTV), we have people of all ages joining our volunteer-produced programming every week to be able to tell the stories they feel are important and are clearly not told or misrepresented in the mainstream media.

    We take pride in what we do and welcome anyone that believes in our mandate to get involved. The power of the media should be used and important breakthroughs can be made thanks to it.

  43. Linda said:

    What an amazing farewell! Thank you for taking the time to share this publicly. Rest up. Can’t wait to see what you do next

  44. Patrick said:

    Your article is a well deserved indictment of my generation.

    We used to have ideals, now we are pathetic wretches.

    Your generation should be kicking our asses !!

    • MA said:

      @Patrick, if only more boomers were as honest as you are…

      • .: MA: Do not doubt for a minute that many of us boomers are as honest as Patrick. Many of us are beyond being fed up with the drivel that passes for news reporting and journalism, never mind the ideology that passes for “fair and balanced” reporting on Fox, and its limp-dick little bro in Canada, Sun.

  45. EF said:

    Very inspiring article….
    I have myself found my true passions working “in” the Government, but “away” from the politics, helping millions of Canadian from all ages requiring their Government’s assistance. Despite all the controversies, Government do great things too.
    Wishing you all the luck in finding your pinnacle….

  46. Scribbler said:

    Plenty of food for thought… have a great journey…

  47. RN said:

    You started strong, then it became David Suzuki Jr rant. Perhaps you should ping the Ceeb to see if you can take over the mantle at “The Nature of Things”.

      • Doc McCoy said:

        Clean up your own backyard.

  48. Thank you for writing this and for having the courage to say what I know so many in the news media are thinking. Like you, I’ve always felt that the future of our country and our planet is simply too important — we can’t remain neutral and objective (if those two concepts even still exist) when there’s so much at stake.

    Good luck to you.

  49. ot bear said:

    I made the same stand in 1972. I was right then and right now. Poor but happy and done everything I wanted so far. Time waits for no one and even though your first 25 were exciting on paper, wait till the next when all the pieces of life settle to a firm path. Then it gets easier. All the bull crap flies off faster and life becomes clear, for you and you alone. Keep that enemies and friends list though.

    • Pat H. said:

      Perhaps these blog comments should be moderated?

      • Mark W said:

        Why?

    • Imma ask it once.

      Did you fall in love with your sister before or after you moved out? Or do you still live with ma’n pa(aunty ‘n uncle). Heh he

  50. Janet Lynn Sobocan said:

    All of what you say about the state of ‘journalism’ is true of education. Political correctness and popular ‘knowledge’ has blocked the path to truth. Your article gives me great resolve as I leave the academy in a trail of dust behind me to find myself and my freedom of speech once again.
    Jan Sobocan

    • Here’s to you finding greener pastures as well. I’ve just finished my degree and after taking a year off am shooting for teachers college. Aiming to teach grade 11&12s since I felt like that is where some of my teachers made a *huge* difference in my life. I still keep in touch with some of them and they tell me the same things as you wrote about. Here’s to hoping that with time our generation can change the face of both the media as well as education.

  51. Susan said:

    Wow! You’re my hero!

  52. TG said:

    Your story sounds so familiar. 15+ years ago I was in my early 20s, rising fast in a TV network newsroom, when I decided to leave the business for many of the same reasons you did. Fortunately, I was able to hop into the nascent dot-com industry, and that led to the best decade of my life. There will be ups and downs, but based on your clear statement of your values I’m confident that you’ll come through fine. Broke can be corrected in time for a person of your obvious drive, and with family and friends like yours you won’t be homeless.

    If you’re interested in staying in the game (if not the business) in some form, I may have a lead for you. Or, if you just want to commiserate with someone about the positives and negative aspects of making the decisions we did, and the reasons they were made, please feel free to e-mail me. Either way, I wish you the best going forward.

    [saw this via Metafilter, by the way]

  53. Vahan said:

    I have a lot more questions than answers when I read well written pieces such as this one and many in the states along with all the comments. It would appear to me that the majority of people are more progressive than the governments in power, so who is voting in the stifling government. I know that here in Canada the majority voted against Harper yet he got a majority of seats. In Quebec no one really wants separation yet the PQ is always poised to take over power. Who are the people who are silent when opinions are being voiced, yet they are the ones putting people in power? Is it because of the famous “apathetic youth non-voters”? How do we get the young out to vote, write letters to editors or make their voices heard louder than it is now? I am sure that the majority of Canadians know there is no need for more prisons, and we don’t all have gun racks in our pick up trucks, we know climate change is real and are perfectly happy with same sex couples having the same rights as all couples. Funny because all the people in power now, where the hippies of the ’60s, what the hell happened to that movement, how could they all just all of a sudden shut up and let the world fall apart? Does everyone, all of a sudden become a drone once they get jobs and kids and mortgages? What happens to the fire in their bellies? See more questions than answers.

    • Perhaps you do not understand our political system, but you should realize that it does not take a majority of voters, much less a majority of citizens, to acquire a majority. It only takes a majority of seats. You can get a majority government with around 20-25% support of citizens.

      The general ignorance of basic conclusions like that underscore the failure of our political system and our society.

      • Vahan said:

        I was being rhetorical. Hoping to get people to think about the unjust election rules and how it may have turned off people. But thanks for the follow up.

  54. MA said:

    I’m speechless and in awe…

    I wish I had that kind of guts.

    Congrats… and thanks Kai!

  55. Andrew said:

    You are courageous.

    The coverage of the royal visit was disgusting. It did at least show a lot of people what CBC is really all about.

  56. Kai, very courageous and what all of us in the field should be doing. I’m working on a new project and am looking to gather like minded people, I’ve had several recent discussions on exactly what you have written here. Please get in touch with me. I’d love to share some ideas with you. tobarbazon@yahoo.com

  57. Hope you can keep up the blog as you travel both physically and mentally on your journey.

  58. Robert said:

    This post is beautifully written, and extremely brave. I look forward to following your observations in the months and years to come, because we desperately need honest, courageous voices like yours. I’m very pleased to see how widely this essay is getting circulated, as It’s popping up on Twitter feeds and Facebook profiles totally unconnected to each other.

    I wish you good luck!

  59. Kai, Well said and very true. There are many in the field who feel the same but few willing to do something about it. Please get in touch with me, I have been having the same conversation with people recently and am working on an idea. I would love your input.
    It’s time to change things.

  60. john delacourt said:

    This morning I posted this piece on Facebook and was, I’m sure, one of the many who retweeted about it.

    If any piece of writing merits going viral, this is it.

    You’ve kept your courage, your heart and your integrity intact and said what needs to be said, especially for those j-school students coming out into the world they didn’t make.

    For this, and for the clarity and power of all you said here, know that you’ve already gone on to greater things. Congratulations on your new, real life.

    • Pat H. said:

      I couldn’t have said it better, John.

  61. A beautiful, thoughtful, and reasoned piece. Many thanks for offering your insights on the inside of politics and your own choices as a journo and person. We would all be the better for it if such honest self reflection caught a hold of all of us — journo, politico, or otherwise — more often. best wishes all you do in the time ahead. DW

  62. kevin Dougherty said:

    Having worked with Kai this past year, I can attest he was one of the best and brightest, also funny and fun to be with. I am sure those same qualities will guide him in his next endeavours. So long Kai and all the best!

  63. Geoff Bird said:

    1. Someone better looking than you will replace you.

    2. Hopefully the groundwork we lay down now will pay dividends in a decade when these boomers start to die off. We’ll have a jarring swing to the left and be stuck picking up the pieces of what remains.

    3. Hopefully a young, attractive flak is any more effective at changing this country than a young, attracting hack. I’m not so sure though.

  64. That is one hell of an essay, Kai. You’ve got guts, kid. Good luck to you, sir!

  65. Susan said:

    What an eloquent missive! I would vote for you if you ran for office…please do!!!
    Canada is in desperate need of a thoughtful, progressive and passionate leader!

  66. Dave said:

    3,000 words and not one mention that he was schtooping the weather girl? What a rip.

  67. What a tremendous article. Delivers the sentiment of so many Canadians that are disheartened by the direction that our country that we used to be so proud of, is headed.
    Good luck on future endeavours.

  68. Vanessa said:

    Good for you – I did the same thing years ago. I was working as a publicist – a fun but ultiately vapid and meaningless life. I turned thirty and decided to give up the money, the parties, and the connections in pursuit of finding a life that I could have faith in – not religious faith – but a moral faith nonetheless.

    It was terrifying. I had no plan, no money and no degree to back me up – all I had was a sure, true feeling to guide me.

    I packed up and gave away everything I owned and lived out of a back pack in various Latin American countries for two yeas. I returned to Canada and went back to school to become a journalist.

    And despite agreeing with a lot of what you wrote – objectivity in journalism is a farce, and strips the humanity out of a story – I still beleive in the art of journalism, and I have been to places that need it so desperately. I have seen another side and told the stories of those who are exploited, impoverished, and abused.

    I know there are few outlets that even pretend to have any interest in the human condition, but I think that is changing. I am aware that maybe I believe it because I need to, but I am not alone in wanting this, in fighting for it.

    Change is slow, but it is coming. Just ask the guys at News of the World. :)

    I hope you don’t leave those of us who still believe in the power of telling a story – we need people with clear vision, a strong voice and the ability to give others insight into the lives of others,

    Good luck.

  69. Hanna Jane said:

    1. Marry me.

    2. Failing that, you’ve got a spot on my Vancouver sofa for as long as you need.

  70. unaart said:

    Just a message of support and admiration from someone who took similar steps in the last month leaving a high-ranking, high-paying job in the Canadian (print) media at a young age.

    You’re not alone. Enjoy your journey.

  71. francesco sorbara said:

    As stated in other posts canada is deep need of people like you. Your opinions and understanding that you bring forth of what is happening in the country needs to be told to all canadians. We need leaders many of them to step forth and return this country to a progressive force again in the future and in this world .

  72. Mathieu Trudeau said:

    Bravo, jeune homme! Onwards and upwards… Je te souhaite plénitude et courage pour le chemin qui se dresse devant toi, quel qu’il soit…

  73. Renée said:

    24 years old… you are very wise for your years Kai. Yet, I still cringed at the fact that as QC bureau CHIEF…you were BORN the year of the Meech Lake Accord!

    I quit my producer job at the CBC at 33… the tipping point for me… the coverage of the death of Princess Diana…

    Life is short, if what you do doesn’t jive with who you are….so
    kudos to you for having the courage and honesty to be who you really are!

    Many may think you are out of your mind…but you have to be out of your mind to follow your heart! And the only way to change the world…is to change yourself… be the change that you seek and it will become so. xo

  74. A true act of citizenship seldom seem. Sir, you have my admiration.

    Please keep a public site so we can follow you and also use you as a measuring stick to compare others who would call themselves journalists.

    I must also admit to your making me feel a bit smug as I have stopped watching CTV news for many of the reasons you sight, adding the presence of Lloyd the Cadaver on deck, anything for the appearance of credibility.

    I hope this is the fulcrum for many of the desperately need discussions about the state of our democracy and the elements needed to maintain it for the future

  75. Lana said:

    Best of luck on your journey, sir… and thank you.

  76. Observant said:

    A bleeding heart, immature, confused person … so obvious.

    Canada is full of these tender minds.

    • Sue W said:

      Well, these “tender minds” object to the selling out of truth for the sight of Kate’s bum. That sounds quite mature. How does that make him a bleeding heart?
      Do you stoop, tugging your forelock before these celebrities, like all the other peasants?

    • Kind of Blue said:

      What would you have him do? Continue kissing the ring for a chance to buy a house and, in the process, perpetuate the same destructive political and journalistic structures we all currently endure?

      Is it smarter to attempt to win “the game”? Get that anchor’s job or move into the executive? At what cost?

      I see the eroding of our middle class everywhere I look and, collectively, this country has no answer. In fact, we chose to elect a government that will attack the middle class and our welfare state continuously over the next four years. Our media stands by, the abiding stenographers.

      No, Observant, those who prefer a chance to drink from the cup of corporate greed might not be “tender minds,” but their hardened minds – selfish – will pull this country further from our 20th century position of global leadership.

      We need to think – and SPEAK – about how we are choosing to live together. Whether this party or that party will raise taxes is an utterly asinine bifurcation that results in nothing but idiocy and terrible public representation.

      To add to what was put so finely in The West Wing, no only do we need “politics in full sentences” but media, too.

  77. Chris A. said:

    Wow! You are both strong and brave. You should write a book about your career and your epiphany. Maybe you can get on The Daily Show and discuss it with Jon Stewart.

    This is indeed sad for my country, Canada. With Stephen Harper behind the wheel, we are heading down the same right wing ideological path that the United States has headed and has gone into the ditch. I would like to think we are smarter than that. But, after the last federal election, I’m not so sure anymore.

  78. I appreciate your honesty, and admire your passion. Its terrible whats happening to our media, and I hope that more people come out to say enough of this bullshit!

    also I had no idea that ctv was bought by Bell…

    If only more people took their jobs to heart like you do, perhaps this would be a much better world. Thank you for all your hard work.

    Perhaps you could even become an independant reporter who isin’t part of a giant corperation. Give us the real news without all the hype and BS. I’d surely donate to that. <3

  79. Well said and well done. Congrats Kai, to have that level of insight at any age is awesome but at yours? Wow. I look forward to following your adventures.

  80. Great article!

    I’m graduating from Jschool next year and I’m freaking out about the biz. When I interview Chomsky he said “schools will talk to you about ‘objectivity,’ and it was the day after our class had the discussion about that very subject.

    He didn’t have nice things to say about “objectivity.”

    Thanks again for your bravery.
    j2

    • Kind of Blue said:

      I hope the result of your class’ conversation about objectivity was an understanding that there is no such thing as objectivity.

      It is a construct and it has consequences.

  81. Bravo for you! I, and millions upon millions of Canadians, couldn’t agree more with everything you have stated here. Now the real hard part – turn these words into actions

  82. We need more of this, much more of this, in Canada. There is too much at stake. Thank you for your courage in taking this stand.

  83. You’ve written a very powerful and poignant personal essay, Kai. As someone who works in television, I share your concerns and frustration. All I can say is that sooner or later, probably through the growth of stronger voices in the digital domain, the tide will turn and we will create a better system for governance and public accountability. The main impulse of television networks is to attract mass audiences and make money for shareholders. To think of them as something different is, I fear, an antiquated notion. They compete mainly through Hollywood deals for American programming and attractive sports rights; fine. Journalism will eventually need to find another home. But I’m convinced it will adapt and thrive. Voters will wake up one day and demand better information to make better decisions. Journalists will be there to serve that need.

  84. Dominic Aebi said:

    Much respect for making the hard choices, Kai. Choosing an uncertain future over a steady pay takes guts.

    You touched on the topics of science and academia, something I have a good share of experience with.

    It’s pretty interesting that a lot of what you see wrong with newstelevision are things I see happening on the academic scene. Today’s Canadian universities are run like businesses, and cater their programs more to what they want coming in (tuition money and endowments) and less to what they have coming out (increasingly underqualified, unemployable graduates). The same type of thinking that is causing a drop in the quality of our news coverage is reducing the quality of our university graduates. I might be totally out to lunch here, but I think the two share a lot of similarities.

    Thanks for getting my mind working on some of these issues. And for shining a light on a scene that I didn’t know much about.

    Good luck.

    • Hi Dominic, can you shoot me a direct message with your contact info on facebook or Twitter? Thanks.

  85. Magdalena said:

    It would be good if Canadians saw the country for what it is. Not a glory filled democracy but a vast piece of the planet that humans have not as yet managed to screw up for a few thousand years (or more.) Very similar to Russia and China really if we care to admit it.

    Welcome to the coperative universe where 1 does what can do with conviction and grace.

    Mmmmagdalena @ Flying Hands Farm

  86. This was so refreshing and inspiring to read and I wish you all the best on your path! Nothing but great things can come of being so honest, true, and passionate about your integrity and your contribution to putting out good in the world.

  87. Hi Kai

    I am a PhD student (MSVU Halifax) and long time media participant (TV Radio Print etc). This is a stunning treatise. I would like to speak with you further. Please contact me. Would love to chat. Also my latest book “Media Mediocrity-Waging War Against Science, How the Television Makes Us Stoopid” (Fernwood Publications) might be of interest to you. In the interim…all the best

  88. I made a similar decision to quit a job that served neither me nor others very well, and the road to fulfilment, while poorer, is far richer.

    All the best to you.

  89. Megan Otton said:

    The whole asbestos fiasco makes me ashamed of being Canadian too. Thank you for expressing many ideas that i hoped were not as bad as they seemed about tv news and the Harper government. Keep up the good fight as a guerilla.

  90. Tara said:

    I was a journalist at a right-wing daily paper for three years. Wrote about crime. So much of my job was about `beating` the other daily in town to sell papers, not tell an important story (and besides the journalists, who ever compares two dailies in the same city every day to see who won this pathetic contest of one-upmanship?) I often felt sick about what I was doing.But I was too scared to quit and have no income, so I held on until I got another job. You have vocalized here what I couldn`t put into words. I have since done an intensive course of spiritual growth, and wouldn`t go back for anything. Just thinking about it turns my stomach. Congratulations. I am particularly impressed that your post doesn`t come off as judgemental of the media. You don`t sound like you`re coming from a place of superiority. You`re just stating facts, perhaps with some sadness. And that shows me you`re already in a very strong place of spirituality. The best way to make change is not from a place of anger, but from a place of hope. And you`re there.

  91. Great piece! As another former broadcast media worker and reservist, I salute you. Takes guts to do what you did. I truly hope that Canadian media doesn’t descend to the depths of its American cousins, but your article only suggests that given time, we’ll be joining the race to the bottom, if we haven’t already.

    What do you see as the means to stop or reverse this trend in TV news journalism?

  92. I’m so glad I’m not the only reporter who has come to this conclusion. Please let us all know what you find. I’ve concluded that striking out on my own is the only way I can be true to myself… but it’s really difficult when you get it drummed into your head that leaving reporting or not being a well-known face or name means you’re a failure.

    Best of luck to you.

  93. LESLIE STECHER said:

    Leslie Stecher

    Some bridges are better burned. How brave. And enlightening. Harper’s control and religion scares the shit out of me. His faith controls his politics. His ignorance grows with every donation to the party from big business.
    The networks air drivel. I have quit watching since the royal couple touched down.
    Best of luck on your next venture.

  94. Way to go Kai. You are moving from simply being human, with all the failings that come with that label, to becoming humane. This is growth far ahead and above of little things like a paycheque.

    I hope you follow your bliss, and learn how to change the world for the better. I made my own changes from an ethically bankrupt investment industry and have not looked back. ( http://www.breachoftrust.ca )

    cheers and best
    larry elford
    alberta

  95. Andrea Stewart said:

    Kai, I admire your honesty and courage: the honesty with yourself for listening to that gut-level dissatisfaction for what you are doing; the courage for naming why that is and for following through with decision to live what you believe.

    I work in television too – on the ‘factual entertainment’ side. Occasionally, I am involved with documentary projects that have meaning, but all too often I find myself disillusioned by what a sausage factory this ‘industry’ has become. Most people that make this kind of television have no specific training in journalism standards, and that type of rigor is rarely, if ever observed – the excuse is that the entertainment trumps the factual. Although, no one is really interested in fact, let alone truth – because what we really want is drama. And that’s on the side of the makers and the viewers as well. I believe viewers have some savvy to guess that there are somethings that might be made-up in the process, by do they have the ability to parse out what is fact, spin and ‘storytelling’? And if we pretend to offer the news or something factual, should we be asking them to, or should we be holding ourselves to a higher standard?

    It’s not just sad – it’s unconscionable for media to play unchallenged in the netherworld between what is real and what they’d like to believe is real, because it makes a good story.

    I respect your decision and it makes it easier for me to commit to a time line to my own ripcord day….

  96. gil said:

    Wonderful! Best of luck to you in the future!

  97. bahador zabihiyan said:

    Nicely written, very interesting! All the best!

  98. agathabrammahonline said:

    Interesting

  99. AJ said:

    I spent last night hanging my head in shame, listening to an American tell me that his father died because of asbestos. The Daily Show has a skit over the stance Canada is taking on asbestos. Science is used by our government when it conveniently serves Harpers economic policies. And scientists are discarded when they don’t. Tangentially, like in the recent (2009? 2010?) case of killing the tax-free post-doctoral funding policy, which allowed Canada to compete for prime scientific researchers we couldn’t otherwise afford.

    Thanks for writing this. It’s interesting to read someone who shares my own opinions, albeit argued from a different perspective (I frame Harper’s government outcomes in terms of his grab for votes and his focus on money at all costs, not in terms of religious ideology). Good luck with your next step.

  100. Vahan said:

    I have to chime in again. Some are writing here about baby-boomers and how they have ruined everything. I don’t know where I fall in, in the timeline, it keeps changing, but I am 46, progressive and I feel that there are many people in my age group that hate what is happening. I vote, the one power I have. I write letters to editors, I write letters to MPs, I write letters to MNAs in Quebec. I voice my opinion on blogs. I engage friends to think (differently), yet many are stuck in their suburban, minivan, pay-check to pay-check lifestyle sold to them by people in power, it is more appealing to have things you can’t afford it seems because it is sold as sexy. People, young and old have to vote, have to write letters and have to unite the left to have one voice. This blog, this subject, will soon blow away when we are all relaxing in the summer sun, but it shouldn’t. Stay engaged. The internet is your tool, fill it up with your truth. The election is many years away, but starting today you could lay the groundwork for change. Baby steps.

    • Sam said:

      I am in my early 40s and am a suburban, minivan owning, paycheque to paycheque parent of 3 children. I think differently and want things to change as much as you do. Please don’t think that just because we live in suburbia, we don’t want the same things for our country as you. I vote for what I believe in, write letters and voice my opinion. I also educate my children about how not be treated in the workplace and to treat other people and our world with dignity and respect.

      I too work for Bell Media in a middle management position and can certainly attest that it is not a progressive company. Like most other major corporations, money is paramount and is made at the expense of the employees. I have left several similarly sized companies for this very reason and have come to the conclusion that if one is going to work for a big company, these are the conditions in which you will work (for the time being).

      Congratulations Mr. Nagata for your courage. I am certain my children know that I would completely support them financially and emotionally if they were faced with making a similar decision.

      • Vahan said:

        Why do you live paycheque to paycheque? Is it because you have taken on more than you could afford and/or need? Change things for yourself first, then everything else will follow. Don’t follow the marketing of the corporations that you need a minivan, or a huge house in the ‘burbs. Downsize now, avoid the rush…

    • D_Abes said:

      Here’s the thing, The boomers that are “dying off”, were the Kai’s of the 60′s. Peace and love man, far out. Age tempers ideology. 20 years from now I put odds down he’ll be one of those he rants about.

  101. ottawa said:

    this was truly a fantasic article and it overjoys me to think that other canadians in my generation are wise to what’s going on in our government and our media. i really hope you succeed in whatever you pursue. having worked in the federal government, i can agree that it’s an almost sisyphean battle to make truly lasting change.

  102. Jenn said:

    Bravo Kai! The corporate media have but one aim – making money – they exist purely to make a profit for their shareholders – end of story. The sooner the sheeple realize this the better. Best of luck to you and your future endeavours!

  103. An extraordinarily thoughtful, and challenging piece. Too bad it will fall on too many deaf ears in Parliament, more than a few who are more concerned about their pensions than potentially catastrophic issues we face. Bravo! Brave!

  104. Vahan said:

    Remember when the U.S was at “war” during the Bush years the only thing the news was running hot and heavy were stories about idiot celebrities and hotel heiresses coming out of cars with no panties or being stopped for drunk driving or neglecting their children. What happened to them? Why is it that when right wing people are in office we get fluff news, yet they sell themselves as lovers of their country, and wholesome family values. But they are the ones with darks pasts, drunken accidents, male washroom fun times, knocked up unmarried teen daughters, marital infidelities and multiple divorces. But when there is a left leaning party in power we are told by the right that now we will have wild naked people running through our streets and we will be married to animals, but in turn we have civil caring people governing. Why does the right always have the loudest bullhorn? How disgusting was it to see Harper shoving his tongue down his wife’s through at the Falls during the campaign and what the hell was his over the hill wife wearing, mini dress and hip boots, while they watched the royal wedding. Who are the skanks. Family values. Skeletons in closets more like it.

    • “Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.” – Samuel Johnson

      bonus:

      “Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent.” – Isaac Asimov

    • Ken in NVan said:

      You mean.. like the Kennedys at Chappaquiddick or Eliot Spitzer or Barney Frank or Whitewater/Paula Jonesgate/Lewinskygate or John Edwards? Or.. like Jack Layton in a “Rub n Tug” parlor? Or Shawinigate & the Sponsorship scandal & the APEC Summit scandal? Be more specific… which right-wing scandal are you talking about?

      Oh.. wait a sec…

  105. I know exactly what you mean man. In fact, I recently decided to do some volunteer work in the developing world instead of getting a well paying job in the first place. This world needs more people who will open their eyes to the problems we are facing, and commit themselves to becoming part of the solution. I’m sure you’re going to do great things!

  106. James said:

    Why’s he talking about CBC?
    Is he saying CBC is going downhill and CTV is following it since Bell bought it?

  107. Heather S said:

    I don’t know you, but I am so proud of you.

    I know how scary what you are doing is: in September I moved from Vancouver to Ottawa, without knowing what really awaited me. I moved here to push Stephen Harper to request the repatriation of Omar Khadr. We cannot allow the legacy we leave our children and grandchildren that of a country who abandoned a tortured Canadian child.

    I wish you a soul-filling next step on your journey, and I can’t wait to see what it is.

    With admiration,
    Heather

  108. Doreen Taylor-Claxton said:

    Young man,
    Run for the leadership of the liberal party.
    Please.

    • p said:

      No way. New party. Fresh.

  109. gracie said:

    I was the same age as you when I quit a nice journalism job in Montreal and moved to Vancouver Island. Good luck, and no regrets!

  110. David Tinker said:

    I write a column for a community weekly newspaper. Reading your magnificent essay, I realise how fortunate I am that its publishers allow complete freedom to their editors, reporters and columnists. Within the normal bounds of libel laws, good taste and courtesy we can print whatever we think is right, and I am glad to be able to thank them for this. But here’s the point: they are not dependent on big corporate advertisers, so they are free to do what newspapers are supposed to do. As soon as you enter the big corporate world you lose that freedom. So Kai, I hope you find a small mountaintop somewhere and keep on telling the truth. Live long and prosper!

  111. QC said:

    Thanks for sharing your world…all the best.

  112. Congratulations on your courage for taking action based on your convictions. I very much appreciate your honesty about the inherent contradiction and tension between business and journalism. And I applaud your refusal to continue accepting these vapid, distracting “news” stories populating the headlines when many far more important matters go ignored.

    However, I am a little concerned over all the reverence for John Stewart, Stephen Colbert and the like, as there are lesser known, more research-based thinkers who don’t earn their living making entertaining comments about politics, and thus cashing in on our passions. I don’t know how constructive it is answering the right’s parade of clownish “journalists” and other poop-disturbers with a left-based pool of jokers and jesters. I concede that they play an important part in past and current society, but so to do the more even-keeled academics, policy analysts and others who refute what the “right” is doing. Even though they are dull, they need to be listened to.

    Again, thank you so much for showing integrity and sharing your story. And all my best wishes for your future adventures.

  113. Michael Ignatieff said:

    Good for you. Courageous, thoughtful, desperately needed. Don’t go back. Don’t give in. Keep it up. Sent to me by a young friend, and I hope it ricochets around the whole country. Michael Ignatieff

    • If you mean that, why didn’t you do more to support the private member’s bill to control the environmental impact and ethical behaviour of Canadian mining companies abroad?

  114. Thank for this blog article that shows that intelligence is neither conservative or liberal. It is seeing the real situation in front of us. Keep reporting, writing and communicating with compassion and wisdom.

  115. Ian Murray said:

    This piece should be required reading ( and required understanding ) for all Canadians, as it speaks of the need for a realistic approach to broadcasting in general. Congratulations for having the courage and conviction to do the right thing, I am certain you will be back on the public scene and will look forward to watching your future success. We can all learn a lesson from your resolve.

  116. Alanah said:

    The great mecca of our generation is the job you can do entirely as yourself. You may have to create it, but it is possible! Trust someone who has done it (and who does lots of free “journalism”, no dry-cleaning provided). Take care, have a great adventure, and I hope to bump into you in Montreal.

  117. To be true to one’s self and stand up to speak and take action – in today’s culture is truly heroic. I wish you well and do believe that you will find that one place where you can make a further difference.

  118. Stella Johnson said:

    So young and so wise!!!:)

  119. Maybeline said:

    I’ve never heard of your before I read this, but I really enjoyed it. Very honest and very interesting. Thank you.

  120. Kai: You’ve already made a difference to those of us who’ve long suspected we’re not getting the real story from the media. Congratulations on this brave move & the opportunities ahead of you. My interest is in connecting stories to social change, so I’ll be rooting for you & watching to see what you do next. Good luck!
    Evadne Macedo

  121. Liz O said:

    Hey Kai! Amazing article, damn, you are articulate as all git out. The atmosphere you were in sounds stifling. We here in Vancouver were all proud and impressed of all the work you did to get to where you were, but I did wonder about the challenges of being told what stories to tell people. You have so much talent, you just need to find out were to point it, as it were.

    And I can see why having to cover Will and Kate might lead to this…

    Good luck to ye! Love ya Fuzzy,

    Liz

  122. sd said:

    we will never convert those who have ‘seen the light’ because it has blinded them to facts and reason all together. i know first hand, my mother is the very base on which harper stands.

    we can start by getting rid of the idea that some how we can use television as a medium to get ideas to the people.television is bread and circuses all day everyday. it has done what it was always meant to– pacify the populace, and take their money.
    we have to move on to new ideas, new ways of delivering facts.
    how do we get this new generation, probably the best educated in the last 10,000 years, engaged enough to be outraged that their future is being mortgaged off for their parents and their grand parents lifestyle. how do we get them to think of their future?

    we have to answer these questions and fast. we can. think of what has happened in the last fifty years, the inventions, new way of doing things. there are people out there who can see a different way to think, who have fresh ideas, who can invent the next social medium….the generation harper has counted on, lets face it, they are coming up to the end run. we can stop them from getting new converts. we can change the world, it’s been done before….right in-front of our eyes we watch it crumble. we started it, we have to do something about it.

    you’ve done a very elegant, broad first step. who’s next?

    • Sue W said:

      Good comment. imo we have to start the way the Reform party rebuilt the Con movement in Canada. At the grassroots. Get a local thing going, build out to like minds across the nation and beyond.

  123. You made my day, Kai! Come to Fernwood in Victoria & we will make you welcome. We harbour your own hopes & fears.
    Busy making wood-block prints on strictly non-commercial subjects & loving our neighbourhood ~ some free thinkers still exist
    Jenny & Cec!

  124. Barb P said:

    Wow. I’m glad I follow Margaret Atwood so that I read this. Wow. On your travels westward, please consider touching base with Magda Havas, Trent U. Happy & Safe travels to you.

  125. Dawn Kuisma said:

    Welcome.

  126. Peter Manousakos said:

    Kai,

    I do wish you the best. But frankly, I think you’re going on a narcissistic binge. Which is fine. We’re all entitled to one on occasion and I am just as guilty. Kai, external powers like the fate of journalism, politics and social progress had nothing to do with this next chapter in your life and you, as an individual will effect very little universal change. It is based on the false premise that your generation (god I feel old writing that) like the baby boomers before mine are entitled to self-actualization. You are not. None of us are. Go on your travels, explore, meditate and contemplate to your hearts content, but your journey will remain the same no matter what you do, where you go and how you do it. It sounds like I’m bursting your bubble but I’m not. Just because the journey remains the same regardless of our actions, doesn’t mean we shouldn’t explore other roads along that journey. Different scenery provides perspective and you’re smart enough to benefit from it. However, your reasons for trying this path are weak at best and irresponsible at worst. But here’s the kicker, going on it will still be meaningful if you enter it with the right frame of mind. Right now, I think you need to work on that. Having said that…enjoy your life.

    On a personal note where I risk revealing myself as a tad hypocritical, I left Montreal because I wanted to live in London. Simple. The fact that I didn’t have to deal with silly french language laws and oligarch orchestrated regulatory restrictions was merely a plus and I must admit, I did bask in it for a while:)

    P.S. Going back to family and roots for a while is always a smart move and I applaud you for having the good sense to do that. Most people your age are too fearful of guilt and criticism to do that. You’re a lucky soul in that you have a wonderful family like mine and know – that you can go home again – well, for a little while anyway.

    Good luck to you and safe travels.

    • And if I might add this tongue-in-cheek counterpoint…

      “Then one said unto him, Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and said unto him that told him, Who is my mother? and who are my brethren? And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples, and said, Behold my mother and my brethren!”

      Not a conservative family-oriented guy, that Jesus. ;-)

  127. Col said:

    “A few are raging narcissists.”

    No offence but I think you should include yourself in this post. You just wrote an enormous post about yourself basically, including lots of pictures about yourself. If you really cared about today’s press, you could have worked to change it from within.

    Instead you gave up and gave in.

    • I’ve seen a few comments to this effect, and I must disagree. Why spend 10, 15, 20 years – one’s youth – working one’s way up a stagnant corporate ladder only to arrive at a place where the chance to make change is small, at best (especially with a rise in corporate interests)?

      How many of Kai’s (and my) generation really sit down and watch networks like CTV anyway? Very few. No, if Kai is really interested in working against the troubling paradigm shifts in Canadian politics and media, in getting his generation informed, active, and engaged, there are much more effective avenues out there. I think he’s gone looking for them, and for that I applaud him.

    • How can you change things from within when you’re broke and the powers that be are multi millionaires??

      Think before you press enter

      • PAM said:

        First you need to have vision.
        Some empire were built with vision.

        Money is not important if the vision is powerfull enough:
        Gates, Walton, Buffet, Canergie all did it.
        They were not in the system.

        So thinking and having vision is the first thing need before pressing enter.

        Seems there is a lot of vision in Kay’s text.

        You seem to have some, please share it with us.

        Being inside an organization at the bottom gives you no possibility to change anything.
        Further more, sharks in the organization will make sure you do not reach their level because they are afraid of loosing their jobs.

        So as long as mister Nagata stays on the field, the power hungry higher management are happy.

        Seems Kai took the right decision and doing it at his age was the right one.

        Basically we are in agreement, someone trying to do ad hominem attack (attack the messenger) shows that he can not attack the message.

        Seems to me, that extracting part of a sentece from context and removing the needed details to put the sentence in context is using the same tactics as Fox.

        Does not make it true, but we have to respect the way used to derived the conversation.

        Just mean the guy had nothing to say or no time to read carefully.

        Also could gun for hire who are paid for posting against Kai.

        Not sure about the motive, but when I look at this kind of reply… I would (if I would be you) not even loose time over this.

        Remember someone with no intelligent argument post on this board and does ad hominem attack on Kai…
        Who is the narcist?
        Basically, I am just saying that you are answering to someone that does not even diserve your spit.
        Just look at me igoring this guy.
        He has proven his real value.
        Going back to Fox… When you end up on this channel by accident, what do you do?
        You just go to the next channel.
        Even weather channel is better than fox: at least they are right sometimes…

  128. Col said:

    PS. A TV reporter without a TV! Bizarre. It’s a like a chef without an oven.

    But good luck anyhow. Personally, even though I despise them, I would give up my right pinkie finger for a job at Fox News for a year. I’d delight in trying to change mindsets there. You could have done the same at CTV.

  129. Kai, a lovely and inspiring read. I flirted with the idea of pursuing journalism but was wary of some of the same concerns, at least in a very general way. (I’ve worked at CTV and CBC also, but as a designer) I agree wholeheartedly with what seems to be your perspective – that large parts of the machinery of society are broken, and that the time to fix them is limited. Good for you for pursuing something better.

    In the meantime however I have a question for you. Would you consider yourself a skeptic, as in part of the skeptical movement? Based on some of what I’ve read here I wonder. If so, or in any case, get in touch sometime. Based on the number of comments here I know how hard it is to reply to everything (I had a piece of content go viral once also) but it might be nice to keep in touch.

    Cheers sir, and good luck!

  130. Daniel Ducharme said:

    If you ever run for office , and I have a chance to vote for you , I will. Don’t waste your time doing anything else , we need people like you leading this country

  131. Thank you for this impassioned, reasonable article. I am impressed that you had the courage to do this, yet I am saddened to have lost your voice. I hope that you come back to the public realm soon. We need to hear you.

  132. Todd van der Heyden said:

    Hey buddy…you’ve clearly given this a lot of thought and decided your calling is elsewhere. Whether folks agree or not, there are some important things written here to reflect on and ponder. We developed a great rapport over the past year and I’m going to miss you, your talent, your perspective and your A storytelling. And I wish you all the best on all the roads life takes you down.

    Todd

    • Sheldon said:

      Come on, Todd. Say what you’re really thinking…but, then again, that would be CTV News’ intellectual property, wouldn’t it?

  133. I can’t do any better job than you just did yourself of describing why your actions are so vitally important, so all that I’ll say is this.

    I’m a 24- yr- old j-school student currently working a Sun Media internship with the Banff Crag and Canyon and the Canmore Leader, just outside of Calgary. I still honestly believe that journalism, real journalism, can and will save the world, but only if it’s pursued by people who believe in the power of words to stop bullets.

    People like you.

    I also have a couch, and some friendly contacts at the Rose ‘n Crown.

    If you want a rousing debate about the sad state of our media environment, or simply a place to crash and a delicious Albertan pint before you do, don’t hesitate to give me a shout.

    -Jesse Winter
    Canmore, Alta.

  134. I also couldn’t help but notice that you have a mountain bike hanging over the tailgate of your truck. that is rad, and Canmore is a great place to shred….just sayin’

  135. Sue W said:

    Hey, Kai..come for a stay in Eastern Ontario if you need to stop for a while…you’ll have all you need for as long as you want.

  136. spencer said:

    Don’t agree with your views politically, but I agree with the narative. Critique is important, and the media isn’t providing it. Fluff pieces about a rich young couple or the latest pop culture craze does nothing to enhance the national conversation.

  137. Green Rabbit said:

    I’m so excited that you exist in the world!!

  138. Kate said:

    A great piece that really demonstrates to me why your voice & analysis might have been wasted in TV news. Even if it’s the way these stories are best told, it’s not really how they get consumed. As a young-ish adult, I also experienced a similar need to find an alternate path – I’m still looking but generally feel better about my life outside the box.

    Thanks for sharing, and I look forward to hearing more from you in the future.

  139. maggie muggins said:

    Wow, just wow! One big strike against the Murdochs of the world! I too know the joy of leaving the corporate world out of utter distaste, verging on disgust. May the gods and goddesses be with you, with all of us really, in these bizarre times where up is down and right is wrong.

    As for boomers – I’m 63 and am more politically aware and active than I ever was in the 60s. We didn’t have the internet back then, and were stoned much of the time. ;-) Though there’s something to be said for dancing during the Revolution. We did start something though. It just ain’t finished yet. It’s called Freedom.

  140. Great article, a perfect tap-out.

    “where my own opinions and values were carefully strained out.”

    The above should be the norm in reporting, any agency that uses the word News or implication of being ‘News’ should report WITHOUT personal opinion or spin attached to the ‘news’.

    Once anyone reporting the news stops reporting facts dry and factual it becomes a biased commentary which is not news.

    Colbert, I like because he doesn’t claim to be reporting news.
    He doesn’t pretend to NOT spin it.

    You are so right society wants to hear things that please them even if it means adding to a false and dysfunctional reality.
    It has become a pick the channel that coddles your reality.

    You know something is amiss when Fox and MSNBC report the same event but really it doesn’t seem they both attended the same event. If reporting has no bias then no one channel would have a weighed following.

    Instead of reporting news, successful corporations like FOX chose a demographic to appeal to. Like you said it pays more to say things in a way the viewer demographic wants to hear.

    A news program should not worry about milking the most money from their news program.

    Sure fire an annoying journalist who is unlikeable based on their appearance, sound of their voice or mannerisms, sucks but that’s the biz. But if people want to tune out because they simple do not like the truth and not being spoon fed how they should feel. let the find a commentary program.

    Those of us that value the facts do not show up in ratings because we gave up years ago trusting TV broadcast news.

    We were once loyal viewers who got sick of filtering through the spins to get to the truth.

    I appreciate your VERY honest and accurate assessment but I also see that you had to tap out because you do feel your opinion should be injected. It sounds lie i woudl agree with your opinions but that is not the point.

    A journalist should not sway the viewer or try it just shouldn’t be a job where one expects to be ‘heard’.

    • Kind of Blue said:

      A journalist is making an argument whether they choose to be explicit about their political opinions or not.

      There is no news that does not contain an opinion. Obscuring it is, often, more dangerous.

  141. To dream of the person you would like to be is to waste the person you are.

    (unknown source)

    Congratulations!

    • DJ said:

      It’s a shame that integrity (and action) like yours is so sparse. Your courage inspires, I’ll be forwarding your words to anyone who’ll listen. Although, I’m sure many are thirsty to hear more and I have a feeling this may only be the beginning for you. Take care and stay strong!

      “To avoid criticism, do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing.” Elbert Hubbard

  142. anotherformerjournalislt said:

    Hello Kai,

    I’m another former journalist who left at a young age. Kudos. While you’re figuring things out, I would humbly suggest youtubing Eckhart Tolle to help with the spiritual side of things as you begin your new journey. His books are excellent. You were clearly suffering, and the insane thing to do is to just keep up the illusions and keep on suffering. All the best.

  143. Mrs. K said:

    Sorry, but I don’t find this piece to be as enlightening or as “brave” as some are making it out to be. To be blunt, this rant is a little self indulgent and pretty obvious.

  144. Hans Moleman said:

    Get over yourself. You are a 24 year old, wet behind the ears, kid. You just aren’t that important. There will be any number of mindless drones ready to step in and carry on.

    • maggie muggins said:

      “There will be any number of mindless drones ready to step in and carry on.”

      Isn’t that the topic of the article? That our culture is producing mindless drones? Sheesh. Sad world that produces such apathy.

  145. Bill said:

    Dude! respectfully..ever heard of NEWSPEAK?…George Orwell, 1984? THAT is your battle. CFR, TLC, BB, CoR,…..

  146. Bob Dickerson said:

    Sounds like the “manifesto” of a bitter person. Kai, enjoy your vacation – you certainly need it and I hope it is a long one . . .

    • Chris A. said:

      Thanks for your ignorant opinion, sheeple. Go back to your TV for further instructions.

    • MichaelWH said:

      Working as a whore for vested business interests tends to leave one bitter at the constant pain in the arse.

  147. Daniel S. said:

    Good for you ! Joyce Kilmer, US poet, writer and sometimes reporter who died in uniform in the First WW had elegant words to describe those like Kia, he said that ” They carried in their soul the courage of their song”

    On this side of the Atlantic the News Of The World debacle have brought the general and specific actions of the press, editors and reporters into sharp focus. That picture is not very attractive.

    Kia have given an insiders view into the back-room that is carefully and deliberately veiled from the general public that they purport to serve. Just as we have painfully learned that politics is too important to be left solely to the politicians, so also ‘The Media’ is far too important a society accept to leave it to the Murdocs and ‘The Wizard Of Oz’ types.

    Full credit to Kia for what he has done : currently his may be a lone and lonely voice but the general public is slowly waking up to the fact that the Western media are little more than enablers for the political, financial and other malaise paralyzing public life. More will hopefully follow now that he has shown the way!

  148. One of the best “well said” on anything I’ve read in a long time. So much of the system is broken (pick media, government, climate, all of the above and more) and we as Canadians have been too polite in dealing with it. Mostly, because we prefer to be Ostrich’s and hum the “Ignorance is Bliss” song so loudly we can’t hear anything else.

    I wonder what it is that we can do to solve some of this. Dollars seem to rule, there is no recall legislation for politicians. We speak and those in charge appear to not be listening. Perhaps we have to not be SO polite. Not in a violence sense, though…

    I am new to this ‘rebellion/political’ stuff, and I’ve made mistakes in the past on how to present issues. I am learning to tone it down. My twitter profile statement has always been:

    “Having a strong voice with sensible emotions can help to make a driving change… Let your voice be heard!”

  149. A Warrant Officer with no patience for little dweebs said:

    Please tell me you quit the CF too.

    We don’t need you, the infantry is above-strength as it is. Sissies who only want to do peacekeeping when they had ample chances to deploy to Afghanistan, are just cluttering up the ranks and wasting rations.

    • Heather S said:

      Warrant Officer: My grandpere, a naturalized Canadian, earned the Croix de Guerre parachutting behind the lines and organizing the French Resistence. My uncle was in the Canadian Army Intelligence Corps for twenty years. I am ashamed of your conduct on this blog.
      Sadly,
      Heather

      • MichaelWH said:

        Surely, Heather S, you don’t believe that the poster is actually a Warrant Officer? One of the magical things about the Internet is that anybody can be anything they can spell (mostly) correctly.

        • Kimberley said:

          MichaelWH…You sir, just hit the nail squarely on the head!

    • anotherformerjournalist said:

      I too have a proud family history of service. Remember, when you say you are fighting for freedom, you are fighting for freedom period. If you joined the military to feel like a “real man”, it’s the military is probably better off without you.

    • Erin said:

      Forgive me, brother, but…did you actually use the word ‘sissies’ to make your point? Someone who believes in peacekeeping is a sissy vs. someone who wants to “deploy to Afghanistan”? Wow. Just wow. Shameful, brother – I hope to heaven your attitudes and opinions are not widely shared. If they are, God help the people of Afghanistan.

    • A warrant officer with no brains either. The infantry needs more like him, and less like you, the mindless drone type.

      I fought in Afghanistan, wore the flag on my shoulder for 12 years, and I’d rather have him on my side than you. You are a testament to the current failure of our nation, you are part of the problem.

    • Yeah getting a leg blown off for a war we have no interest in is real smart….dumbass

  150. Vahan said:

    Kai, you know what’s on tap next don’t you? The attack machine is going to be put in motion and you will begin getting “hate” comments from an organized group of people. If that happens, publish them all, expose them for what they are. A group of people that want to snuff out any new voice. A group of people that want to control information, nothing grass roots about it. Unite the left people, unite the left. Bring back the middle class, bring back jobs. Murdoch’s empire may be teetering now let us hope the same will happen here. We have to unite and even possibly work with people around the world with the same mindset.

  151. Good luck, Kai. You’re braver than a lot of people. We need media critics like you. Hope your trip west brings you to the Left Coast.

  152. anotherformerjournalist said:

    Wow, the haters are amusing. Only unhappy people post that kind of crap. If y’all are so wise, it sure isn’t showing in your comments. You’re miserable and want everyone else to be. It’s not fair if they aren’t right? Quit pretending you know what’s best for someone else.

    • p said:

      My thoughts exactly. I’ve never seen people so openly bitter about work and their own career.

      Sorry life dealt you a hand you couldn’t contend with, haters, but grow a pair and do what it takes to snap out of it. Maybe take an art course with your pension money or something.

  153. Red Greenee said:

    To summarize – he is “Coming out of the closet”. He is “feeling sexually attracted to the people on screen”. “not the best use of my short life” would suggest he has a terminal illness. Guess which one?

    • Socrates said:

      Are you ok?

  154. Steve Brice said:

    kudos to you Kai on having the intestinal fortitude to go forward on a much need attempt of a wakeup call to the sleeping with hands tied giant that we know as Canada.

    Special interest groups that come in all monetary and political sizes that control the inherent rights of the people to know the truthful information to bring those to the forefront for public and if needed judicial accountability to the people of Canada.

    With eyes wide open you would see it on a much more grand scale, I am sure that most of us have know as far back as we can remember that the news in Canada has no investigative journalistic ability or teeth and as person of optimistic values like yourself with a pessimistic view driven into us like you can’t fight city hall or deep pocketed special interest values.

    I’m sure your parents are very proud of you for standing up for what you believe in, and in the age of the information highway I think effective change can be made with an optimistic view point one click at a time.

    We have the ability now to have one vote from the comforts of our homes and hand held devices on all points that should concern the Canadian people once we all wake up and smell the special interests.

    Good luck Kai on your journey to the truth, and accountability to the truth is always a worthy cause.

  155. Nathan said:

    I totally agree except for one thing:

    When you talk of a community theatre group losing its funding, you have an unstated major premise that government should be funding such things in the first place. Selling tickets might also fund such endeavors. Light rail is one of those things for which funding could be justified, but perhaps only in the form of loans at low interest rates until fares begin to pay for it.
    If governments funded less extravagant military purchases AND less extravagant artistic but socially null endeavors, someday we might discover what we want government to do and what we want it to stay the hell out of. It’s the list of the things we want it to stay out of that I’m most interested in, as it’s already involved in everything I can imagine.

    • Mark W said:

      Before you knock arts funding, you should know that the revenue generated from the arts is FAR more than what the government invests.

      Most people, not knowing this, subscribe to the fallacy that artists must be poor beggars that offer no significant return for government investment.

    • When roads are totally funded on a user-pay basis then so should trains. Passenger rail is always subsidized and intelligent governments understand that there are many side-benefits, such as facilitating commerce by allowing lower wage workers to get to work efficiently, reduced air and water pollution, fewer deaths and injuries from traffic accidents, fewer police dedicated to patrolling the roads for traffic violations and accidents, and so on. And it even benefits the rich who continue to drive expensive cars as there are fewer other cars to cause congestion.

  156. Matthew Hays said:

    A brilliant posting by a thoughtful young journalist. Everything Kai Nagata says makes sense, and resonates. The so-called “liberal bias” charge against the press has worked as a brilliant passive-aggressive ploy, stifling any actual critiques of a Conservative government that is out of control. Canada, you have been hoodwinked, and more easily than I thought possible. Bravo to Nagata for his bravery and outspokenness.

  157. Jake said:

    Good God, what an overwritten stream of self-important drivel. Oh, and Kai? Come to think of it, I think I would like some fries with that Coke. Make it snappy, would you?

    • Chris A. said:

      How would a fresh, steaming plate of pigshit sound to you right now, jackass?

    • Socrates said:

      Sometimes when I read something online and have an urge to comment, I ask myself if what I write will contribute anything to the discourse or is it simply a knee-jerk ego driven remark which really says to the world, “LISTEN TO ME EVERYONE, I HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY. I’M IMPORTANT, LISTEN TO ME”. I suggest you try ask yourself the same question and avoid wasting bits.

      • Vahan said:

        Socrates, this is fine, let people like Jake and Red Greene make their comments. Kai should publish every word, every hate filled sentence of people who are trying to move the narrative away from discussions and more towards confrontational. This is simply helping prove our point. If a moderate opinion is not agreed upon, then ugly, childish people come out of the woodwork and muddy the waters with filth. Let them loose and maybe people will see how easily disgusting they could be and then they will be pushed to the edges and adults could then have honest differences of opinions. In the past I had written to Harper telling him that I agreed with a certain stand he took. At the same time I told him that that is what democracy is all about, the ability for me to tell my P.M that I agree with him and that when I don’t I will also tell him that. This is our democracy we have to use it. Speak up, but be adults. Make your arguments with your adult words and try to convince me that what you are saying is just, but then be prepared to listen to my point of view. We are Canadians, we don’t shoot each other when we disagree, but please let us be civil with words and actions.

      • Jake said:

        Kai has a rewarding career awaiting him, slinging hash at the nearest Tim Horton’s. When you drop by in 10 years, be sure to ask him whether it was all worth it.

        • Vahan said:

          Jake what are you implying by your comment? Are you implying that those employed by Tim Horton’s, a great Canadian institution are the bottom of the barrel? That working at Timmy’s is not a great job? That they are not hard working tax paying Canadian citizens? Is this supposed to be an insult to Kai or are you such a snob that people in the food service industry are worth less than maybe tax avoiding CEOs? No really tell us how you were planning on using this as an insult. Is a human being judged on the job he holds, so we have a caste system here in Canada?

          • Doc McCoy said:

            Very well said.

  158. Saywhat? said:

    Wow, congratulations for quitting a job that for many Canadians would have sustained them for many years. Congratulations on sounding like a git while doing it at 24 years of age.

    Here we are, a depression, whether or not our media overlords want to call it that or not, and one 24 year old with a journalism degree is going to change the world. Hey kiddo – grow up time.

    You made crap loads of money that most working class Canadians will never see. You paid out the student loans or may the family pitched in and now your going to rediscover yourself.

    Spoiled. Spoiled for putting it up in a long winded, set in justified margins – which are the worst for reading, manifesto of self importance. From this end you look like you got caught with your knickers down and were forced out.

    As for covering the Royal Visit – sure beats the crap out of our local news with people shooting, stabbing and in one case running over a little girl.

    Hint hint – most people will never give a shit about the rest of the world because their own needs out weigh those of nameless crying child in (insert country here).

    Let’s have media go with the simple message from Douglas Adams: “Don’t Panic” and the world’s media outlets will be out of business.

    Good luck fella. Try to find yourself. Don’t bother the rest of us in 20 years when you are kicking yourself in the ass for abandoning your job based on principals that the working stiffs know don’t put food in the mouths of their kids.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      Vade retro, Harper Minion!

    • Warren Z said:

      Oh that was awesome.

      Let’s see… “Hey kiddo – grow up time.”

      So growing up =

      “Good luck fella. Try to find yourself. Don’t bother the rest of us in 20 years when you are kicking yourself in the ass for abandoning your job based on principals that the working stiffs know don’t put food in the mouths of their kids.” … Equating every decision you make on money.

      “As for covering the Royal Visit – sure beats the crap out of our local news with people shooting, stabbing and in one case running over a little girl.” … Ignorance

      “most people will never give a shit about the rest of the world because their own needs out weigh those of nameless crying child in (insert country here).” … Selfishness.

      You’re not also stridently religious too, are you?

  159. Mikey said:

    Bookmarked, tweeted and shared. You speak truth. Kudos for having the courage to quit your job based on your principles and beliefs. A lot of us don’t have that luxury unfortunately: Money still rules the world sadly and there are bills to be paid.

    But I’m glad to see someone like you take a stand and stop doing something they may be well paid to do but don’t find satisfaction in in anymore. I wish I could do the same. Regardless of what you do next, make it something that counts to you. But I get the sense you’ve already figured that out which is why you quit your job!

  160. Chris said:

    Quitting your job for principle is noble. Yet it is almost always only seen that way for a fleeting and short amount of time. I read your post as a mental salve to ease your self inflicted wounds (i.e. more for yourself than others). Do what you must to cleanse yourself of your last employments ideological filth lest it stain your capacity to see good in other media ventures. Do it quick and don’t stop moving forward or you will fall under the heavy weight of your HUGE decision and it’s ramifications.
    Many people will agree with your decision, many will not and some will even deride you behind your back after shaking your hand and looking you in the eye saying they are happy for you. Keep on the singular road, you did this for yourself, do not expect others to understand. Selfish as it may seem you did what you felt is right.
    Your lack of dependents is a boon. Now go get a good career and have some kids you punk. 24?! You got lots of time left. Use it well and spread the Kai.

    • Chris said:

      Let me add that I did the same thing. I quit my managers position for my principles (regarding emerging employment policies out of my control) and then fell into a rut of depression and self degradation. My main point is don’t do what I did. The regret and pain is gone, but the unemployment remains! Get out and do something quick brother.

  161. Jim Henry, Chatham, ON said:

    Right on Kai! I am impressed. Good luck in your future. I know you will do well. :)

  162. Jan said:

    I came here without an agenda. You won’t find any knee-jerk reactions, nor a finger-shaking lecture on how “you should be”, from me. Frankly, both reek of resentment and tunnel vision.

    You seem to be a talented young man trying to find his way through the maze of his career. Best wishes. You are a talented journalist. Do what you love. Always.

  163. lr said:

    well said.
    hope to see you getting involved in politics or at least get your own show.

  164. Start a political webcast! See where it goes. We need an honest, rounded voice. I’d watch it.

  165. Jenny said:

    What a fantastic article! It’s so refreshing to hear someone with an opinion and not just reguritated “party line” speech.
    What you have said about commercialized news broadcasting is also true here in Australia. Assumptions are made that the viewers are idiots who cannot formulate their own opinions and will be happy to be spoon fed “interesting” stories about the latest weight loss fad, rather than give the real news and possible risk the viewer changing channels.
    One of my biggest annoyances is when valuable news time is taken up with product placement advertising for the current flavour of the month reality tv show, and it’s delivered as a news item!

  166. Everything IS possible! Keep searching and be free! And don’t stop writing, asking, and challenging the status quo. Write write write, my friend! Bravo!! Je suis avec toi. Je te jure. Carmen.xo

  167. Natasha said:

    I finally feel that I’m not alone. I feel very proud for you brother. You have sacrificed your job for your freedom. I agree that we are loosing the Canada that I was born into since my childhood days. I thought the Liberals will serve our nation but their leader failed and the Harper government won, SADLY. in order to save our nation we must run for office and help bring the canada that we once loved. our nation is dying and our mass media is getting so polluted with nonsense. Be the change, I know I will but i just gotta finish my university degree.

    • Natasha said:

      I great example of how destroyed our nation is when refugees landed by boat from across the world in British Columbia the Harper government treated them like criminals. We are loosing our generosity and using ideology to destroy our nation.

      But that same group who came on the boat from Sri Lanka were according to a UN war crimes report, fleeing rape, persecution and abduction.

      Don’t give up writing…we need your voice….no wonder Harper lost our seat at the UN Security Council!

  168. I have not read any of the comments (there are so many), but I have more faith in the future of our nation than I did before I read your post. Thank you.

  169. Denise said:

    Good for you! Your new journey is going to be amazing, just don’t forget to enjoy the ride and the many steps along the way!

  170. Laurie said:

    Congratulations for taking a stand, something so many people long to do but can’t.

  171. eyrea said:

    This was so refreshing and illuminating to read. Then it made me sad. It should not take the level of integrity you’ve had to demonstrate to say what you said here out loud.

    I hope you find something to do that will work for you. I hope even more that it is still within the arena of journalism, or at least “being a public voice”.

  172. Kai, when I first started in the biz, news media was a different world and I don’t envy those who are in the early years of their news careers. It’s not that the world was perfect, far from it, but there were more choices/voices. I wish you all the best in your new adventures and have no doubt that you will find your way/voice and make the kind of difference you know you can make.

  173. Joe said:

    Good for you. I remember I felt almost alone here in the U.S. until Jon Stewart started saying the types of things I was feeling. It’s important that competent, thoughtful views be heard on TV. May Canada be blessed by your wisdom

  174. Viewer said:

    I do not work in journalism, but I agree wholeheartedly with Kai. The majority of the people posting here are supportive, but there are some people posting here who clearly didn’t read the whole article and think this is “sour grapes”. I would speculate these people work for one of the media outlets that bows down to Harper.

    For several years now I have found CTV to have decreasing journalistic integrity. It was really apparent during the 2010 Winter Olympics.

  175. Amazingly honest and true. I hope you find what you’re looking for.

  176. I can see, and I predict, that a significant minority of the population will just walk away from the rules of the Establishment (tarot supports this) and this will really confound the algorithms that are supposedly universal to how we will behave.

  177. Anne Beamish said:

    You are a very courageous individual and I applaud your decision. Have you considered teaching? It offers opportunities to work in other countries as well as at home. A very interesting piece and I couldn’t agree with you more with regards to our beloved Conservatives.

  178. Brian King said:

    KOSINSKI WOULD BE PROUD……..

  179. Daniel S. said:

    Recently I attended an International weekend seminar hosted by Leeds University in the UK. on Empowerment and the Sacral. Over eighty papers delivered there, many to do with value systems.

    Over half the conference were in the twenties age group of varied cultural and religious backgrounds, most of that group had their masters and most also were finalizing their Doctorate studies. They were a fine bunch of young people.

    Most also had come through Post-Colonial studies and their views and attitudes could not be more different from the Western ‘status quo’ Establishment elites ruling consensus of Blair, Bush & Co or Cameron, Obama & Co.

    ( The political party labels of the rulers may change but just like Ireland and our recent election, the broad sweep of policies remain the same, the much trumpeted ‘ changes’ are mere cosmetics and window dressing!)

    These bright young people referred to had a realistic view of those pulling the current levers of power and why the world is in the mess that it is.

    For those who have trouble with Kia’s attidute, I suggest that they get used to it or over it : his generation will not ‘go quietly into the night’ or rather the nightmare that the vested interests of my generation have inflicted on them. Their individual reactions may not be as dramatic or decisive as Kia’s but they are equally opposed to the cosy consensus and maintaining the prevailing status quo.

    The fight back and reaction has indeed started: Kia’s action is but one overt manifestation of what thousands like him are feeling and covertly thinking. They too will act as the fine young people in the Middle-East have acted against their own inert, stagnant and stymying political systems.

    Revolution knows no frontiers : Western Leaders cannot continue to be two faced and call for a new morality abroad in restrictive corrupt regimes while continuing ‘business as usual’ at home without exposing themselves for what they are!

  180. Franky said:

    congrats to you for being so True to yourself…. some of us just keep going hoping it will be right again…..or hoping someone like you comes along to help make those changes.

    Godspeed Kai and yes if you go into politics…. I’ll vote for you.

  181. Un autre journaliste said:

    Merci d’avoir écrit tout ça.
    Bonne suite des choses.

  182. iqra said:

    As a senior Undergrad who was just a few months ago headed towards magazine journalism, mostly due to the narrative element, I have to say that I switched my career track for many of the same reasons you did, minus the political discussions. After an internship with a well known magazine and reflecting on signposts, I realized my storytelling skills would be wasting their time where I was headed and since then, I have been in the process of becoming a screenwriter. Thank you for sharing this – it gives me hope that its not too late to get where I want to go.

  183. Wrote this 3 years ago to no effect. Sent one to Jim Travers who was interested but nothing ever happened.
    Thank you so much. Great courage.

    Notes taken while waiting for the outrage.

    While trying to get my head around that nosedive of Eliot Spitzer, I came across the thought that while self destruction occurs in many walks of life, and is critically covered by the media, the media never seems to focus its intense critical beam on itself. Journalists, especially political journalists, are just not known for going at each other’s jugulars. They comment and criticize while remaining safe in their métier, kind of like threatened muskox, facing out, bum to bum, shaggy and mute whenever a critical note is struck, I can’t recall a critical article, op-ed piece or editorial on the state of journalism itself. Sometimes vetted criticism is allowed in letters to the editor, hardly a venue for satisfying comment on the performance of political journalists. I think it would be refreshing to have a go in the media at such a cosseted group, if for nothing else, than to bring their collective being into the reader’s reality.
    I want to hear some of you political journalist types say you’ve done some reflecting. I don’t expect to hear any confessions. Forgive me, but not many of you people are known for your ability to take a hit. Harper smacked you all a good one and what happened? Most of you folded like a Trabant bumper. How did it all get like this? Political journalism in this country isn’t progressive or courageous. It’s circular, like the same people tossing a heap of pizza dough around. I don’t think many of you realize it or you’d be writing about it more critically. In many other fields the members look at overall performance and make critical comment seeking adjustment to help maintain integrity. But you people are notoriously thin-skinned. And you’ll criticize everybody except a fellow journalist. Have any of you ever considered turning that searchlight toward yourselves? To see some credentials put to the test? Some courage? I’d like to see some reflection, some inner turmoil. I want to see less daily game playing, more shouting and shaking of fists. Not from the politicians, from the journalists. I want some turmoil and dust rising when a Canadian government closes an unannounced deal to allow a foreign army into Canada to quell Canadian civil unrest (Oh ironic déjà vu! American soldiers on our streets: we’re not making this up!). Where’s the outrage? There’s barely a peep except in blogs. But you guys, in the public’s mind anyway, are supposed to have integrity. I know you all have biases, and there’s nothing wrong with that. Life is bias. My problem is you all have BlackBerrys. And with all you people fondling your Blackberries, we’re stuck in the present moment aren’t we? Harold Innis called it presentmindedness. It’s a disease and you people have it bad. When did any journalist last reflect? You know, think about what’s actually happening, not the daily fecal examinations that pass for journalism these days, but actually thinking; a stand-back-and-look picture. Wow, is that a friggin’ meteor heading for the planet? Yikes, there’s a meteor filled with toxic bugs heading for earth and we’re spending our time commenting on the fiery tail and the latest push polls about who Canadians would like to see it smite. And oh yeah, Jane Taber will tell us which toxic bits are hot and not.
    Is it enough to sit and cheerily chat with a gracious and bright Don Newman when this stuff is going down. The country is slowly going down the toilet and you’re all making gentle little comments. Where’s the passion, the outrage? And you people are some of the better journalists in the country! Do you think everything is just unfolding, as it should? No it isn’t. The frog is in the pot and it’s getting hotter. The Canadian people know this. It’s why Stephen Harper stays at 30 to 33 percent on those polls that don’t ‘randomly’ pluck their respondents from ridings which bias according to Liberal or Conservative majorities. So where is the media to talk of these things? They emerged for a while in Chile and Argentina until they were frightened or shot down. Do you think it can’t happen in Canada? What else can’t happen? Blatant lies in advertising have ruined a person’s reputation and I’ve not heard a critical word of it from any of you. Someone asks Rick Anderson on CBC’s Politics if the attack ads against Dion will work and he smiles and says yes. No one says, “They’re lies, fraudulent, misleading and wrong.”
    Hey, we’re not watching a play. We’re in a play, and it’s a tragedy.
    Where’s the courage? Is it lost in paying the rent or the lease or the contacts so important to all your job survivals? Is it in the easy phone calls and the BlackBerry tappings and the presentmindedness that journalists seem to have like head colds. Something is happening, and it’s sinister. There’s a hollowing out of values, with the ensuing vacuum filling with a jingoistic, militaristic pudding, pandering to our basest levels. A kind of oil-fuelled macho goose-stepping prance amid shouts of; “We’re an energy superpower!” Tim Horton good. Academics bad. At what point is it possible for journalists to personally take a stand, not for a party, but for something that defined us? Call it a reasonableness. I mean a collection of differences, weirdly held together by geography and flexible strings of social caring. A dull but workable premise: Sharing and caring, rather than grabbing and stabbing. It’s toast. Now we’re exhorted to wear red on Fridays or risk being cast as traitors. Guns! Not butter!
    Maybe the problem is more with the media owners.
    Not a lot of guys who own print and electronic networks are left wing. Some of them would scare the shit out of Genghis Khan. Apart from Rick Salutin and Jim Stanford, I can’t think of many left wing columnists either. The rightward trudging journalists working for owners like CanWest certainly aren’t known for their courage. Well, that’s not entirely true. The only time I read of the Canada/U.S. armed forces deal was in the National Post. But mostly they seem a bunch of pack animals, ready to jump on anyone who stumbles, and good at the cull. Then we have the television pundits, so very ready to pontificate, mesmerized by the camera’s red light, freshly balded in the style of the day, horn-rimmed and bow-tied. It’s like they’re all watching a traffic accident and dissing the moans and shrieks of the dying and injured, then retiring to the bar to help each other get their pieces out. These people are BlackBerry freaks too, and having no sense of critical thinking, they run on raw political effluent and discharge, with no default facility for challenging assumptions, especially their own, as this would involve thinking rather than reacting.
    Are we somewhat like Germany in the thirties? Swept along in a new style, I mean apart from the Shakespearean caucus stabbings on one side of the House and the Machiavellian caucus smotherings on the other, is something else going on? Can a reasonably sane person actually say the word fascistization without being blogified? No one in the press would hint at such possibilities, either because of their particular biases for such a happening or because they have fears about their jobs and losing contacts that allow them to print the daily minutiae. Meanwhile the frog in the pot is noticing the bubbles. A look at the Government’s actions in the past two years shows an incremental movement toward what might be considered a fascist perspective. Look at a few symptoms: Big military build-up; Big lie used in ads directed against any opposition; Attention focused solely on the leader; News restrictions on government actions; Individuals pointed out in traitorous terms; Plans for a propaganda centre of Goebbelesque proportions; Scientists, intellectuals and academics seen as enemies. Evidently, the burning of the books will be replaced with laws cancelling funds for the broadcast arts. All these things happened in the past two years, with little more than passing comment from our press. The closest thing I’ve seen was Susan Bonner actually backing Jim Prentice up against the wall on a completely fraudulent ad smear on Stephane Dion. And Don Martin sometimes has a faux criticism of the PM, I imagine just to get his pH factor into a lighter shade of blue. My God, bring back the sponsorship scandal, bigger if possible, because what’s happening now is a greater swindle, the stealing of a country by a party containing a fraudulent bunch of right wing thugs thinly-veneered with some decent conservatives. The former who think Canadians are stupid, the latter who think that the end justifies the means.
    I think you journalists are playing the game wrong.
    You should be more aggressive with the power holders, and less contemptuous of the Opposition. I can’t remember anyone actually writing anything positive about Dion, yet he has to be a very tough guy, because he spends his days being knifed by Ignatieff followers and assorted Liberal weasels as well as having to tolerate stuff like Rick Mercer’s Jubilee Singers delighting the Conservatives. That’s a wonderful new trait for a satirist, Rick, cheering for the overdog. Dion’s obviously a gutsy person, but how would any of you people know? You’re all into piling-on. You’ve bought into the ‘”not a leader” stuff because it doesn’t require thinking or reflecting or gulping and saying; “Christ, what are we doing”? The road is always easy to follow when it’s well lit and there’s directional signage. And you’ve all bought the GPS political software.
    But wait, there’s more.
    Let’s look at the pathetic way many of you understand political polling research. I know something about qualitative and quantitative research. Every word I’ve written for a living for 43 years has been tested in one or the other of these broad methodologies. And the lesson I early learned is a simple one. Whoever pays for the research gets the desired results. Oddly, Harold Innis had the same conclusion in another context. He said, any system of communication eventually influences what issues from it. (I think McLuhan ripped that into the medium is the message). Whatever, the average Canadian thinks that this kind of research shows what Canadians think at a given time. What it may be though, is what the research buyer wants Canadians to think. So please don’t give me the “we’re just reporting the facts” bullroar. The facts are that 3% 19 times out of 20 is a weasel. The real bias agent is in the question, and the lead up to the question, and the placing and rotation of the question in the context of other questions. Weighting is another little statistical shim that can even out a rocking verdict. Those are facts I’ve rarely seen in a newspaper or heard on air. What I have heard and seen are press statements like, “on verge of majority”. As I say, who sponsors the poll gets the results desired. Yet journalists frequently imply that poll results are truth or signs from above.
    So, political journalists, where’s the reflection?
    Some of you are excellent writers, possessed of a power to explain rather than spin and having no need to ease off into hackneyed, packaged, explanations which coincide enough with the pack mutterings to keep you comfy talking to each other in bars. So, where’s the outrage? Where are the journalist fistfights? You were all passionate writers once. Now many of you just have a writing job. Where’s a Cardinal Newman? Courage. Daring. Anger. Insight. Canadian political journalism today reminds me of the ad business today, where everything is ironic or humorous or edgy, because everyone writing ads today is terrified of being typecast as corny and maudlin if they move into the difficult area of persuasion, of being seen as living in a cheesy, Coutts-Hallmark land. I think some of you people are afraid to be yourselves in your writing too. I’m tired after saying all this and I’m sure you’re tired too, if you got through it this far. Let me leave you with this thought. From my perch in the Bay of Fundy’s little Sackville, I’ve watched you political journalists drifting, tide wrought and keeping up with the effluent outpouring from every political stream or freshet. Just drifting, adding to the sea’s confusion by never pausing to question the reason for the tide or the effects of wind against current and how they affect the incredible reasonableness of Canada. Even though something else is happening that’s too big to fit on a BlackBerry.
    With every good wish,

    Graham Watt
    13 Campbell’s Hill,
    Sackville, NB
    E4L 3R6
    506 536 1436

    • Jaded Canuck said:

      Graham:
      Loved your rant. (If you call it that).
      When the Conservatives won the election, I told my wife we better get used to wearing armbands and doing the goose-step.
      The old line media in this country cannot be trusted.

  184. innertubes said:

    Bravo, sir! Talk to Keith Olbermann and Al Gore IMO!

  185. Harry Leslie said:

    Kai, you are a centrist, moderate all Canadian.

    I am a 48 year old regular guy from Scarborough who grew up in a Canada where life was bliss and I felt in tune with my fellow citizens.

    That has all gone away ever so precipitously since 1989 with the advent of flawed free trade.

    I lament the loss of the society I so loved where everyone was precious but not special.

    Your story has moved me to tears has rekindled hope that the next generation might just pull this this world’s neo-con debacle from the fire.

    Thank you and thank you again.

    Where do I send my money to replace your income while you discover the place where you can best help yourself and therefore all of us?

    We need you to be the best that you can be.

    Harry Leslie
    Scarborough

    • Hi Harry, thanks for your note. I’ve posted an update on the blog. If you’re still interested, I’m trying to fund a documentary project right now.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      Très bien dit. Je seconde.

  186. I understand where you’re coming from as I’ve felt much the same myself.

  187. Larry Pinzansky said:

    For a young guy (Well, I’m 57!), I was startled at your total lack of clarity in your essay. I’ve worked many years in journalism, now more in an editorial role where I can manage to ignore, for the most part, all the stark realities that you are well aware of. I hope you keep fighting! It gives me a little hope. At a certain point a lot of us just stop fighting, feeling the relative imminence of mortality. So, after all the many years of fighting and finding more and more pessimism, I need to find a few years to experience some renewed joy. I hope you always manage to fight AND find joy.
    There are people that think you are being self-destructive or naive. They are totally wrong; Don’t you believe any of that for one moment! You’ve got it right. If you want to do anything meaningful, it simply hasn’t been do-able in the setting you were working in…and really not for a VERY long time. It’s simply gotten much worse that it was, say 30 years ago. And it was pretty awful then.
    Remember that the majority (I told you I was pessimistic.) find it way too easy to believe their own lies. That’s not a judgement, just a reflection of how frail we humans are.
    All the very best!

  188. nobody said:

    “You took your lucky break, and broke it in two.”

    • Harry Leslie said:

      figures you would quote paul mcartney the sell out and not john lennon the idealist that put words into action
      disgrace

  189. hanaboomom said:

    Very well written. I wish you all the best in whatever you choose to do next.

  190. Giles said:

    If you need a place to stay in Revelstoke, just past Glacier National Park, let me know. My family and I would love to host you. All the best, Giles

    • This is what happens when you get swamped and give up on the comments section. Darn.

  191. Every single human being who gives a lick about the future should read this fantastic piece. I’m inspired and 100% behind you on it. All the sincere best to you, Mr. Nagata!

  192. Kai Nagata, Lets consider humanity’s common ‘indigenous’ (Latin = ‘self-generating’) roots as a way of understanding the present situation we are in. We don’t need to believe the lies of our dysfunctional ‘exogenous’ (L. = ‘other-generated’) age and the alienation colonial empires engender towards First Nation knowledge. The great bulk and commonplace of human history everywhere on planet earth is indigenous. http://www.indigenecommunity.info

  193. frankie said:

    Jesus Christ this is depressing. Here I thought my Northern cousins were sailing calmer waters than we are. I don’t read about the wingnuts and Christian Taliban in Canada being in control like they are here. Of course the masters of the universe are always happy to use these morons to extend their control over the only thing that matters to them, money. I just didn’t know it was that bad yet.

    • Vahan said:

      Frankie, take heart from what is being written here. I believe we here in Canada have seen the mess made in the U.S by the “nuts” and how out of control it has spun out. We are hopefully nipping it in the bud here before it gets ugly. The media is being controlled by a select few, but the internet will not be controlled and we could use it, much like DailyKos, MediaMatters, ThinkProgress and others are doing in the U.S. But how do you get the message to those who have tuned out because the marketing from the media is pushing them towards vapid goals? How do you get youth involved when there parents have been sold on the idea of don’t rock the boat or you will lose your lower middle class lifestyle too? How do you spread the message to those who have tuned out because the right wing noise machine is louder and insane? How do you engage those who believe all politician are liars and the daily lies are just proving the point? How do you prove that government and democracy can work, when the people in government are actually working to break it?

      • MichaelWH said:

        “I believe we here in Canada have seen the mess made in the U.S by the “nuts” and how out of control it has spun out. We are hopefully nipping it in the bud here before it gets ugly.”

        I believed this until Harper got a majority.

  194. Robert said:

    Kai, thank you for writing that. I enjoyed it, and hope you’ll enjoy your journey. I’ve been there, although I didn’t have your courage, so I saved a big stack of cash before pulling the plug. If I could disagree with a single point in your thinking, it would be that you’re less likely to find yourself than you are to redefine or recreate yourself. Best of luck!

    • You’re right, I was already here. Thanks for your note.

  195. Something tells me you have zero to worry about finding your next gig. I think many people are aching for your kind of passion for the (well-researched) truth.

    Lesley

  196. J Murphy said:

    What a gift of strength of character! Carry on, and please consider continuing to write, to “report” on what you are discovering and – perhaps more importantly – how many like-minded people there are out there! One does not have to be a dreaded pinko commie to give thought and care for others, to consider balance and equality as vital to civilization. I am so tired of that dualistic mindset. Pray for peace, pray that the leaders of our nation and the world stop driving us all off the collective cliff.

  197. Bruce said:

    well if you wind up in BC come to Salt Spring and we can talk about chucking big careers to live life on your own terms, and how it can work out.

    Bruce
    chefbruce@shaw.ca

  198. Laurens said:

    Extraordinary….. Gutsy and a pleasure to read….. I find myself agreeing with most if not everything you have said about the news and social issues… Travel safely and may good things continue to come to you.

  199. Don scott said:

    Great piece. Says a lot about the state of Canadian media when a 24 year old, in a couple of pages, illustrates how vacuous and meaningless it has become.

    Your experience is not unique, but at least you have had the courage to break from the mould and stop contributing you credibility to something that has little. The same thing is happening in spades in the workplace, especially in places like the public service where spin rules and reality is an inconvenient truth.

    Keep speaking out. Connect with Brigette de Pape. The two of you are an inspiration to us older folks who have witnessed our country’s and society’s drift to mindlessness, where faith trumps science and myths dominate public policy replacing rational decision making.

    Best of luck and communicating.

    Don Scott

    • Hey Don, can you shoot me a direct message on facebook or Twitter?

  200. Dave Moore said:

    Hurrah! I am glad to see that people like you are actually thinking and learning and hungry to be more than you are, or more than the masses say you should be. I turned 50 this year, and I look back and see how much of the minutiae of life forces us to be hamsters on the wheel. So many big dreams and so much potential that I never really tried to harness. Too busy treading water in poor economic times, or focusing on the pragmatic little causes, rather than the truly rewarding things of life. You leave your youth on the way to becoming your own creation – but almost always, we settle for creating an adult version of ourselves from the easy scraps we find before us on the road. Grab you chainsaw my friend and pick a spot to cut your own road. Look inside yourself, look at the people you admire, look at what you feel disdain about, look at what you think you can fix. Then make a plan and strike out on your way!
    When my father died at a relatively young age, it changed me. I decided that “people” must always come before “things” in this life. The only sure “heaven” that we have, is the one that we make on Earth, and regrets are most deeply felt when youth is gone. Cheers! And best of Luck to you!

  201. Jim said:

    Wow this is the nicest article I have read in so long real refreshing and I totally agree on all points you brought up bravo great job. God luck in what you end up doing.

    P.S. Your really inspiring and I hope others follow in making dramatic changes after reading your piece here.

    J.

  202. This prima donna quit as soon as he realized his personal politics and leftist agenda were being rejected by mainstream Canadians.

    This so called “journalist” is rather a left wing ideologue with delusions of being a northern version of Jon Stewart, Keith Olbermann.

    Jeff Vouladakis

    • Is this one of those penny-ante paid astroturfers? The approved talking points are there, but the spelling’s too good for this to be an authentic troll …

      • Funny how he doesn’t actually say anything to rebut the article, isn’t it? Just a poorly written bolus of conservative cliches.

    • Vahan said:

      This is what right wingers seem to love doing to prove a point. Belittle, belittle, belittle. Your Facebook page tells the whole story of who you are and that is what is needed more macho bravado. It appears you like the Smiths, too bad Morrissey isn’t a huge W.Bush fan and who knows what his sexuality is, does that jig with your thoughts of the world, because Michelle Bachman doesn’t think so or her closeted husband. Such contradictions, such self loathing, nice male duck face pictures with the gangsta next to you.

      • Haha what does music or my duckface have to do with calling out a shameless self promoter?

        Yes, the left never belittles those who they disagree with, what a frothing hypocrite.

        BTW Morrissey is a closet nationalist, The world is full of “contradictions” beyond your 2 dimensional understanding.

        • PAM said:

          Are you self promoting yourself?

          I like your word: Hypocrite… Do you have any facts or real proof or are you just fake?

          You are a closet case: just don’t worry man, you can be gay!

          So your three sentences are three dimenttional… (willingfull error).

          At this point my gaol is to make you look bad with less sentences than you.
          Seems easy: you are so Unidimensional…
          Go ahead… make my day!

        • PAM said:

          You are the first post on this board.

          Seems to me, you are part of the first wave of public relation handlers…

          Going back to your first post…
          You seem to be lazy…

          Please take more time to bring us your vision.
          Please show us you are not a spinner.

          I am looking forward to see your next post…

          I am looking forward to your challenge.
          You are either a tourist or a spinner…

          Please enjoy, I want to deal with you.
          We are on equal grounds here.

          So every stupid comment will be met with proper response…

          Going back to your words:
          - Haha what does music or my duckface have to do with calling out a shameless self promoter?
          Care to prove your points with facts, citations, description, anything but you shameless self promotion?

          - Yes, the left never belittles those who they disagree with, what a frothing hypocrite.
          Care to prove?

          - BTW Morrissey is a closet nationalist, The world is full of “contradictions” beyond your 2 dimensional understanding.
          Obviously you know better, please explain.

          So let’s recapitulate:
          Either you are a sheep or a hired gun…
          I would bet for the former…

          Do you sleep well?

    • I think what you’ll find pretty universally among conscientious journalists is not a frustration at not being able to spout what you sneeringly call their “opinions” but of not being able to bring their full *intelligence* to the job, and being asked to spin information in ways that leave things out. Shallow people won’t have any problem doing the job, which is why so many dimbulbs can be found in the punditry. The corporate media is not a courageous institution, but a purely self-interested one, and they do all they can to avoid controversy – except fake controversy, which they like.

      It’s just not a job for someone with any self-respect, frankly.

      • ek said:

        Have you done the job Scott? I love how any difference of opinion on this post is instantly boiled down to conspiracy theory like the comment from Orwell’s Bastard. As a veteran journalist i’ve NEVER been asked to ‘spin’ something a certain way in order to reflect the parent corporation. That is the job of PR reps. Jeff, keep up the posts!

    • PAM said:

      Voulokadis is greek if I am not wrong?
      Hoew is going greek economy?

      Going back to Socrates…
      Are you saying something that is truth (failing here), interesting (failing here), etc (failing again).

      So using Socrates words: “ideals belong in a world only the wise man can understand”…

      So obviously your area not greek…

      So you must be a true Canadian…
      A real hard core Harper’s Canadian.

      God I am enjoying this!
      A la fox!

      • Vahan said:

        I suppose Voulokadis is a Greek surname, and a funny thing my relatives are from Greece too. The country is in the dumpster because no one wants to pay taxes. The economy is under ground, yet they want the government to pay for everything. Two faced. Much like most of the right wing thinkers, we want small government, no intervention, free market. Until the free market crashes, then bail us out, bail us out we are too big to fail. Think about it, we survived this last depression because of government regulations. We have clean water to drink because of interference of government, we have healthier livestock, less recalls of food products (well had) because of regulations, which are being loosened. See the link? We could live happy and safe in the streets because of government, laws are protecting your investments for pensions, which are being whittled away slowly by this government. Hey let us really get rid of government, go wild west and see what happens. This macho, strutting, meat eating way of thinking is back asswards to an enlightened society. That is what progress is. That is why we wear seat belts in cars and helmets on bikes. We have grown as a society and have evolved and rules make us evolve further without worrying that we will die if we eat fresh meats and vegetables. So yeah go around walking like cowboys with your six shooter stances. Don’t you dare ever call the cops when someone robs you, they are part of the government. Yeehaw pardner……

        • PAM said:

          I really love what you wrote.
          I did indeed challenged you but your reply show grast analysis.

          I may not be your friend, but you are mine!

          About six shooter stances, please look at my other posts…

          Sometimes, I do take the easy path.
          But with someone like you replying, I do find a true person.

          You are adding so much information and I do not see the usal stance here.
          I see a balance opinion and a bit of sorrowness about ther path taken.
          I see wisdom and I will give it to you (like if I could).

          To resume: I am impressed and I learned a lot from you!
          Please go one.

          What is the solution for Greece?
          Obviouly not the path the have taken… But still you showed there was things that was worth to preserve….
          Socrates, Plato and Aritotheles are still behind everybody’s mind: but the citizen have gone lazy!
          What is the solution for Greece?

  203. tbedi said:

    More of wise guys says that freedom is glory of life. Some people more important in their life not just from the job, but what they have done for other. Keep spirit and keep smilling…!

  204. Sean said:

    Sir: keep on being awesome. Thanks for the profound read.

  205. My days spent on the road living out of my van and being totally unaware of what tomorrow will bring have been the happiest and most rewarding days of my life. I headed west after graduating from university in environmental science and seeing how ignorant we are of our environmental footprint left a bitter taste in my mouth. Though the living has been tough, I would never go back and change my decision. I still long for the feeling of waking up somewhere new everyday, whether in the van or under the hospitable roof of the amazing people I’ve met along the way. I certainly envy you for what you are about to undergo, so I’m extending that same hospitality that I’ve received to you. If you should you find yourself in Whistler BC, look me up, I’ll certainly have a couch for you to crash on for a bit, some good trails for that bike of yours, and I’m sure some very good conversation. I look forward to it.

  206. Good for you! Things will work out for you, they always do. Funny how I was just writing about this topic today and came across your post. It seems to be arising theme throughout the world lately.

  207. Good for you and thank you for taking what in today’s climate is a very brave stand. Every thoughtful Canadian wishes you luck and knows that with your integrity and intelligence, you will find a way to make a real difference. Follow your heart, it’s a good one!

  208. Hello there,

    While I dont completely agree with you about the conservatives, I do absolutely agree with you about the media and I respect the courage of your convictions. Not to have a lame ‘quoting a movie’ comment, but there is a great moment in the ‘American President’ where Michael J Fox and Michael Douglas are having an argument, and MJF says ‘They (the people) want leadership. They’re so thirsty for it they’ll crawl through the desert toward a mirage, and when they discover there’s no water, they’ll drink the sand. ‘

    The media has been handing us sand for so long, and it is refreshing to see a member of the media call out his industry on it. People no longer think for themselves. They smile and nod over their pizzas at the pap the media dishes out and never go a step further! It is so sad!

    Go forth and bring some water to the people! You have the skills.

  209. Just want to say Bravo to you Kai. Reading your reflections reminded me of an interesting Ted Talk clip I just watched on the generative power of vulnerability. http://www.ted.com/talks/brene_brown_on_vulnerability.html.

    I have not doubt that this act of vulnerability will be generative for you and the world (and as I can see from the response you’ve received, it already has been)…even the periods of depression you might feel as a result of it.

    Watching the above clip on vulnerability and then reading your reflections and some of the ensuing comments on objectivity makes me wonder how we might integrate vulnerability and objectivity in journalism. I don’t think ‘objectivity’ or ‘balanced reporting’ is what we should be striving for. To me a good news story is one that that brings the black, white and grey areas of the issue into conversation with each other and is thought-provoking, ideally inspiring us to engage in dialogue with others. And since there is no such thing as ‘objectivity’, perhaps asking journalists to be a bit transparent about their own feelings about the stories they cover would be a better solution. Otherwise we continue to fool ourselves that what we are reading is objective, and we dehumanize the journalist in the meantime.

  210. Ian said:

    You’ve inspired me. Good luck.

  211. Daniel said:

    As much as I appreciate your decision to quit as well as the onerous publish your reasoning, might I suggest the use f a tl;dr? Interesting as it is, this post is way too long for people on mobile devices.

    • MichaelWH said:

      The irony! It burns!

      One of the major problems with media (of any sort, mainstream or otherwise) is the whole “sound bite” bullshit, and here we have someone positively SCREAMING for a sound bite instead of thoughtful reading.

      I mourn for humanity.

    • PAM said:

      Can I suggest you: if tl;dr… Go away!

      Why do you even post here if you do not want to read?

      The quality of your life is directly proportianal to the details you put into it.

      Are you happy?
      I guess a simple life is the only answer to all your needs…

      Simple is good, why bother?

  212. Kiki Proteau said:

    Kudos for quiting your job! Because we all get to decided what we will tolerate in our lives.

    But please don’t cloak your leaving as a freedom fighter for the journalist. You say your job was good and you got to report on what you wanted to primarily, why not work your voice into your pieces, discusses having pieces that impact the people who feel you are representing.

    On your political opinions, you are a journalist, your research on topics are shameful, saying we didn’t win the UN Defence seat is ignorant… like believing we deserve the Olympics over another country, we were not shoe in, we weren’t even in the playing field. We serve better as the country the world turns to for peace keeping not making defence decisions. Portugal was voted for, and it had been a well know fact that they would be.

    You cal Murdochism the money machine that pushes it’s financial agendas…. really?? Tell me a company, a party or a country that doesn’t push it’s own financial agendas, money makes the world go round, or you’d be working on some land plot trying to grow crops to use for trade.And this climate issue, awareness is key, believing what few say is true, many scientist debunct this theory, many believe it’s a crash grab. Become educated on both sides.

    Please find something inspiring to do because it’s best for you, but referring to yourself as anything as progressive and thrashing voters is IGNORANT. People chose to go to the election polls because they feel heard, this may not reflect the left side currently, having you or calling anyone who disagrees with you sheep is NOT progressive.

    A little lesson for a bunch of you Progression is working with what you have and building on that! Tearing down to start from scratch is well beginning anew!

    And I love all your Jschool commentators, can you name me one of your profs who was a Right wing advocate? Just one, please! Should conservatives refuse to send their kids to Universities because their education isn’t balanced? Some in the world do, and the rest teach!

    • maggie muggins said:

      Hi Kiki,

      I wouldn’t know where to start, with all the issues you put in your reply box. Just re: climate change – from The Guardian, 28 June, 2011:

      “One of the world’s most prominent scientific figures to be sceptical about climate change has admitted to being paid more than $1m in the past decade by major US oil and coal companies.

      Dr Willie Soon, an astrophysicist at the Solar, Stellar and Planetary Sciences Division of the Harvard-Smithsonian Centre for Astrophysics, is known for his view that global warming and the melting of the arctic sea ice is caused by solar variation rather than human-caused CO2 emissions, and that polar bears are not primarily threatened by climate change.

      But according to a Greenpeace US investigation, he has been heavily funded by coal and oil industry interests since 2001, receiving money from ExxonMobil, the American Petroleum Institute and Koch Industries along with Southern, one of the world’s largest coal-burning utility companies. Since 2002, it is alleged, every new grant he has received has been from either oil or coal interests.”

      Dr. Soon, because he publishes in peer-reviewed literature, has a lot of influence. When someone like him is paid by the polluters and non-scientists like you and me don’t know that – that’s hideous! He also lied at a US Senate hearing about who he gets his funding from. So I’d get “educated”, as you say, on more than surface reporting. I think it’s stuff like this that Kai is talking about. How the heck was he supposed to “work his voice”, as you say, into reportage on climate change or any issue, when he knows what the Koch brothers do with their billions? I think you’ve been brainwashed. Sorry, it’s the only explanation. We all have been to some degree, until we dig deeper and wake up.

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jun/28/climate-change-sceptic-willie-soon

      And what’s wrong with growing your own food? And heavens! Sharing or trading some of it with friends, family and neighbors! Chicken Little, the world is ending!

    • PAM said:

      Did you know that in 4 minutes you posted that same post.

      Either you are a narcissist who wants to pass the same message or you are so full of yourself that you need to post it twice so your message is understood.

      Maybe you don’t know enough about computers… It must be that… You clicked twice because you are not aware of what you are doing.

      Did I say; you are narcissist or dum?

      I guess you have to read and understand…
      Can you read?
      Do you understand?

      See my reply on your second post…

      But I may come back because you have great intelligence…
      If I ever get a parrott, I will call him Kiki in souvenir of you…

  213. Kiki Proteau said:

    Kudos for quiting your job! Because we all get to decided what we will tolerate in our lives.

    But please don’t cloak your leaving as a freedom fighter for the journalist. You say your job was good and you got to report on what you wanted to primarily, why not work your voice into your pieces, why not discuss having pieces that impact the people who feel you are representing.

    On your political opinions, you are a journalist, your research on topics are shameful, saying we didn’t win the UN Defence seat is ignorant… like believing we deserve the Olympics over another country, we were not shoe in, we weren’t even in the playing field. We serve better as the country the world turns to for peace keeping not making defence decisions. Portugal was voted for, and it had been a well know fact that they would be.

    You call Murdochism the money machine that pushes it’s financial agendas…. really?? Tell me a company, a party or a country that doesn’t push it’s own financial agendas, money makes the world go round, or you’d be working on some land plot trying to grow crops to use for trade.And this climate issue, awareness is key, believing what few say is true, many scientist debunct this theory, many believe it’s a crash grab. Become educated on both sides.

    Please find something inspiring to do because it’s best for you, but referring to yourself as anything as progressive and thrashing voters is IGNORANT. People chose to go to the election polls because they feel heard, this may not reflect the left side currently, having you calling anyone who disagrees with you sheep is NOT progressive.

    A little lesson for a bunch of you Progression is working with what you have and building on that! Tearing down to start from scratch is well beginning anew!

    And I love all your Jschool commentators, can you name me one of your profs who was a Right wing advocate? Just one, please! Should conservatives refuse to send their kids to Universities because their education isn’t balanced? Some in the world do, and the rest teach!

    • Harry Leslie said:

      Right wingers have to go, one way or another.
      Murdoch. Peladeau, it doesn’t matter, they have to be removed.
      Propaganda kills.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      Name just one, ONE person you have inspired advocating for big money.

      One?

      • Kiki Proteau said:

        that’s a great argument Max! Answer the question with a question it shows a ton of intelect! Lack of conversation is what worries me about this post, it inspires the lack luster of intelligence to chime in with their ability to see what is good for the country but taking a stance on a side of politicis!

        • PAM said:

          Lots of words but no answer.
          He asked you one question…
          Would you care to try for once in your life to answer?

          Seems you are tourist… you have more value: you are a tourist who does spin facts… without presenting them…

        • PAM said:

          I do remember a master politician called PET…
          He was answering a question by a question.

          Are you saying that Trudeau lack intellect?
          So please do show us your wisdom and tell us what is needed for this country.

          Obviously you know better..
          We need your wisdom here…

          Please show us the truth as you seem to own it.

          BTW are you a fan of Harper?
          How about Bush?
          And Nixon?
          And Chretien?

          What are the politicans that represents your values?

          What are your values?

          With your behaviour, I am just waiting that you show us how we should run the world.

          You seem to know better than all of us together.
          You must be the messiah we all have been waiting for.

          Please do commit and show us…

          You have proven us you are great at bashing… Show us more about your true values.

          Shooting down someone is easy. Presenting options for the future is for real people.

          Please do tell us where you want to see us in 2 years, or 5 years from now…
          Show you have enough imagination to see a better future…

          For now, you are talking about the past…

    • PAM said:

      You are such a tourist that it is not even good to reply to you.

      Seems you are worthless to yourself and others.

      Can you try to bring new ideas and new solutions instead of lying and reinventing reality to fit your agenda?

      Do you have anything to bring to the table?

      In my post about GW, I did bring some new perspective that are trully mine.
      Can you bring anything to the table?
      Are you real?
      Do you have a name?
      Do you have any ideas to bring us and bring the debate to the next level?

      Bashers are like tourists to me… They come, the take pictures, say a stupid comment and then run away like cowards…
      Thing is: they are almost wrong all the time…

      Time to show you have something to bring to the table…

  214. Mozes said:

    I want to grow up one day and write the way you do. This is so compelling it makes me want to cry; I love it.

    • PAM said:

      This actually means that you have everything in you to do it…
      If something can touch you… You can do it also!

  215. Theresa said:

    As a Canadian and Quebecoise living abroad, I share some of your concerns about the political direction that Canada is taking. I think it’s admirable that you are standing behind your beliefs and looking for another way to use your talents. I’m sure you will find it and will be all the more fulfilled.

  216. Kai: I grew up in the media and have been witnessing, sadly, exactly what you’re talking about for several years since the ‘group buy-outs’ of media-chains buy comglomerate media firms.

    We are working on a series of stories about the challenges faced by Medical Cannabis patients and the Harper-driven *need* to eliminate the system almost completely – leaving thousands (perhaps 10s of 1,000s) of patients ‘dry’ and for most unable to afford their Legal medicine from Cannabis Club (also not legal and facing elimination).

    Would you be interested in hosting and telling our story?

    Todd

  217. Kai, Fantastic piece of writing. One of the best by any journalist in a very long time. Sums up many issues with the media that are on the surface – and suspected from a viewer’s perspective, but not outlined by industry insiders too often. A bold step and a right one to take.

    All the best.

  218. Vincent Bouré said:

    Nice write-up. It resonated strongly with me. If you replace ‘journalism’ with ‘renewable energy engineering’ and ‘please the greater number with easily digested stories’ with ‘sell as many turbines/dams as possible, no matter the local conditions’ it’s pretty much what I went through last year.

    I quit my job the day I turned 25 and left Montréal for Sweden to study sustainable development and figure out my next move. I’m still in the dark as to what to do now, but I never regretted getting out of the ‘system’.

    Hope you figure out how to best use those skills of yours! And please keep us updated on your train of thoughts!

  219. Congratulations on this new direction in your life, and also on this excellent piece of writing. I enjoyed reading it and will share it widely. Cheers.

  220. Wendy said:

    These ideals are truly something to aspire to. As a student in the field of broadcasting, I certainly believe this manifesto has given me some direction. Thank you for writing this!

  221. Frank said:

    Not a single one of these 300 comments matter. You’re listening to your inner voice and that can’t be debated.

    This is truly inspiring and I wish you the best of luck.

  222. Lesley said:

    This was an amazing and really inspiring read. As someone who often hands out less-than-satisfactory responses on behalf of our government, I would love it if more journalists were asking the hard questions and being heard.

    • Do you care to send me a direct message on facebook or Twitter?

  223. Canadian Pianist said:

    THANK YOU. May you find your true calling.

  224. Pamela said:

    hats off to you! I graduated from the Ryerson Radio and TV program many years back. There was for me always a big disconnect between what i and my classmates were learning and acknowledgement of the incredible potential and impact of the medium we were learning to model and craft. I had trouble suppressing my opinions even then which did not bode well for a fine future in Canadian broadcasting…successive dumbing down combined with the sheer overwhelming volume of eye candy slot filling has transformed (not for the better) what I once believed to be the most powerful mediium of television. Happily radio is not yet entirely dead, though hurting. The web has finally become what I hoped television might…a venue for wide, varied and sometimes very small important voices. This may not last long in the current reining ideological climate but we can work to keep it open and accessible. I have turned to much more direct and dare I say it spiritual and heart based work in very recent years that makes me feel much more aligned heart, head and hands. I still get a nostalgic wince every now and again when I see or read a powerful piece of reporting but know that I have made the right decision. To thine own self be true. Here’s to your journey of discovery. Kudos!

  225. Castorius Cornéliadis said:

    Hi Kai,
    You just wrote a “page-turner” (!!!). I guess you now know why the “alternate medias” are hugely popular…

    • MichaelWH said:

      Alternate media, tragically, is just as prone to spin, ideology and groupthink as is mainstream media.

    • PAM said:

      You are the one.
      He will never do this!
      A corrupted place like parliement is not a place for mister Nagata.

      Obviouly, Governments have given up.

      See “the power of nightmares”…it shows Bush and Quted reality…

  226. The issue of giving the public what they want vs. what they need to know has been with the media for decades. One thing I’ve learned (in my decades) is that the pendulum swings…this way and then back. And no, you can’t effect change by yourself in massive ways. However, you CAN try to hold back the tide and stand for your own principles and those you feel serve your community. In the end this too fails. Trying to channel what is right as part of a small ethical minority is overwhelming…the surge of ignorance and mob behavior cannot be overcome by a small dedicated group (my humble opinion only). The masses want what they want and only at the last minute when it is too late will they realize what they have missed.

    I wish you well in your journey.

  227. It’s rare we come across someone such as yourself who finds they can’t sacrifice personal integrity for the big paycheque and perks. You should be proud of yourself.

    A great article and I hope that many will learn from your experience.

    All the best on your journey back home, as well as your journey toward the next phase of your life. I’m confident that whatever your next career might be, it will work out great for you.

  228. D Smith said:

    Well done. Beautiful decision, and eloquent statement. We should all try to find the courage to break free of this prison we’re constructing for ourselves. Thank you.

  229. Gloria Varley said:

    You are exactly the kind of person Canada needs to speak out about the wash of distraction which too often masquerades as news. All good luck in your future endeavors!

  230. Kenneth Ross Gillis said:

    Humanity Lives!

  231. Garry Boychuk said:

    Bravo! A brave and bold step. I have mixed feeling of hope and cynicism. Hope for you and your like minded generation, cynicism for the establishment. Take heart, there will be change, if for no other reason than you will outlive the b@stards.

  232. MsSara said:

    It’s nice that you have opinions and good for you for caring about the world you live in. But being voluntarily unemployed in a market scarcely if at all out of the worst economic conditions in 60 years, to make an idealist point? Last figure I heard was still 14 million unemployed Americans. To say nothing of the youth employment crisis here. Believe me, there are a lot of intelligent ppl who are not making a living by other ppl listening to their thoughts on life and society. Especially if you are only 24 – I am only 32 and I wouldn’t give you the credibility you expect as some kind of right. It seems pretty clear you’ve never had to work for rent money, and you are about to learn some things the hard way, probably while serving food or sweating outdoors. Good luck and all, but don’t be encouraging others to take unrealistic and unnecessary chances. Follow your dreams and your conscience, by all means, but we must make some concessions to social reality.

    • prin said:

      The take away message from this comment:
      Don’t be a dreamer and definitely don’t encourage others to dream because the world is a cynical place.

    • Short summary: be afraid, and don’t ever rock the boat.

    • Jan said:

      nicely said,Terry.

      On second thought, stay in your job because of the “youth unemployment crisis”, Kai. That’ll make all the difference.

      insert ‘eye roll’ emoticon here.

    • MichaelWH said:

      MsSara: It is precisely in times of turmoil and uncertainty that the young SHOULD be looking toward their ideals and toward the leading voices of their generation to undo the damage we old farts have done to the world.

      It is the coward who says “yes, this is unjust, but at least I get paid”.

      • George Tsikouras said:

        I agree with MsSara, the world isn’t perfect and is rarely going to perfectly reflect your ideals. Taking a stand against it is admirable in a way, but also foolhardy and unlikely to effect any real change. By contrast, perhaps by staying in the field, the author might have been able to eventually steer news coverage toward the issues he felt were most important.

        • Chris said:

          Change more often occurs from the bottom up/ outside than top down/within. If the public start demonstrating a belief in values that differ from those in the media or political parties, you can be sure that the media and political parties will adapt to reach out for their purchase/vote. All major change in the last century began with grass roots movements (civil rights, suffragettes, gay rights, etc.) and the debate they influenced. I feel Kai has inspired more debate and opportunity for change with this blog, than he ever could from continuing within the field.

    • ek said:

      Best post yet.

  233. Great post! As a regular news junkie I don’t often think about the pressures faced by journalists in Canada. I’m sure we’ll hear more from you soon!

  234. Michael Nesbitt said:

    The internet has space for those who want to approach the NEWS from a different angle. Use it.
    As for your future, you should maybe have pared down to what you could carry on a bicycle and trailer. Believe me, THAT’s a change.
    Best wishes.

  235. HSB said:

    Congratulations on taking your values back, it takes only a second to stand up for your believes. Action that is mindful and respects all life is a honor to the sacredness of life itself.
    It is the people of today that will change the world of tomorrow.
    Here is to you. ‘…to the best life you feel is right for you, stay true to your heart and always keep your mind free.’ As my father once said. “Never let anyone take your mind.”

    HSB.

  236. What have we become when we have to apologize for thinking? What have we become when our society defends exploitation and complicity?
    Moral hazards and conflicts of interest have come to spawn public policy, rather than being outlawed by it.

    Welcome to the origins of Generation whY.

    May our youth inherit the earth before there is nothing left to inherit.

    May they learn from our mistakes, and may we commit to teaching them all what little we know, at least about what should not be, for they are we and we are they.

  237. douglas williams said:

    Contact Amy Goodman at Democracy Now and offer to become the Canadian voice. The absence of serious opposition here is the situation’s most appalling aspect. Canadians are pathetic. Great article.

    • maggie muggins said:
  238. Chris said:

    Tip of the iceberg.

  239. Intelligent, heart-felt, and sadly very accurate. I applaud your decision and wish you the best. I hope we see you out there continuing to report on the truth though. It seems that’s one thing you’re strongly committed to, and people like you are few these days.

  240. Thinking about quitting my job, I can only admire this !! Kudos !! And best of luck :-)

  241. Dan Ripley said:

    Thanks and congratulations. You have a very interesting life ahead. Let us hear about it.

  242. My suggestion is that you develop a webcast. I think TV is so 1950′s. ;)

    You wrote >The idea has taken root that if the people reporting the news look like your family and neighbours, instead of Barbie and Ken, the station will lose viewers.>

    Thank you for mentioning that. I find myself repelled by all the plastic, bleached blonde Barbie bimbos and Kens who read the news on the tube now.

  243. Hey Kai,
    I know nothing about Canada but I can relate to your struggles with TV news. I’m a journalist myself (print, thank God), have always been passionate about journalism and lost a lot of my illusions in the working world. I’ve been struggling lately to recapture the passion of my J-school years (only 3 years ago…).
    Good luck in your search. You sound like an intelligent, articulate young man. Whatever you do, I’m sure you’ll make this world a slightly better place.

  244. Kai, you have given us much to think about in such a short time; that in itself is an accomplishment and a testament to your ability to communicate what is important.

    I appreciate your metaphors associated with water, the river, the well – indeed, it seems you have tapped into a stream which both resonates with what you have to say, and which will carry you forward. Though the river cannot be pushed, one can flow with it in marvelous ways. For those who are mindful Budo and the Zen teachings are a boon on the way.

    We so need a national discussion which is values-based (integrity, compassion, human needs, child honouring), and focuses on public life and policy, and the role of journalism in an increasingly technologically centric society where economic and market imperatives seem to have become determining criteria, the benchmarks if you will, for all else. That this state of being is ultimately alienating, divisive, and unable to cope with the relational needs we have to live in thriving communities where we are valued for who we are, seems to me to go without saying. Except, it needs to be said.

    I won’t presume to suggest where you should go with this amazing journey you’ve begun, other than to say what you already know – and that is to be faithful to the process. Many people, myself included, will follow your writings – and whatever they may lead to – with interest and appreciation. Your words reflect integrity and wisdom – thank you indeed.

    Daly

  245. Hi Kai,

    I think much of what you outline here is why I’ve switched so much of my own media consumption from mainstream media to alternative media. I think what people like Paul Jay is doing at The Real News (http://therealnews.com) and what Amy Goodman is doing at Democracy Now! (http://www.democracynow.org/) is far more interesting and far more relevant to my own life than absorbing content from the CBC, CTV, the Globe and Mail, the New York Times and the like.

    I did want to quibble a bit with one thing you wrote. You mentioned, “People like low-nutrition TV, too. And that shapes the internal, self-regulated editorial culture of news.” You may be right on this, but I suspect that the lack of real alternatives (or rather the perceived lack) is more to blame than anything else. In my own case, I had to really reject the status quo of mainstream media and seek out alternatives. And I couldn’t find them by simply switching the channel. At least not here in Ottawa.

    Best of luck to you going forward, too.

  246. A great and courageous decision. I applaud your move and wish you luck in the future. Your clearly a smart and talented guy. The only question is going to be where you will put your skills. I hope to see the positive impact from that in the future. Hell, I’d put you in charge of the CBC yesterday.

  247. Kai, thank you so much for your post. I have been working as a freelance journalist for the last year and a half or so. This post sums up almost exactly why I decided I wanted to become a journo. Since undertaking the profession, I have mostly gotten work in what would be described as “fluff,” arts, entertainment, etc. While I have enjoyed the work, it has always been somewhat bothersome to me that I haven’t had much success in straight, hard-hitting reporting. But what has occurred to me, and your manifesto helped put into perspective, is that journalism in it’s current state lacks the ability to impact meaningful change.

    I wish you nothing but the best in your travels and hope that whatever you find yourself doing next fills you with happiness.

    -Nick Manes

  248. Ryan said:

    you should start a version of democracynow.org here in canada. With your experience, we could have a truly independent media voice.

    There are many people, many journalists who feel the same way you do. Your passion is obviously journalism, you just want it to be real journalism.

    like they say, if you want something done right, you have to do it yourself!! You’d have plenty of support along the way!!

  249. John said:

    I got about 20% through your whiny little blubberfest then I realized I didn’t give a shit WHY you quit and stopped reading.

    I was simply glad there was 1 less loud mouth, holier-than-thou, self appointed know-it-all, elitist “news” person in the industry.

    Please let the door hit you in your pampered fat ass on the way out & don’t come back.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      20%? So you don’t have a CLUE of what you’re talking about.

      If you don’t give a shit, why post a reply? You mean you don’t give a ”what you’re full of”?

      Anyways, you can collect your paycheck from the conservatives, now. You’ve done your dirty deed alright.

    • MichaelWH said:

      You don’t give a shit and you don’t give a shit so much you took the time out to tell us all how little of a shit you give.

      Tell me, John, is irony, to you, just like goldy and bronzy only made of iron?

  250. Kai Nagata is one of the more trite writers I have encountered in a long while. While I appreciate the sentiment, I would like him to find himself along with the proper use of a semicolon.
    I feel that a lot was negated when he broached the CBC and their lack of public funding. I don’t know what you plan to find when you get over the rainbow, but I think you will find it very disappointing. Many of us call this “reality”, pretty boy.

    • “along with the proper use of a semicolon”

      That is a popular joke in writers’ groups.

    • Jan said:

      Sarcasm = lowest form of wit

      Punctuation Police and the use of the pubescent term “pretty boy”= lowest form of discussion

      • Kai Nagata is someone I have known for many years and I am not shying from personal bias.
        I am a writer based in Montreal and find his discourse on this subject an outrage as a member of the community.

        A “manifesto” should create hope for alternatives . As well as give credit where credit is due. Making a comment in anger is not to my credit. However, this piece is the rantings of a narcissist, and yes, a “pretty boy”.

      • Jan said:

        Rachael, I quite frankly don’t care if you’re the recent recipient of the Nobel Prize in Journalism, nor do most people, aside from your proud parents.

        And, no worries re: taking things to the personal level – the individual below who just called Kai a “candy-ass fag” makes your comment look near-brilliant.

        • H said:

          Jan & Kai are probably the same person. “Pretty Boy” wants to hide behind a sock puppet when defending himself because he can’t handle the critics directly.

          • Jan said:

            Dear Consonant,

            I have never met, known or heard of Kai until two days ago when I happened upon this link at MeFi.

            Rachael’s comment is now verging on ‘Edward R. Murrow’ status after your ‘sock puppet’ post. Thanks for the laugh. Made my day!

            • H said:

              Sure, uh huh, you bet, you go to a great deal of effort to defend someone you’ve never heard of until just now.
              Of course you’re not Kai. Ssssuuuuuurrre you’re not. Have a nice day Kai (oops I mean “Jan” – ;)

            • Jan said:

              H,

              Rachael at least seems to be an intelligent woman who defends her point of view with some type of reasoning and background. I hardly think she needs some teen-aged board troll like yourself, running to her defense.

              Do us all a favour. Scurry on back to the World of Minecraft Forum. They miss you terribly.

  251. Laurie said:

    I have read the full text, but not all of the comments. I am unfamiliar with any of your work, which I will now change, and I do disagree with some of your statements, but I respect anyone who is willing to state what they believe, if they know WHY they believe it. You seem to be one of those, I look forward to reading more of your posts.

  252. CTVer at large said:

    I’ve worked with Kai for the past year at CTV Montreal, formerly known as CFCF pulse news ( while he was still living in Vancouver natch).

    I have mixed feelings reading this.

    In some ways this is greatly idealistic, in others incredibly naive, and as a journalist let’s face it, you’ve crapped on the boss’s desk.

    Kai is a great reporter who was able to offer a lot of great analysis and let’s face it: analysis IS editorial judgement. So the idea that you were in some way limited in what you could say, unless Barry Wilson or Jed Kahane told you directly ‘don’t go there’ is a little odd to be honest. I know Jed– the VP news– has sent him messages saying journalists need to provide context for political stories.

    As for the bit about ‘intellectual property’ that was very naive. That’s been a clause for every employee at every company for the past 200 years. Haven’t you ever heard of steve jobs and woz? They had to bring the first Mac computer to their bosses even though they built it at home. Maybe companies shouldn’t be demanding that but the alternative is not to work.
    Regardless that clause has not stopped countless Canadian journalists from writing books.

    On the whole I think management failed you Kai.
    You did a great job over the past year, but you were isolated in Quebec city, away from your west coast family and all your friends in Montreal ( including your girlfriend). You were missing your support group and it’s obvious you needed it.
    When you talked to Jed and Barry did they offer you a leave of absence? Counselling? Did they try to figure out where you were coming from? I’m certain the answer is ‘no’ and that’s a shame.
    This post should be a missive to management about the problems EVERY young worker can face, and the possibility of burnout.
    You had a great career Kai, and I know you will continue to do well in the future. I am sorry we won’t be able to watch it though.
    Good luck and god bless.

    • maggie muggins said:

      Counseling? For goodness sake, even BBC World News had less percentile coverage of Will & Kate in Canada than CTV or CBC.

      • CTVer at large said:

        Yes counselling.
        He is saying right now on CBC daybreak that he only thought about quitting a week ago, and that his only thought was to go home to BC.

        he also just said that he was forced to include viewpoints in his reports for the sake of ‘balance’ even if they weren’t true. Sounds to me like a generic argument without much truth to it.
        Either that or Kai doesn’t know how to say ‘some people disagree, but they don’t have facts to support their claims ‘

        .

        • Skookum1 said:

          It’s stock-in-trade of a propagandist to denounce someone speaking the truth, and/or acting upon their own truths, as having mental problems……in other words, that they are defective and need medication/treatment.

          Instead of answering to his points you seek to denigrate and patronize him. Go f**k yourself, and no doubt your own medicine cabinet is stocked with xanax, zyban or paxil, valium etc, whatever it takes for you to shut down your own mind and be a willing mouthpiece for those you have decided to serve…….as with other defenders of The System who have posted nasty, patronizing stuff against Kai, I feel more contempt than you than sorry for you. It’s you who have willingly stayed in the bed of thorns you are seeking to promote as legitimate, and ignore the wishes of the general readership (whose voices, en masse, outnumber yours here in great number).

          • CTVer at Large said:

            Oh quit looking for vitriol and get real. I’m talking about a friend and co-worker whom I respect.

            I’m saying that a person who has been cut off from friends and family for a year, who has had a sudden change of heart about his career, should be given the time and space to privately make a decision without prejudice. That’s why I asked if he had been offered a LEAVE OF ABSENCE which you would see if you knew had to read without a filter.

            I’m not saying he’s a mental defective for g-d’s sake, I’m saying that breaking up with your girlfriend, quitting your job without notice, and running back home to Ma and Pa may not be the best long-term career move.

            • Teezer said:

              CTVer at Large, we let Pulse news into our living room for, well since as long as I have been alive.(ie my father before me). We did accept kai into our living room and gave him a chance even with his kooky hairdo at first. He grew on us, giving a good overview of the even kookier politics of quebec. Clearly you are correct that Quebec is a long way from BC. I think that Pulse did the best it could given the market, and Kai just felt he could not fit in, but we accepted him as he was. Perhaps he should go work for Al Jazeera, they seem to be able to say whatever they want, or BSKYB and steal whatever they want, AND get away with it. Good Luck Kai, Pulse will live on, we need it in Montreal.

      • PAM said:

        Please elaborate
        There is much details needed here!

    • Not the first Mac, the Apple I. Woz’s employer Hewlett-Packard wasn’t interested.

        • CTVer at Large said:

          I’m so glad you completely did not understand what I was writing.

          • PAM said:

            Just barge in if you please:
            Are you talking to the conscious or the subconscious?
            (remove the not!)
            This is just a funny comment!

            So Kai is idealist.
            I prefer idealist and naive as far as I am concenrned.
            IF being realist means giving up…

            If I am reading properly mister Nagata text, he is just saying what he thinks, plain and simply telling the truth as he perceives it.
            I do not feel he is crapping on his boss desk. I would pretend that he does not blame his boss for this.
            Seems the blame goes more to the cover your ass and make money at all cost (human cost).

            I would think, for one, that mister Nagata would blossom in a place where real journalist in it’s purest form is done: no hold bared!
            Further to his text, we must ask the real question…
            Is he representing the truth?

            The text raises many concerns and I for one share them.
            We can always the McLuhan excuse: the medium is the message.
            But if the medium is misrepresenting the truth, then they should focus on their strength and give up information.

            I for one believe that PBS is having much more balance information and that CBC has lost his nature.
            Question is: are we OK with that?

            And if we are and there is a need (at leasy for me) then another news channel should be built.
            When you feel that Al-Jazira is more balanced than CBC, you really start to have a problem.

            At this point, I see:
            PBS, BBC and Al-Jazira, TV5 as good sources of information.
            Then there is the rest!
            CBC is in a lower category.

            Finally, channels that misrepresent information a la Fox.

            I do not think that GHG emissions will be a problem because there is another factor to consider: Peak oil.
            As the gap between declining offer of oil and increasing demand of energy will widden, the replacement solutions will become more cost effective.
            Gas is going to peak even faster (a few years later).
            The time for taking the decision was Kyoto. We missed that boat so we will have to live with the consequence.

            At this point, GW already built in the system should provoque an increase of methane (pergelisol and oceans).
            As the temperature is slighty increasing in oceans, we should expect the increase of methane to be the canary in the mine shaft…
            http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2008/methane-tt1029.html

            Kai’s text raise very important questions and not answering them would be plain stupid.

            It is like saying half of the town is in fire and you say… I am in the other half!

            At this point we don’t need fire, we need water.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      You can’t please everyone and your father, unless you shut up and say nothing.

      Glorifying submission of one’s intellect to corporate interests isn’t really honorable.

      Good luck trying to be someone in the world saying nothing, under an anonymous nickname.

      • CTVer at Large said:

        I’m being anonymous because I’m criticizing my boss for letting this guy go. No other reason.

      • PAM said:

        The more people talk about it, the more it evolves…
        So limitng discussions means we are not ready to face challenge.

        I am reay: are you?

    • MichaelWH said:

      “As for the bit about ‘intellectual property’ that was very naive. That’s been a clause for every employee at every company for the past 200 years.”

      It’s never been a clause in any contract I’ve signed, and I’ve worked in the same industry as Unka Steve and Woz. Here’s the trick: when the contract offered contains that clause you negotiate it down to “related technologies” or you walk away from it into a job offered by non-dunderheads.

      Of course you’ve got to have a spine to do that, something most people lack.

    • Skookum1 said:

      “In some ways this is greatly idealistic, in others incredibly naive, and as a journalist let’s face it, you’ve crapped on the boss’s desk.”

      Clearly the boss’ desk needed crapping on – as any intelligent person knows who watches CTV newscasts (or CTV or CanWest-whatever-it’s-called-now), or reads the counterfactual, counterlogical “analyses” in the associated print media. Have a look at the bulk of these responses here, oh former-co-worker….doesn’t it seem to you that it’s you telling people how to think who don’t want you to do that, and are upset that types like you rationalize away “editorial control” as some kind of great boon to mankind, when all too often (=nearly always) it’s used to steal, lie, cheat, and defame?

      Again, take a look at the bulk of the responses here in support of Kai, and inspired by him….that’s more than I can say for you…..

      You’re just a mouthpiece not for a free press, but for a blatantly bought-and-paid-for press. Paid liars and deceivers who have sold their own consciences for an overpriced house and social status as supposedly more-in-the-know than the rest of us. What I see in your post is a reaction to the threat Kai’s principles pose to your own long-shelved ones.

      As for taking a bite out of a novel he might write etc, that’s shameful, and has been for 150 years etc……just because something is entrenched, long-standing, institutionalized – like our corrupt parliamentary system, doesn’t mean it’s right.

      But then that’s me thinking for myself, instead of having you tell me how to think, huh?

      • CTVer at Large said:

        Did you bother reading my entire post or did you just look for the parts you disagreed with?

        Guys who say “&^%G you all” and quit are always cheered on by ‘the public’ — look at that flight attendant who grabbed a six pack of beer, pulled the emergency door and jumped off a plane on the runway.

        His name’s Steven Slater. He later apologized at the Rally to restore Sanity and or fear. Because he recognized that he was kind of a dick, but also because he wants to avoid jail time <— see, analysis and context.

        So of course Kai's going to get lots of anonymous internet support for this post. We're all sitting here going "yeah! sitck it the man! "

        Except I work with Kai, I know what he did, and I know that HE had control over his reports. No grand poohbah pronounced from on high "YOU MAY NOT REPORT ON THIS ISSUE" or said "GIVE US THIS SLANT." Not even nudges and winks. the real world of journalism just does not work that way anywhere except in the mind of a conspiracy theorist who is convinced that I'm "just a mouthpiece not for a free press, but for a blatantly bought-and-paid-for press. Paid liars and deceivers who have sold their own consciences"

        Your statement — which you would know if you ever met me or Kai or any of the people I work with — is the biggest, steamingest heap of BS ever concocted. About as big as Harper and Charest's lies that asbestos is safe, the tar sands don't pollute, and global warming isn't caused by humans.

        You can think whatever you want to think, but if you're going to think, you should damn well come up with some facts to base it on first, instead of going in with eyes wide shut.

        You don't like that the company wants a cut of your intellectual property? That's cool — I don't like it either, becuase it's a stinky, rotten clause and as I said initiually, companies should not be asking for that.
        But it's not a reason to quit your job and run away. It's a reason to negotiate, like @MichaelWH points out.

        • Kenneth Ross Gillis said:

          Hey CTVer at Large,
          You do sound sincere in your concern for Kai, I think that comes across in your words. On a seperate issue, are you saying the media is not a mouth piece for elites? There’s a 9 minute clip from Mel Hurtig’s “The Truth About Canada” on youtube where Hurtig talks about the concentration of Canadian media–it is a very real problem (invest the 9 minutes, his words are troubling and his arguement is meaningful). It’s undeniable that those with serious money slant the conversation… (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d8D67YiLcOM) … Hurtig does give facts for this assertion. This isn’t the stuff of conspiracy theories. Further, just as a novel may say more about the human condition then the author intended, Kai’s piece touched a nerve, exposing yet again issues sensitive and uncomfortable to those that live within a certain storyline, and giving hope to those that secretely know that our media is a con and a lie on a certain level. If principle isn’t a good reason to quit a job, what is? He’s 24 years old. That may not be an option for others entrentched in our current concensus reality (folks with morgages, wife, kids, decades invested in their status, etc.) but it sounds like he can do it. You want to take something down? Withdraw your participation as much as you can. One last point, it sounds like you’re suggesting if Kai wasn’t isolated, he wouldn’t have had time to step out of his situation and would not have made the decision he did. I agree with you. But by unplugging from the pack he may have found his own voice.

    • Ken said:

      CTVer. You seem like a drone. Do something crazy in your life instead of thinking about finances all of the time. I have a freind that recently did the EXACT SAME THING. Live a little and dont worry about Kai……and stop belittling him and being so condescending. At least he will have an interesting life and he is NOT afraid of change. The is a shift happening and people are tired of big corporations (with old crusty men running them) controlling the outcome of SO MANY PEOPLES futures. It doesn’t matter if it has been happening for 200 years……its NEVER too late to question it and STOP it! We are human, not robots greasing a machine.

      • ek said:

        I really hate it when people get on the “I hate big faceless corporations” band wagon. They started once as little corporations. Don’t hate success.

  253. Much of what you say here is true Kai, but I think you assign too much blame to viewers for the sad state of TV news. After all, as I point out in my own commentary on your piece, Canadian viewers have few, if any, alternatives if they want quality coverage. See: http://mediaspin.ca/

  254. The word pietistic comes to mind…as the vomit wells up in my throat. Oh the world-weary wisdom of 24 year-olds!

    • Harry Leslie said:

      Chris is full of piety. Kai isn’t.
      May vomit in throat remain there.

  255. I read it. You’re just a standard leftist – and a whiny one at that – who denies you’re left biased and thinks your audience is stupid. Which makes you a dime a dozen in the news business. It’s tiresome. Good that you quit.

    • Harry Leslie said:

      Randy Maters is incapable of defending himself from propaganda. Good thing he’s unemployable.

    • Warren Z said:

      C’mon Randy, lighten up! Your side just won the election for chrissakes!

      Gloat, enjoy it a little, you have four years ,man. Leave the permanently persecuted syndrome until closer to the next election.

  256. amk said:

    You’re hopes for your future are clearly embodied and attained by this brilliant courageous article. You stand tall while others clamor to climb. As a man seemingly without you have gained more by letting go than most will ever know is possible. The innocence in your energy and purity of your words will draw all to your value. Success and glory whether desired or not, are already yours. I salute and commend you and hope others will learn your style. It will save the world.

  257. Julie said:

    ” I thought if I paid my dues and worked my way up through the ranks, I could maybe reach a position of enough influence and credibility that I could say what I truly feel. I’ve realized there’s no time to wait.”

    Here here. The biggest crock of shit our culture sells us is that if we just get on the inside, then we can make change. In almost no case is this true.

    Best wishes for you, wherever your path leads.

    • Ken said:

      Thanks Julie! So true. My opinion is that the “old grey hairs” (executives) dont budge on anything these days. They are all obsessed with their retirements and they basically have sold their souls to climate change. I believe there is a strong shift coming for humanity very soon amidst the chaos and greed.

  258. Tom Franklin said:

    We have a name for Magid at my station, the Maggots.

  259. Thought Jon Stewart might like to read about someone like Kai and have posted on the show’s forum. Could get interesting…

  260. John said:

    Some posters here have been disparaging “big media.” But look at what’s going down in the UK: thanks to the ongoing investigative journalism of The Guardian, the crimes of the Murdoch media empire are finally being exposed. The police, the politicians, and the Murdoch-owned newspapers all dismissed The Guardian’s stories, month after month, year after year, until the weight of the truth finally broke open the dam of lies. Now the slimy editor of The News of the World has been arrested, more arrests are expected, and Murdoch’s empire is crushaking. All thanks to an established newspaper. There is, and must be, a place for papers like The Guardian, and the journalists who work on them. Journalists with integrity like Kai have a place in this world, but Canadians need to wake up to the value of a vigorous, independent free press. Canada needs you, Kai. Good luck in your journey.

  261. John said:

    Some posters here have been disparaging “big media.” But look at what’s going down in the UK: thanks to the ongoing investigative journalism of The Guardian, the crimes of the Murdoch media empire are finally being exposed. The police, the politicians, and the Murdoch-owned newspapers all dismissed The Guardian’s stories, month after month, year after year, until the weight of the truth finally broke open the dam of lies. Now the slimy editor of The News of the World has been arrested, more arrests are expected, and Murdoch’s empire is shaking. All thanks to an established newspaper. There is, and must be, a place for papers like The Guardian, and the journalists who work on them. Journalists with integrity like Kai have a place in this world, but Canadians need to wake up to the value of a vigorous, independent free press. Canada needs you, Kai. Good luck in your journey.

    • John said:

      Yes, good luck in your Jourrrrrnnnneyyyy and your quest of self discovery, enlightenment and empowerment. I desperately hope you get in touch with your inner child and your past life as a shaman in Atlantis. May Gaia grace your inner soul.

      Holy FUCK! Try lowering your estrgen level you candy assed, whining little fag! Journalists are biased loser jerk offs as it is. This blubbering mess simply proves it.

      • xorbtiman said:

        John….where do I begin? You’re an uneducated moron with such low selt esteem that you need to bring down others in order to elevate yourself. Your command of the English language is surpassed only by your depraved lack of judgement and understanding of the world around you and how it works. I suggest that you move to hill billy country and stay there. You could use a little estrogen yourself! In one simple paragraph you managed to insult millions of people: gay and women! You are a mindless cretin with subhuman intelligence! Now go crawl back to that dark space between your ears.

  262. You are a brilliant young man, who will do well no matter what you chose to do because you possess honour an integrity. Bravo to you!

  263. Jennifer said:

    Canadian journalism isn’t left wing enough for you? Really?

    Anyway, I wonder what you were expecting when you decided to go to J-school. Did you think you’d be Woodward and/or Bernstein? The field is packed. You were very lucky to have the job you did, and for your sake I hope you’re well-connected and don’t wind up flipping burgers for the rest of your life.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      Let me guess…….hmmm….SunMedia, or Journal de Montréal? :-)

      Spin doctor for sure…;-)

      • Jennifer said:

        Oh, right, I’m employed by some machiavellian right wing news organization to leave mildly hostile comments on blogs for no conceivable reason.

        Lay off the pot, dood, it causes paranoia.

        • Max LeBlanc said:

          I guess I did hit close to home…..while you are way out in left field.

          The difference between us, is that I assume my opinions…signing my name.

          Don’t assume, verify, lazy lady….

          I know you right wing types are more the type to regurgitate populist opinions that you were too lazy and/or stupid to research yourselves, but come on…….

          See? I can spew stereotypes too….

          • Jennifer said:

            “I guess I did hit close to home”

            How so? And I don’t know anything about you beyond the fact that you have a similar name to the actor from Friends, and you’re kind of a lefty, and you don’t seem to punctuate well or know what words mean; so I don’t really have anything much to base a “stereotype” on, do I? But your thing about me being a “spin doctor” (you don’t mean “spin doctor” BTW) is pretty paranoid and it doesn’t really make a lot of sense. Hence my leedle joke about laying off the mj.

            • Max LeBlanc said:

              You are still belittling an idea that is inspirational to a lot of people, and you are still doing so anonymously.

              If the idea is so ridiculous, why would you even care?

              You find trolling fun?

              My English ponctuation needs work; that much I’ll acknowledge, though.

              If you are not paid to rant against left-wing ideas, then you have way too much time on your hands.

            • Jennifer said:

              I don’t know what idea you think I’m “belittling”, unless it’s the nobility of journalism itself, in which case, well, a) I’m not the one who quit my journalism job and wrote a big thingy about it and b) Grow up. Something isn’t true just because it inspires people.

              I’m going to go bang my head against a brick wall now Max. It’s been real.

            • Skookum1 said:

              “the nobility of journalism”?? A profession that has been readiliy compared, even by its most eloquent and ardent theorists, as something very similar to prostitution? Nobility? Since when is lying for a paycheque “nobility”??

              Keep on banging your head against the wall, you may find enlightenment at the door, and learn to shed your pretensions.

    • Ken Burch said:

      Is there any good reason to do NON-Woodward and Bernstein-type journalism?

      Is simply running actualities of what the leaders say publicly of any value at all?

      And isn’t it time to admit that it’s pointless to expect journalism to be “objective” or neutral given that reality itself is never objective or neutral?

    • Ken said:

      Jennifer seems obsesses with money and “connections”. True conservative right wing idiot that spews angry bs all day. Jennifer, dont be jealous of Kai. Lay off the pot??? really? reallllllly? I hate people like you. Why not just add “go get a job” to your sentence and be done with it. Who teaches people this shit???? Do you question ANYTHING?? Kai is the new normal. Wake up. Have fun in your giant SUV and 3 car garage home. Moron.

  264. Marc Duguay said:

    Your thoughts are concise and your command of the english language is refreshing. You represent the kind of Canada I want to be part of. I want more people with your skills to use web to “out shout” the crazy rhetoric. Perhaps if enough of us apply common sense, we can make real change happen. Great job.

  265. Great read. Those above who criticise you for following your interests and principals because you should “grow up” and simply feel “lucky” to have any job to “put food on the table” are small-minded, or perhaps just bitter because they never did the same when they were younger. Your views that leans toward fiscal conservatism and social liberalism sound very sensible. Likewise, your dislike of having your ideas and opinions stifled in exchange for a paycheque are perfectly reasonable.

    I’m sure you’ll have no trouble finding other ways to engage yourself and make a comfortable living that don’t involve feeling like you’re selling out your own beliefs. Best of luck to you.

  266. Traditional media competes with online for the scarcest commodity in the world: human attention. And where ‘trad’ is mostly lean-back and passive (hat tip to Neil Postman) and we can spend (or waste) loads of time doing the same thing online, new media is more of a lean-forward, participatory thing. The future belongs to clumps of local + mobile + social and it will all be interconnected through the intertubes. See, for example, http://collabracam.com

  267. fake name because I'm afraid of Conservative internet trolling said:

    Amazing. Congratulations. Though I’m quite sure we’re in the predicament we’re in simply because the general population would rather watch The Bachelor than read a text like this, nevertheless I’m sharing it with anybody I’m connected to. Good luck!

    Ivan

    PS If you can tell a joke or two, I’ll nominate YOU as Canada’s John Stewart

  268. Kristen said:

    I wish I had one iota of your courage. All the best in the future. If curious, check out Dream Change (dreamchange.org). They have some interesting philosophy. Take care.

  269. I appreciate the reasons you quit your job.
    I appreciate more the fact that you shared them courageously.
    I marvel at the reactions of your posters.
    I see there are a lot of bitter people in our world.
    Ignore the pettiness and the anger. Don’t let them stop you.
    Be bold. Be brave. Be strategic.
    Be true to yourself.

  270. Max LeBlanc said:

    Inspirational. This is a great synthesis of what is going terribly wrong in our country.

    I guess a background in journalism can be helpful :-)

    I can’t wait for what’s to come….if something is to come. Good luck for what’s to come, whatever it is. :-)

    • H said:

      yes helpful. For flipping burgers. What a whining little turd.

      He couldn’t simply quit for his own reasons & leave it at that. Oh no. He had to blubber about it on his pathetic blog. Journalists and journalisl students, self important blowhards who think they are so much wiser than the common rabble. Too lazy & stupid to study anything challenging or useful in college or university, they take journalism to leech cheap fame from the ccomplishments of others.

      • Grant said:

        What an idiotic comment. Speaking of turd….

  271. CD said:

    I’m a 24-year-old federal civil servant. For months, I have been considering leaving my job for much the same reason. Your words have given me strength and resolve, and I will be following your journey closely as I begin my own. Thank you.

    • Thanks for your comment, CD. Could you send me a direct message on twitter or facebook?

  272. Paul said:

    Hi Kai. I started off here with the intention of simply wishing you luck and telling you what a loss this will be for us. Like everyone else, I can certainly relate with many of your points. They’ve struck a very poignant chord, as all these responses obviously reflect.

    But I can’t get passed one simple basic reality. Which I think should be acknowledged given the scope of this conversation. It is that you abruptly left a job that offers the rare opportunity of reaching tens of thousands of people nightly, after having done it for less than one year. People aren’t stupid. They grasp subtleties within stories if those subtle points are incorporated creatively and effectively. Even if you truly reach 500 people nightly, this one is an extremely valuable soap box to suddenly crush.

    As for editorial influence, I would say CFCF is probably one of the least stringent shops out there. We could take significant liberties partly because of pretty “easygoing” oversight, and partly because we have one of the strongest union delegations in North America. When it comes to social media all that I’ve ever been asked to do is temper remarks with a disclaimer. I mean Christ, Stephane Giroux is a prime example. He says anything he wants (love u steph!). Point is, there’s a lot more at play, at least at this shop, than the ravenous identity and ideology munching monster that many would like believe is this industry.

    And that brings me to what I feel is the most important point here. You left a prime position in the business at a revolutionary time…when social media tools and mainstream journalism are coming together like never before. Your balance between the two was being executed finely, in my opinion appropriately skewing the strict line between objectivity and subjectivity, helping to guide this evolution in our trade.

    I wish you luck. I think you’ll be successful in everything you choose to pursue in the future. But I truly believe you made a mistake…solely considering the points made in your blog post.

    Of course the truth lies somewhere obscure, in a very emotionally raw, and immediately inaccessible place that can’t really be laid out in a few paragraphs.

    In the mean time, I wish you the best… as do many of your former colleagues and friends in Montreal. Take care.

    P

    • CTVer at Large said:

      Correction: hundreds of thousands of people nightly.

  273. Dear Kai, Allow me to say say I just read every word of this courageous post, something I do rarely in favour of scanning. Your story resonates for me on many levels – and I have to laugh when I think it took me until I was fifty to come to the same conclusion you’ve come to at 24. Finding and following your passion(s), values, beliefs – living authentically – is the healthiest way to live. I have to say that I lived dominated by cognitive dissonance at almost every turn until the big 5 0. I’m not going to address your thoughts on journalism or Canada’s politics here – although I found them fascinating and scintillating for such a young man. Congratulations! And, all the best on your journey.

  274. Real Carbonneau said:

    You’ve got heart like any 20 year old. Now time to acquire a brain. This will come with time. I hope.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      Quelle pertinente contribution au débat, Réal. Vraiment, Bravo.

  275. Denise Groulx said:

    Bravo Kai. Vous me rendez fière et pleine de confiance en la jeunesse.

    je vous souhaite la meilleure vie, le meilleur chemin possible.

    Bravo. Vous êtes un être humain vibrant. Longue vie. Et j’espère vous lire ou vous entendre bientôt. Bravo encore.

  276. LeCanardHasBeen said:

    “Freedom of speech isn’t something somebody else gives you. That’s something you give to yourself.” Kurt Vonnegut ou Kay Nagata?

  277. Thank you for posting this. I hope you have a long, well-deserved rest and then return to help us all figure this out.

  278. TheJerseyDevil said:

    The news business improves every time a 24-year-old know-it-all quits.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      When did the news business improved? How so?

      N’importe quoi……

  279. Andrew said:

    What a beautiful essay. We all wish you the best.

  280. bill Justin said:

    You outlines a great platform for a party – one I would love to join. I don’t think we are alone and that a party like this could actually do very well.

    Congrats on your move, and the best of luck ahead.

    One of my favourite books, which you might enjoy is by a Canadian couple and called – “A Career-free Life”

  281. Lisa G said:

    What you have written is bang-on with how I feel about these issues as well. It is rather inspiring to read about one person choosing to stand for what is right, rather than passively allowing themselves to be sucked into the system because it is deemed a means of survival. Bravo, and good luck with the next steps of your journey.

    And I would like to thank you for speaking up about this. I am sincerely hoping others will also reflect upon what you’ve shared with us all. Cheers.

  282. I agree and support every single part of this post. I love your political views, your social comments, your reasons for wanting to move on… Kudos

  283. Zena said:

    Well said. I wish you the best of luck as you discover your path.

  284. ann said:

    well come for a visit if you hit the island, you sound like someone who’d be welcome on the front porch for coffee. the blueberries are ripe in august, and the mushroom start coming up in september.

  285. H said:

    yes, (sniff, blubber) I’ll miss you terribly. I’ll sleep with your picture under my pillow every night. Would you please send me a lock of your ass hairs so that i may knit them into a pair of mittens.

    Bloody hell!

  286. Richy said:

    You need to go to Burning Man, there’s no better place to help begin a quest of self discovery and experimentation :)

    Let me know if you decide to go

  287. bigdaddyb said:

    Fantastic read, really very enjoyable and I feel the same way about much of what you wrote in your blog.

    One point I wish to make, though, since I also had the opportunity to cover the royal insanity in our nation; I understand that there was much better hard news in the world while the royals were here in Canada. I think sometimes viewers just want good, happy news every once in a while to be the lead to the newscast, since in most cases we just bombard them with hard, “bleeds it leads” stories.

    Most of the hard news you think should have lead the cast was in there, but occasionally you have to let the fluff flow off the top when it’s what people want to see; if you really want to see the real international news you’re probably not going to watch the local/national news (Al Jazeera is the homepage on my personal computer).

    Beyond that point I think you really wrote a marvelous farewell note and I hope to see more of your talent in the future.

    Those of you that may call me chicken for not posting my name…damn right I am. I enjoy my cushy news job, even when the direction it takes me ticks me off ‘royally’.

  288. Leslie said:

    Would you be interested in a speaking gig? A paid (since you’re unemployed and living in your car) speaking gig? In BC. Get in touch if you read this and are interested. :)

    • I second Leslie’s invitation, if you get as far as the media wasteland of BC.

      Well, actually we have several great independent online news organizations, several excellent bloggers, a few alternative video news efforts, and maybe one decent news weekly.

      If you did come this far, we can organize a convocation around journalistic ethics and social responsibility, and we will raise some funds and provide logistical support.

      Finally, if you could get over how expensive it is here, in the Lower Mainland (greater Vancouver), please consider staying and adding your ideas, your analysis, and your voice to a media revolution that must soon occur.

      We are wallowing in a miasma of navel-gazing, self-congratulatory, bromidic lies about how green and socially just we are; but in fact we are heading off a cliff of real estate overdevelopment that has sent thousands to live on the streets while we pour more concrete per capita than any other city on earth.

  289. Todd said:

    Je soutiens votre decision a quitter. Le Canada a besoin plus d’individuels comme vous. I wish I had the intestinal fortitude when I was 24 to do what you did. Recently, many young people have taken a vocal stance for a direction to Canada from yourself to the young lady in the Senate with her stop Harper sign. Le pouvoir est toujours a nous. Felicitations et bravo.

    • PAM said:

      This planet is changing because individuals are now following a new world order.

      We are the stewart of this planet (who else) and must act responsibly.

      If our leaders fail us, we must find new leaders…

      There are plenty coming up now!
      Kai is just one of them.

      But seing what he sees at his age must be commanded.
      I am ready to follow him…

  290. Jodie N said:

    This has moved me. You have opened my brain and gave voice to thoughts I didn’t know how to voice. I may not have agreed with everything you said but I am happy you said it. I live in Calgary and have some small video equipment at my disposal, if you are heading in my direction I can offer a place to stay and my equipment for use. This age of internet and youtube allows us to move past networks.

    • PAM said:

      Makes total sense to me but when you are facing opponents like this you need to have more than youtube to adress them.
      Youtube is only on mean…
      If you are ready to go face these guys, you better be prepared, look deeper, look further.
      As they are focused on short term it is wuite easy.
      But the day they will see problem arising, you should be prepared to raise the bar as it goes.
      Using 33 strategies of war as an approach, youtube would be step one:
      Declare war on your oppenent!
      Most likely they won’t care.
      So the move has to go deeper and be more planned!

      I agree with GW but given the economics of petrol and gas… It is a non issue (not really) and we should focus on alternatives.

      Leaders in the future are going to be the ones asking the good questions:

      If GW is a problem, and petrola nd gas are going down… What is the real target?
      Given economics and replacement value, when is the date where green alternatives will become the answer?
      If we can supply all of US energy with 3% of Sahara, what is the poing fighting against petrol when we know the answer will arise by itself?
      If northern countries (Canada, Sweden, Russia, etc.) are going to be most affected, what is the politics that will give us an answer?
      If methane will rise dramatically, and the GW effect is following a logarithmic curve, could the GW warming effect of mehtane decrease to lower values (if you double 8 times, the GW effect of methane goes from 100 to 4)?
      What is the point to decrease the methane if science tells us it is already going to bring (unescapable at this point) 3C of warming?
      How do we manage species going accross roads and cities escaping from warmer climate?
      Am I talking to you?

  291. Jade Ruta said:

    this is important. thank you for your voice. wanted to let you know that you have inspired many of us by trustig yourself, standing up for yourslef and trusting us to hear. and you know what, look around: it’s a movement… blessings

  292. PAM said:

    You are really the kind of person I would like to meet.
    You analisis is so incisive at such a young age….
    You certainly did not think about this in a day: this is the result of many years listening and looking!
    Must have taken you a few days before posting that!

    I am flabergated because you have put in words to what I see…
    So obvious and so much guts to write it down…
    It shows your ethics!

    You are giving up on them and going back to your values…
    After all, they had their chances.

    Watakuhi wa PAM. Dozou yoroshiku. Hajime mashite!
    Anata wa sugoi!
    Wakari masu.
    That’s all I know btw…

    BTW, I am poor but I am happy and my mind is rich! Really rich with vision!

    Question is: what would come out if we put 5 or 10 guys like you together doing real journalism?
    Subsidairy question: what could you expect given the trend?
    Fundamental: Can we reverse the trend?
    Meanwhile: I saw the moon today.

    Have a pleasant road trip.

  293. A very good essay Kai. don’t let them tell you otherwise. Most people, if they are at all honest with themselves, have to face the decision whether to go along with the crowd trying to do the best you can from inside. I think Obama is in this position. Or, if you cannot stand that, then quit and do something where you can think and speak out honestly at least feel free, and that you are being yourself – at great cost to your public career. Plato said, long ago: that the only person fit to be a ruler-king is the man who did not want that position. Aristotle acknowledged that to be ruled by the people was to be ruled by he mediocre (the medium of course). I don’t think we have solved that problem in the 2500 years since.
    Get a good job with an NGO – that is where you belong. Try Amnesty International!

    • PAM said:

      Real problem is to make sure everyone of us is raising the bar.
      Seems we have not suffered enough to change.

      Once we will have suffered enough, we will change.

      There is escape about it:
      The is only one constant: Change (buddha).

      As for Aristotle: I would love to see what he thinks about what is happening right now!

      This planet is changing!
      We are changing…

      Things are not simple, they are indeed complex.
      But ethics are above and beyind that!

  294. PAM said:

    You are really the kind of person I would like to meet.
    You analisis is so incisive at such a young age….
    You certainly did not think about this in a day: this is the result of many years listening and looking!
    Must have taken you a few days before posting that!

    I am flabergated because you have put in words to what I see…
    So obvious and so much guts to write it down…
    It shows your ethics!

    You are giving up on them and going back to your values…
    After all, they had their chances.

    Watakuhi wa PAM. Dozou yoroshiku. Hajime mashite!
    Anata wa sugoi!
    Wakari masu.
    That’s all I know btw…

    BTW, I am poor but I am happy and my mind is rich! Really rich with vision!

    Question is: what would come out if we put 5 or 10 guys like you together doing real journalism?
    Subsidairy question: what could you expect given the trend?
    Fundamental: Can we reverse the trend?
    Meanwhile: I saw the moon today.

    Have a pleasant road trip.

    Why so many are missing the point?

  295. PAM said:

    You are a journalist…
    Find me!

    • PAM said:

      What I mean… I can not find your email…
      So you have to do the job for me!

  296. Exceptional Kai, what a journey you are on! I hear you. I know you. I am you. God bless you.

    • PAM said:

      Agreed.

      Wherever this leads you, You are on the right track.

      Keep it on and never have doubt.
      Except when someone presents an intelligent and new perspective.

      Use your imagination to build a better world and then go after it!

  297. Go West Young Man said:

    Congratulations to you, and thank you for this fantastic post.

    I see all these passionate, talented, hardworking individuals leaving our industry… and I wonder what it will become in 5 or 10 years. The audience is such a commodity, and what we do is so undervalued. I wish all of us – the young like-minded ones who are getting so disillusioned and destroyed in this disloyal industry, and the experienced gems still left – could band together to create something new. Quality Journalism is so important – but the companies just see dollar signs and refuse to treat it like the staple it should be.

    Best of luck, sir. I think you’ll do amazing things.

    • PAM said:

      We are a commodity.
      Only belong to us to not behave like one.

      Whatever the size or form of the jail you put me in… I will remain a free man!

      So for me, I am not a commodity, I am a human!
      It is not because they try to convince me that I will become one!

      My freedom is stronger than your money!

      My mother once said:
      You can hit me, but you can never reach me!
      These guys are way below us because in their paradigm they are using their own self evaluation to judge us!

  298. PAM said:

    Time to go and wait!

  299. What a text. What a great act of courage. You demonstrated great respect for youself.
    Good luck.
    Frank

  300. Renee said:

    Loved your essay. You articulated much of what I feel about what is happening to Canada. I feel our wonderful country is slowly being bled to death, and the “Harper Government” is deploying a sinister imposter in her place.

  301. I never heard of Kai before this posting. I have to admit that Kai following his ideals is a very courageous and noble act, but not necessarily the correct act. Based on the little research I did on him (on the internet) he seems to be a young and fairly promising journalist who graduated from UBC with a BA in English and a graduate degree in journalism from Concordia.

    However, I think that Kai quitting his journalism job for the reasons listed was a miscalculated and poor decision. Kai’s motivations for quitting were purely ideological and idealistic. Striving for ideals in life is very important but sometimes impractical and unproductive. On the other hand, ignoring ideals and purely acting on reality can lack human progressiveness. The challenge in life is to meet somewhere in the the middle where one is conscious of their ideals and gradually strives for them but yet recognizes the practical limitations of reality. Kai has taken the typical far left-wing approach to an issue: complain about the system, frame the right as incompetent and bad, claim moral superiority, act radically, and whine. Instead of being a little more pragmatic: critique the system, remain unbiased, come up with solutions to the problem, collaborate with colleagues to change the problem, persevere and struggle to implement the change (as change never happens quickly or easily), and prevail as a winner.

    Kai: Get off your moral high horse, quit whining and start winning. Go beg for your job back, retain your ideals, and start working towards change in the real world. A little less idealism and a little more realism may serve you better in the future.

      • Typical. Don’t like what you hear so bash and claim intellectual superiority. Not surprised.

        • Andrew said:

          I didn’t claim anything about my own intellect. I merely called you a moron.

          • It’s definitely implied. Irregardless, it is an arrogant thing to say. Don’t like what you hear so bash. Classy. Let’s hear you account.

            • Andrew said:

              “Irrerdless” is not a word. Here’s an account of that:

              http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irregardless

              And more generally, my account is this: the Right are and have always been Dupes of the ruling class. Since the days of city-states, when kings pretended to be descended from gods, the Right has always been, and has never even briefly deviated from being lapdogs of said “authority.”

              The fundamental position of the Right is that they are Right, because they are somehow special. The fundamental position of the Left is, and has always been, that if any human being is special, it is only inasmuch as all human beings are special, and deserve equal say.

              The reason Canada is one of the few countries in the world to escape the wordwide financial collapse is solely because of Leftist policies regarding the separation of normal vs. investmant banks. Harper would like to get on a podium and pretend that the reason is because of his policy, while simultaneously changing all Canadian policy to be more in line with American policy. If you don’t already know: American policy is the global precursor for the entire wordwide slump that we are currently experiencing. Rightist policy. Which has been proven, from the beginning of time, to benefit only people who are already rich, while screwing everyone else on Earth.

              It’s time for a change.

        • Andrew said:

          Anyway, heading to bed now. If you have anything of substance to say, I’ll respond to it later.

          • Again claiming intellectual superiority. It seems to just be part of you. I’ll forgive – I understand.

            Seriously? Your going to correct internet language? Grow up. We are not writing university essays here, pal.

            I appreciate your spiel on right versus leftist policies and dogma dating back to kings, but I tend to live and operate in the 21st century.

            I see no point in engaging in a left versus right debate on here.

            I agree that Harper is not solely responsible for our sound economic status but any PM in their own right mind would take as much credit as possible – it’s called reality. Obama claimed lots of responsibility for the killing of Osama Bin Laden, but seriously did 10 years of past CIA and military work in Afghanistan not really allow this to happen. My point is, this sort of claiming responsibility by heads of government when positive things occur even though they had little effect is reality – whether by left or right leaders. REALITY. You don’t seem to understand this terminology.

            And you really believe that right governments only agenda is to support the wealthy elite class? It’s just that simple? They are evil people. Anyone who profits is bad? Capitalists are bad?

            Your radical. I think you need to find some middle ground.

            I do also disagree with some American policy, but not all – that would be radical. I lived in the US for two years and can tell you that it’s not a third world country. In fact, many aspire to live and thrive in the US. This must perplex you.

            You can spout off your ideals of hope and change but until you actually understand the full complexities of these issues and have an action plan, cool you jets.

            It’s time for pragmatism.

    • Skookum1 said:

      Striving for ideals in life is very important but sometimes impractical and unproductive………Kai: Get off your moral high horse, quit whining and start winning.

      In other words, “sell your soul give up on your beliefs and ideals like I did”. By the look of you, Jason, you’re pretty wet behind the ears yourself (i.e. you don’t know f-all about the world or its history except what your business-school profs have told you to think) and clearly are ideological in your own right – the “winning at all costs” ethic, combined with “despise anyone who isn’t as greedy as I am”…….

      Kai has courage; all you have is contempt….including mine for you.

      • Never once did I say:

        1.) sell your soul
        2.) give up your beliefs and ideals
        3.) win at all costs
        4.) despise anyone who isn’t as greedy as I am

        And again, you don’t like what someone’s opinion is so bash, claim moral and intellectual superiority, spin and demonize.

        To some of you brain-washed individuals either a person is 100% compassionate or 100% greedy – there is no in between – sad. Most of you are indoctrinated by left-wing professors. For the record, I was not a business student but rather a political science honors. And like many of you, I don’t just drink the left-wing Koolaid that most professors at university sell us. Most of them are very intelligent and have a lot of useful things to say. That being said, most fail to present the other side to counter their heavy left-wing biases. And like most of you – most of them claim moral and intellectual superiority. Those who can’t do, teach. Simple.

        Nonetheless, my message to Kai was not to be radical and sell your soul or give up your beliefs or win at all costs, it was to act pragmatically, retain your ideals, and work positively towards them and change. Work within the framework towards your ideals. It’s not a zero-sum game – it’s not about being greedy or compassionate, it’s about working effectively towards change. That is different than throwing a fit, claiming moral superiority, and giving up. Be a winner not a whiner, Kai. Simple.

        And to the bashing posters: I forgive because I understand.

        I don’t need to bash, claim moral or intellectual superiority to make a point and I respect all opinions.

        • Skookum1 said:

          You didn’t say those things, verbatim, but it’s what in effect you were saying.

          As for “brainwashed” that’s just more neo-right hobble-gobble treating anyone who shows concern for democracy, openness, truth etc as deluded and with mental problems. I’m not even on the left, I’m a “truther” and tired of the mindless hostile rhetoric of the right, which includes you; and you are on the right, simply evinced by your usage of the same diatribes against the left as if they were not realistic and were somehow not as aware and enlightened, allegedly, as you twerps on the right who shit on anyone who stands up for their own principles. And you clearly DON’T respect Kai’s opinion or his now-open beliefs about what’s going on – your patronizing and condemnatory tone speaks volumes about where you’re coming from.

          “You forgive because you understand”. More patronzing, evasive horseshit – who the f**k are you to forgive anyone, when you clearly HAVEN’T. You want everyone to think like you; but you don’t even think…..and clearly aren’t capable of looking in the mirror.

          As for selling your soul you may not realize you have – but you have. Very obviously.

          • Your really good at spinning things for someone who claims to be a “truther.”

            Again, you don’t like what you hear so bash, claim moral and intellectual superiority and spin. I’m getting really dizzy from all your spinning. Your going to spin yourself right into the ground one day.

            And hostile??? Hmmm I think many who would compare our two different rants would definitely choose yours as being considerably more hostile.

            I appreciate Kai for showing concern for democracy, openness and truth – as noted before I think it is courageous and noble. As it is obvious you don’t understand – you can disagree with someone and still respect their decision. Your missing the point, sir. I think Kai, could have been more effective by working for change within – instead going about it how he did. This does not mean: don’t stand up for your principles, your decision is unrealistic, or your the devil.

            I’m an autonomous individual who is presenting my opinion and who has the right to forgive and apologize.

            I could care less what people think. I have my opinion and values and what is wrong with presenting them?? In fact, I think it is important in a well functioning democracy that there are many different points of view presented and debated. So no, I don’t want everyone to think like me.

            I don’t have to bash you, claim to be more intellectually gifted, or claim to be a better person, or to come from a better upbringing to make a point. Remember, just because you claim moral and intellectual superiority does not make it truth.

            You are radical in your assessment. Painting me to be sitting right next to the devil. C’mon, get a hold of yourself. I understand that you are just really hotheaded right now because your values and opinions are being challenged, but there is no room for derogatory and hateful comments like yours in a well functioning democratic environment. Again, I will forgive your hotheadedness, it is understandable – it’s not rare in this world. I understand that it is hard for people, myself included, to find and accept a rational realistic middle ground in life.

  302. John Galt said:

    If you’re young and not liberal, you have no heart. If you’re old and not conservative, you have no mind.

    Let’s see where you’re at in 20 years, Kai.

    • Strange as a 20 year old i embraced Reagan’s views and now at 42 i embrace Chavez’s

      • Rand said:

        And yet for some reason you haven’t moved to Venezuela. Funny that.

  303. Seriously? Your going to correct internet language? Grow up. We are not writing university essays here, pal.

    I appreciate your spiel on right versus leftist policies and dogma dating back to kings, but I tend to live and operate in the 21st century.

    I see no point in engaging in a left versus right debate on here.

    I agree that Harper is not solely responsible for our sound economic status but any PM in their own right mind would take as much credit as possible – it’s called reality. Obama claimed lots of responsibility for the killing of Osama Bin Laden, but seriously did 10 years of past CIA and military work in Afghanistan not really allow this to happen. My point is, this sort of claiming responsibility by heads of government when positive things occur even though they had little effect is reality – whether by left or right leaders. REALITY. You don’t seem to understand this terminology.

    And you really believe that right governments only agenda is to support the wealthy elite class? It’s just that simple? They are evil people. Anyone who profits is bad? Capitalists are bad?

    Your radical. I think you need to find some middle ground.

    I do also disagree with some American policy, but not all – that would be radical. I lived in the US for two years and can tell you that it’s not a third world country. In fact, many aspire to live and thrive in the US. This must perplex you.

    You can spout off your ideals of hope and change but until you actually understand the full complexities of these issues and have an action plan, cool you jets.

    It’s time for pragmatism.

    • Andrew said:

      “I lived in the US for two years and can tell you that it’s not a third world country. In fact, many aspire to live and thrive in the US. This must perplex you.”

      I’m American. I lived in the US for 28 years before moving here. I can tell you that the majority of it is, in fact, a third world country. I lived for a while in a region where there are more televisions per capita than there are indoor bathrooms. Deepest Kentucky? The dark parts of forested West Virginia? No, the suburbs of Pittsburgh.

      During my whole life I watched the US slide further and further into destruction, as a result of the onslaught of Rightist policy. The policy implemented by BOTH parties in the US, as even the Democrats and Obama are significantly to the Right of most governments elsewhere in the world.

      “Pragmatism” is not an action plan. You’re the one who clearly has no idea what you’re talking about.

      “Pragmatism” is a Rightist buzzword for Harper apologists like yourself. It means buying aging fighter jets at a time when your country is sliding into poverty, building new jails at a time when domestic crime is decreasing (because your friends build profitable jails), and it means peeling back the very laws that have saved us from financial catastrophe in the first place so that our rich friends can make more money at the expense of the rest of us.

      Is it pragmatic to buy jet planes right now, and then get on TV and lie about the cost? Is this the kind of pragmatism that you’re offering?

      • “The majority of America is a third world country”… hmmmm

        • I’ve been to 3rd world countries…the majority of the USA is NOT 3rd world. That’s almost as bad as people trying to spin Obama’s words into saying the USA is one of the largest Islamic countries in the world.

    • 1st you can’t say you’re a rich countru when you have 50 millions of your citizens that don’t have health care

      2nd you should Google “United States national debt history”…it would show just how “conservatives” Reagan-Bush sr-Bush jr were

      3rd in the 50s the elite were paying 80% taxes…and guess what they still made money and could afford Cadillacs

      They call it the american dream because you have to be asleep to believe it – George Carlin

      • I agree that having 50 million citizens without health care is completely wrong. That is one major policy in America that I disagree with. I like our system – but remember its not perfect.

        There is no doubt that the US has a serious fiscal problem currently, but it is still at a point that is recoverable from. Measures are in the works to correct the issue, although slow going.

        But these facts don’t relegate the MAJORITY of America to third world status????

        I looked at your profile – it is clear that you are a radical commie. Your type just can’t seem to get it through your head that there is a rational and reasonable middle ground in life.

  304. Mary Bidinost said:

    Good for you girl! There’s more to life than news and I wish you all the best in experiencing it all. News is a 24 hour job, which leaves no room to have personal thoughts and goals.

    I left journalism 15 years ago to raise a child. Whoa, who does that anymore? Other journalistic colleagues I worked with, put their kids in daycare. They have no idea what they missed.
    I gained a second childhood and the chance to guide my own daughter every step of the way. She used to call me “her best friend” when she was a kid. Now she’s 17 yrs old and remembers some of the lessons about life I taught her. I’m broke too, because they didn’t want me back at the CBC, so I had to do odd jobs.

    I have not regrets at the loss of income. My time was my own as were my thoughts. I didn’t belong to a corporate boss!

    Go for it and experience life! I/m now 61.

  305. Al said:

    The main reason you’ve quit is because your cover has been blown. Lefties like you can no longer twist the news to suit your political leanings. Before the internet allowed instant exposure of news bias and manipulation you were quite happy spewing your double standards and biases. Good luck finding a job in journalism. Journalists now have to check their politics and biases at the door.

    • Warren Z said:

      Al, you left off something.

      “Journalists now have to check their politics and biases at the door”… and subscribe to the politics and biases inside the room.

      Fixed.

  306. Mary Bidinost said:

    Good for you man. There’s more to life than news and I wish you all the best in experiencing it all. News is a 24 hour job, which leaves no room to have personal thoughts and goals.

    I left journalism 15 years ago to raise a child. Whoa, who does that anymore? Other journalistic colleagues I worked with, put their kids in daycare. They have no idea what they missed.
    I gained a second childhood and the chance to guide my own daughter every step of the way. She used to call me “her best friend” when she was a kid. Now she’s 17 yrs old and remembers some of the lessons about life I taught her. I’m broke too, because they didn’t want me back at the CBC, so I had to do odd jobs.

    I have not regrets at the loss of income. My time was my own as were my thoughts. I didn’t belong to a corporate boss!

    Go for it and experience life! I/m now 61.

  307. lila said:

    i don’t think he should have just quit either. he could have fought for truth on the inside which would have been much more effective than just quitting. & if they were to fire him, he will have a better chance to fight back. Perhaps he’s just tired of the whole media thing, so i still think that he did the right thing by posting about it & bringing the truth out. It’s a lot better than doing nothing & keeping quiet. It’s still a brave move to risk his job & income/livelihood which not everyone can do just like that.

    anyway, it’s not the Conservative government that is censoring news/info. Whichever party in power will do exactly the same. The control is by the people behind the scenes who own the media in both Canada & US.: eg. newspapers, tv, radio, etc… The same people have high influence on the gov’t & it’s decisions also. Mainstream Media has always been controlled & censored & always will be, so it’s not like this just happened within the recent 5 years.

    • CTVer at Large said:

      “Mainstream Media has always been controlled & censored & always will be, so it’s not like this just happened within the recent 5 years.”

      No, this is complete BS.
      Go talk to some real reporters and ask them how often they’ve been censored.
      Let me know if you ever find anyone who has been prevented from telling a story by their corporate bosses for anything other than libel.

  308. OM said:

    I hope this guy never succeeds in “effecting meaningful change in the world” around him. It doesn’t look like he has a chance, but still – even if only in the IMMEDIATE world around him – I do hope he fails. Please, take yoga or buddhism and follow the dalai lama into exile. And stop whining already.

  309. lila said:

    P.S. It’s not so much that mainstream media is feeding us what they think we want to see, although that is part of it to get profit . The other half of the truth is that ultimately that is also what they want us the people to see. That is b/c they don’t want us to know the real truth either. That is why they feed us gossip on celebs & all the hype on Will & Kate. The whole will&kate thing started w/ media frenzy & media hyping it up on purpose to keep us too occupied from learning the truth & real news. It’s not like people were already so fond of will&kate that the media thought it profitable to coverage them. The opposite of it is true: people are all crazy on will&kate b/c the media purposely made us aware of them in shiney, pretty words & brainwash us to thinks of them as god/goddess to be worshipped. “oh he’s so handsome & she’s so pretty! They are so perfect together” “Ooooh! Look at that beautiful designer dress she’s wearing!” Yes, they aren’t bad looking, but it’s all Propaganda.

  310. lila said:

    this is to kainagata: i appologize if my words sounded a bit strong, but i just wanted to get my points accross.

    i think it’s all good what you did although trying to bring about change from the inside w/ a well thought out plan might have been better. But then that would be extremely difficult to do & perhaps near impossible to fight the higher powers in the media world. All that matters is that you did what you thought is was the right/noble thing to do.

    Keep on fighting for the truth, keep on writing, keep on doing what will fulfill you as a human soul & not just for material needs.

    Spiritually, i think meditation, prayer & artistic endeavours are a good start. Perhaps you can try astral travel too if you like.

    the truth is that we are all spiritual beings too, not just physical, even the physical are beyond physical, what i mean is that all matter is invisible energy.

  311. Just reading through the comments above and wishing that more of you who have criticism to share (with Kai or other commenters) could do so in a way that is constructive so that we can actually understand the feelings and experiences underlying your positions.

    I don’t see how personal attacks and snide remarks can lead to anything but increased divisiveness and a down-ward spiral of collective intelligence here and in the country as a whole.

    For those of you who have, I am appreciative!

  312. Dear Kai: It was a pleasure here in Nova Scotia to read your essay about why you quit your job. What a wonderful writer you are, and so thoughtful. It was so great to hear someone from the inside of mainstream Canadian media describing what so many listeners and readers feel but can’t express with such power of personal experience. Thank you for taking a stand for all of us.

    I know you are unplugging now and taking a break from responding. When you are back, and if you are interested, I would like to send you a copy of the magazine I edit called Our Times. It is a bi-monthly print magazine about work and social justice (see http://www.ourtimes.ca for more information). We publish a series called Working for a Living and I was thinking your story would fit very well. As a labour magazine, we are also always open to commentaries about decent jobs and a healthy environment — and how we need both. Okay — enough of us! Thank you again, and wherever you land, may it be on a new and life-affirming path for you that brings you joy and meaningful connection.
    Lorraine Endicott
    Editor, Our Times

  313. Phil Joycey said:

    Amen brother…Harper’s greatest legacy may well be that of waking up an entire generation to political activism… speeches, like the one he made in Calgary on Friday, will only serve to fuel the desire of intelligent young individuals, like you, to work for change and bring our country to a place it has not been before, while at the same time embodying some of the value Canadians have held dear for generations; ideals which are being trampled by a tiny minority in our country. I wish you all the very best on you journey and I’d like to leave you with an appropriate tune…Take care, Phil Joycey Quebec,Qc.

    • Vahan said:

      Phil, I wrote to P.M Harper about his speech in Calgary, I also copied Bob Rae and Jack Layton on the email along with the M.P of my riding. I did not appreciate his tone and pettiness in the speech and told him so. Signed with my full name and address and kept it very civil. No name calling is needed, he is after our P.M and we need to respect the position, even if it is being watered down. At this point there are about 500 something comments on this blog, let say that 80% are of the same mindset. Well every commenter on this blog should do the same, in your own words, no Astro Turf form letter or talking points, but in your own words, politely tell our P.M that we do not appreciate that type of talk and I asked the opposition to unite, put egos aside and work on get the government back. It is simple, email, we all know how to use it. Here is the starter all the email addreesses of M.Ps are here http://www.parl.gc.ca/MembersOfParliament/MainMPsCompleteList.aspx?TimePeriod=Current&Language=E.
      Use it often and tell them how you feel. Use the power of the internet to tell media how you feel also. You are not without a voice. The internet and email is giving you a voice, yell from the rooftops and tell all to use it. Listen I have even written P.M Harper to complement him on some decisions. If we keep it civil we will enjoy the fruits of our democracy.
      One last point, send emails to local manufactures and tell them you bought their product because it was made in Canada. Stay away from BoxMarts they are killing the middle class. You as a middle class shopper may think you are saving a few pennies but in turn you are wiping out your friend’s job and your job and destroying your community. WRITE,WRITE,WRITE,WRITE it is easy, KEEP IT CIVIL AND MATURE, WE ARE ADULTS.

  314. Eric said:

    You have courage. And that was a great piece of writing. Very brave and generous to leave your job in a noble pursuit. We should all do the same. I will be looking and hoping to read more from and about you.

  315. alexthegreat said:

    The revolution begins

  316. A bold move, Kai. Along with many others, I look forward to your postcards from the road. Here’s a favourite poem of mine by a West coast poet who made a long journey from Poland to Canada many years ago, Ulrich Shaffer. It’s from his book, Growing into the Blue:

    All growing is changing
    from one state to another.
    Leaving a world behind,
    entering the fear of the unaccustomed:
    of colours that don’t blend,
    of holy words that jar,
    of fractures that give rise to visions.

    We have left one realm
    but we have not arrived at the other.
    We have given up one safety
    but not gained another.
    Above the gazing crowd
    the trapeze artist lets go of his swing,
    and then, if his timing is right,
    seizes another swing,
    without asking time to stop for him.
    That is the flight into growth.

    That is the changeover
    in which we experience our nakedness
    to the point of hurting.
    But there is not real growth without leaping,
    without burning bridges
    and standing wide-eyed and shivering
    on a new shore.

    And yet
    without growth
    there is nothing.

  317. Dante Sanchez said:

    Thanks for sharing this, wish you the best on your next project!

  318. Be ambitious. You have won a strong grass roots following to help you in the future. Maintain your beliefs. I believe they are what most Canadians desire and need. We support you.

  319. Mike Gibbs said:

    Kai Nagata has a very impressive “Jerry Maquire” epiphany…do your own thing Kai, and all the best of luck to you.

  320. denis said:

    Kai , heard your story on CBC and then thought to read your post. Glad I did;-D

    It seems that you are going through what we can call detachment.

    Your human spirit was being limited and suffocated.

    In response you instinctively reacted to set yourself free.

    You my friend are a free spirit;-D

    The feeling of peace you now feel is the feeling of detachment and freedom ….

    You could never be an object or a bolt that will fit into a machine…

    You are a conscientious thinker who contemplates,reasons who seeks truth.

    The only way you will compromise your freedon is for love,

    You need to love your work.

    Your work needs to allow you to blossom as a human being.

    When you love, you devote yourself and in devoting yourself you voluntarily sacrifice some of your freedom.

    Same with your relationships.

    You will only sacrifice your freedom to devote yourself to those you love.

    This is the highest for of sacrifice.

    So now you are asking what will I do next????

    Follow your heart and let your spirit take you there!

    In your quest you will come across challenges.

    Like a child learning to walk , you will fall, hurt and may even cry sometimes but that’s okay….

    When that happens take the time you need to gather your strength , rise again , try again and one day you will walk a free man;-D

    Denis

  321. Robert David said:

    “What do you do when you are overwhelmed?
    You get at things that really matter, on a scale that makes a difference.
    You have a mind and you have other people.
    Start with those and change the world.”

    Liz Coleman, president, Bennington College
    (on TED.COM)

  322. Well said, well thought, well done…thank-you for this, and all the best! CTV and all the others seem to racing at breakneck speed to equal CBC’s record for losing the best people and hiring space-cadets instead.

  323. Arlynne Poitras said:

    THis is a great an important read. YOu are brave. I hope that whatever your next project is, it gives those of us who will be cleaning up this mess a voice.

  324. RuthinOttawa said:

    Want some unsolicited advice from an older kindred spirit? Don’t “waste” 10 years searching for something on your doorstep. The gift to write compellingly is so rare a gift, precious and essential to humanization. You can spend a lifetime seeking to know your muse, or you can trust your gift, its source, as Felix might his “Magic Bag of Tricks” and simply dive in again and again and again.

    The world needs your words right up to the moment you find inner peace, which, hopefully for it, is never.

  325. denis said:

    Kai you have a gift and now you have to figure out what to do with it;-D This Blog seems to be a good start ! 100,000 people seem to find it relevant! This seems to be a step in the right direction. Maybe expand on this ???

  326. Scott Lekas said:

    This was a great pleasure to read. I applaud your conviction. It might be important to note that the sentiments you express with regard to the road Harper has chosen, and the consequent, very visceral discomfort his (their) ideology has created in the critical thinkers across this country are not restricted to the generations that came up through the eighties or nineties. I’m 54. Virtually everyone I know, hang out with, work with, or just happen to speak to is dismayed to distraction at the creeping neo-con, evangelical, military loving, Walmart, Federal Reserve, Dancing with the Stars, Fox News mentality that slides continually northward like a sort of republican continental drift or an airborne O’reilly virus. Media control seems to be just one of the symptoms of this reactionary plague. I hate to feel cynical about human potential in general, but sometimes it feels like we are fighting an insurmountable storm surge of ignorance and superstition. Other than that, it’s a good day in Nova Scotia, and I wish the same for you…

  327. jzaiyouna said:

    Kai,

    I really enjoy the feeling I got from reading your post – it truely is passion and drive that radiates from your words. I am looking to put a workshop together in Toronto – I’d like your opinion, and possible role in the event. Please contact me

    Jame Zaiyouna

  328. Kai, thank you. You’ve managed to codify exactly what I’ve been trying to express about journalism in general, and in Canada specifically, for years. Specifically, there’s very little of the real thing out there.

    I trained as a photojournalist at the end of the 80′s. The recession hit and I had to eat, so I’ve been working in other fields since. But, I still know how to do the job and, with a few exceptions, I haven’t seen that happening for some time. I was taught better and I know that most of our talking heads would have been summarily tossed out of Loyalist then if they’d tried any of the nonsense that they routinely get away with now.

    The Canadian public deserve better (both in politics and journalism), but our society has descended into such a left/right split that I’m not certain it’s possible to recover from.

    I was taught to give people the benefit of the doubt, but you can only say one thing to my face, then kick me in the ass when my back is turned before I start to expect an attack. This saddens me.

  329. Amen brother! Better to be free and broke than rich and owned.

  330. As a young’un about to start a degree in journalism, this affirms the thought that I need to get into the field of sports writing and hang on there for dear life. I see similarities in our philosophies, and I know that if this way of living and working couldn’t fulfil a determined, talented young man such as yourself, I would be wasting my time to even dip my toes.

    I’m just gonna start my own little sports site and survive off the money LiveJasmin gives me for advertising.

  331. By the way, have you come across The Conversation? It is a new model of intelligent news media started three months ago in Australia as a collaboration of the major universities and scientific organisations. It is ad-free, independent and contributors must have genuine academic credentials. Even to comment you need to have a .edu email address. It is getting some attention and looks like an exciting development.

    All the best with whatever you decide to do.

  332. I myself I’m pondering my next career move. I’ve volunteered allot with fairvote.ca, but I’d love to make some money working with that organization.

    The referendums on electoral reform are a good example of media disinformation. So many people did not know about the referendum in Ontario in 2007 even as they were going to the ballot box or were misinformed on how it work or the short commings of our current electoral system. Yet this referendum would have fundementally changed the rules of the game of politics for the better in Ontario.

  333. Kai… as a soon to be graduating journalism student, I must admit that I had these fears even before getting a full time job.

    You have inspired me with this confession and if you ever start up a true, north, strong and free media institution, I would love to work with you!

    I wish you much luck in your endeavours!

    Rebecca Munroe

  334. LWN said:

    No mention of Rick Mercer in his analysis, who is kind of a short version of Jon Stewart show…perhaps Kai could take up the Stewart mantle (canadian version) and make it a long play for this side of the border.

  335. Marie-Louise said:

    You are very courageous! You chose the right path… It’s gonna be harder, but so much more rewarding :)

    Good luck!

  336. GOOD FOR YOU MAN! In fact, news media in Canada today is increasingly becoming pure right-wing corporate propoganda. It sounds like you should join the NDP in terms of political affiliation. I’m an aspiring journalist/blogger/activist/whistleblower, and the current adminstration is basically doing everything that the Bush administration did, and is building a Big Brother-type state. In terms of media, there’s a documentary on Al-Jazeera English called “To the Last Drop”, which is about the Tar Sands and how Harper and Alberta are literally muzzling scientists and communities and and covering up the fact that the Tar Sands pollution is literally killing people. THAT should be front-page news.

  337. Senor Wences said:

    People suggesting Kai become our Jon Stewart are forgetting one hugely important thing. Jon is a comedian. His writers are all comedy writers. It’s a comedy show. It’s certainly effective communication, but very little in this excellent and pointed missive suggests that humour is part of his arsenal. Kai’s deadly serious.

    May I suggest starting your own political party? Or run for parliament as an independent? WIth the near death of the Liberal party there is no reasonable uncorrupted political centre from which to choose candidates. Parliament seems to lack fiscally responsible but compassionate members. You could start a common sense revolution! Maybe you can think of a better slogan …

  338. Best of luck with everything, Kai. You’re a great (and talented) guy. Hope you find what you’re looking for!

  339. Jacqueline said:

    Whether we agree with you or not, one thing is clear. It took great courage to take a stand. A lot of us know our job, our situation, our place in life is not working or does not reflect our truths but are afraid to make a change because it means letting go of our material things and maybe having to do with a lot less than we are used to. Good for you that you are able to feel so strongly about something and not just whine about it, but actually take steps to change it. Good luck on whatever your journey brings!

  340. Unfortunat­ely we Canadians are trapped between the rock and the hard place…on one side, the Cons and their constant efforts to bring into practice American-s­tyle politics..­..and on the other, the need to keep this country together .­..it’s the sa­me for provincial politics in Quebec, it’s always choosing between the lesser of two evils…be­tween the PQ or the Liberals..­.which at the end are sort of the same thing..

  341. A ‘self enforced internal code of editorial tradition’.
    Well, that’s your problem right there.
    Try telling the truth, reporting the truth, engaging those who speak the truth.
    Your job was never to manufacture the truth, spin the truth or pander to those who lied to you.
    Sounds like you’re now either halfway to redemption or hell.
    Tread carefully.

    • He is telling the truth and you have no reason to believe (nor do you have proof) he did otherwise as a reporter. The people who manufacture and spin the truth are those who pick a sentence out of context and try to justify a self-professed viewpoint based on little substance as you did in your post.

      • Spin what I said any way you like.
        Journalists, reporters, bloggers, television ‘commentators’ like Ezra and even whateverheis Jon Stewart are at their best when they tell the truth.
        My opinion, which Kai solicited with his open letter, is summed up by that single phrase – I believe he either lost himself and/or didn’t have the courage to speak his truth.
        Maybe it’s too bad, but maybe we now don’t have another media lizard following the warmth either.

  342. vivian said:

    You are wonderful! I stand by you, i support you, and most of all, i feel you. Safe journeys, PAIX!

    • vivian said:

      and keep us posted!

  343. David Bouck said:

    Nice

  344. brm2000 said:

    Seeing that you said that you are broke and spoke “truth” to power you are either brave or crazy. Life has many shades of grey, and you are expressing one of them. I admire your risk taking behaviour, but would not do it myself.

    A word of advice: you would of been better off building a nest egg of type before launching yourself into the real world. You may be upset about the media spoon feeding the public, but really it has always been that way. In different times, the media acts in different ways. In the 60′s and 70′s the Canadian media and country were more nationalistic, but at the same time Canada was accepting thousands of American educated Vietnam veterans and deserters. As the media accepts advertising, and advertising is the “propaganda” of a culture, you were in effect participating in an environment that was debased to begin with anyway.

    As to your contention that the Harper or Con government is concentrating power, that is the nature of any government, regardless of who it is. In fact due to the net, this has been the time when governments have had the least control over issues and the public. We have had two major disruptions of public order (G20 and Vancouver riots) and I believe that these will continue and get worse. As they are aided by social media and fast telecommunications. In other words, I don’t think you realize how authoritarian Canada was and used to be in the past. As well, you are part of a young democratic, the country is being governed by old people, as old people vote and government policies reflect this.
    As a result we are going through a reactionary period, however, once these older people start to go away (die), things will swing back to the left. Power, whether it is wielded by the left or right always will try to concentrate itself, it’s just human nature…

  345. Your values are more important than the system….that alone is the power of a Full Time Human Being. Welcome. You’ll love it.

  346. What you’ve discovered here about yourself some people never discover. I was lucky enough to find this out in high-school and now I can say that I love the line of work that I do. I hope you find what you’re looking for that’s your passion and can bring you the satisfaction you need in your life. :)

  347. Surinder said:

    Much love down your path !

  348. gainfullyemployedandhappy said:

    Kai,

    As a fellow 24 year old, I have to tell you something. You are not the first person in the history of television news to opt for the right to critical thought over a career in CANADIAN LOCAL TV NEWS. Corporations only care about the bottom line? I’m shocked…Acting as though this is the most original and most honourable act ever committed is not only smug and immature, it’s arrogant. It’s TV news…its credibility has always been in question.

    You sound like an over active James Franco in HOWL.

  349. Sophie said:

    Je te souhaite tout le bonheur du monde dans tes nouvelles aventures :)
    Au plaisir :)

    Sophie Villeneuve

  350. Mike said:

    Best of luck my friend you are not alone!

    Mike:)

  351. Elizabeth Wallace said:

    BRAVO!
    Someone in media needed to say this and you have said it well.

    I used to develop and deliver workshops on media literacy in Victoria schools. Media is so influential in our lives, i think the subject needs to be included in elementary schools.
    But as people wake up to media’s affects on us, they tend to forget how we influence the media. We need to realize that like buying a product, when we consume media we are in effect supporting that media outlet and it’s corporate ideology.

    I admire you for your courageous stance and your integrity. You have much to offer and I’m sure you will create many opportunities to fulfill your worthy goals.

  352. Rachel D. said:

    The deCanadianizing of Canada by our current regime and the dumbing down of what qualifys for journalism, where the public get their information about how to navigate the world, are the true fears examined here. People take note!

    • Rachel D. said:

      wow – bad spelling – “qualifies”. sorry.

  353. Mike Boileau said:

    If you arrive in Maple Ridge, BC let me know. I may have a place where you can stay and I also have agreat deal to talk about.

  354. Tony Hancock said:

    Kai, If I had known about this when I met you at K’s house, I would have shaken your hand a little longer. Well considered, well written. Canada needs to hear this.

  355. Judah said:

    Wow! Wow! Courageous. All the best with you next steps.
    cheers,
    judah

  356. tparks said:

    Congrats! I learned to listen to that inner voice part way through my 20′s and have never stopped, nor has it ever led me wrong. Living a life based on integrity and honesty will always be one of virtue. Good luck on your journey!

  357. I think this blogpost shows one of the defining characteristics of our generation: the strength to walk away when something isn’t right.

    Bravo for refusing to wait for your own clout and influence to come about through a system in which you’re stifling your own beliefs. You know that you can make a difference on your own terms, and “to thine own self be true” is the most important human rule. It takes courage to do what you have done.

    Seek peace and love and truth above all! Congratulations.

    • Melissa Jackson said:

      Well said.

  358. tomaven said:

    This is why the print media is still a better source of news than broadcast media. While print not, in general, populated by a bunch of progressive and inquiring minds, at least among columnists there is still room for the odd ‘different thinker’.
    Journalism has become a cheering squad for those in power.
    I used to support ‘Friends of Public Broadcasting’. However CBC is only marginally better than the private broadcasters.
    It is not just the lack of questioning, it is the choice of who to have on news programs to comment. Even TVO (with the new ‘The Agenda with Steve Paikin’) has become significantly more conservative.

    Paikin can ask probing questions but I find him always surrounded by conservative thinkers. It is a less ‘progressive’ program than Studio Two used to be.

    Lawrence Martin has written a fair bit on this in the Globe and Mail. He has enumerated a number of cases of journalistic conservatism and refusal to ask probing questions by the press.

    There is a naivete in the original piece by Kai. But at 24 he is entitled. I wish him well. I only wish more journalists would speak up rather than sell their souls for a meal ticket. But then as I think about it, I’m not sure how many actually still have souls.

  359. Mickey said:

    What a cop-out!
    Have you ever been reprimanded for articles you have produced? Ever been threatened to be fired for trying to publish the truth? Quiting your job is like saying “I don’t like the way this game is being played – so I’m taking my ball and going home” Reporter need to report what happens, all the facts, which means a lot of leg-work. I don’t want to read your opinion. I want the facts, then I’ll formulate my own opinion.

    • Eagle64 said:

      I think you missed part of the point. It’s not that disgruntled journalists want to be able to spout their opinions. There are many places where that can happen. Like this blog. It’s that sometimes you can’t even spout the facts because someone somewhere won’t like the waves it causes. And it’s (almost) never as overt as getting threatened for trying to tell the truth.

      And sometimes the truth, or the real issues, are less superficially interesting, even though the issues are more important. Then they don’t get covered. Instead, you get Will and Kate wall-to-wall, because that’s the saccharine pap that draws a larger audience. Pitch the important stories, and you’ll get told we “need you to cover X today.”

      So maybe Kai is taking his ball and going home. Or maybe, he’s taking a look at what’s next, and where he can find the facts and report them, without the BS.

      • CTVer at Large said:

        Whenever Kai pitched an important story, he was told “go cover it” unless something big and breaking was happening that day.

        IN which case he was free to pitch it again the next day. It’s called making choices, and there’s only so much you can do when you are one man covering an entire city.

  360. Bonjour.
    Je vous remercie beaucoup pour votre billet. J’espère grandement qu’il vous a fait du bien, qu’il vous a apaisé. Ça m’a beaucoup touchée de vous lire. J’ai travaillé pendant plusieurs année au Centre d’information de Radio-Canada comme assistante à la réalisation, temps pendant lequel j’étudiais à l’université dans le but de devenir journaliste. Je voulais conscientiser, dénoncer… changer le monde. Je croyais que CBC/Radio-Canada était le meilleur endroit pour le faire. En y travaillant, j’ai vite compris que je me trompais, et j’ai changé d’orientation de carrière. Je suis maintenant en train de faire une maîtrise en psychosociologie (communication, relations humaines) et je m’intéresse justement aux conflits de valeurs vécus par les travailleurs du contenu nouvelles du Réseau de l’information. De façon plus générale, je m’intéresse à l’éthique organisationnelle, au développement moral, au rapport individu-société et plus particulièrement aux organisations publiques et parapubliques… Ma préoccupation pour les enjeux sociaux et ma grande déception des médias me poussent à me questionner beaucoup sur les valeurs individuelles, le courage, la société hypermoderne et l’éthique, et surtout, sur ce qui fait en sorte que si peu de gens osent critiquer et chercher une plus grande cohérence entre leurs valeurs et leur mode de vie. C’est riche comme réflexion et ça pousse à se questionner sur la liberté. Et comme vous le dites si bien, la spiritualité trouve une place importante dans le cheminement qui s’impose.

    Je vous encourage donc grandement dans la voie que vous venez de choisir (d’ailleurs, connaissez-vous Edgar Morin ?) et j’ai la ferme conviction que nous sommes plusieurs à vous accompagner dans ce chemin.

    Ne doutez pas de votre force intérieure.

    Merci.

  361. Bravo said:

    Bravo! Having graduated with a journalism degree, I never even entered the profession. I saw with my own two eyes during my short internship the world of TV news. Manipulation, recycled story ideas, the stealing of story ideas, the childish cliques between departments, the list goes on. I knew it was never going to be for me.

    As for the politics, I think one of the biggest issues that Canada has versus the US, is that there are NO Canadian celebrities that are vocal or active in Canadian politics. In the US you’ll see guys like George Clooney or Matt Damon voicing their political beliefs and stumping for candidates. Not so in Canada. Imagine if we could get Canadian movie stars like Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams, etc. active in our politics. The idea sounds silly, but it does make people pay attention and would motivate the youth to play a bigger part in our government.

  362. jay-TO said:

    Then on the other hand you have Pamela Wallin and Mike Duffy who have dived headfirst into the public trough as payment for spinning the news. Oh and lets not forget The Kent fellow who now stands against everything he stood for as a journalist. Funny how the public trough did that as well. Kai seems to be the only journalist we had weith integrity and he couldn’t even stand the back room dealings. The PMO is connected with SunTV in ways just as bad as Murdoch in the UK with the Conservatives there.

  363. Desiree said:

    Hello Kai,

    There is a global movement of millions of people who stand exactly in your place and suddenly find themselves inspired to do as you aptly put it: “better myself spiritually, physically, and intellectually, so I can effect meaningful change in the world around me.”

    I am an Information Technology professional who now wishes to put my technology talents to good use in a way that will make a difference – uplift or assist mankind in some way.

    It’s a scary step to lurch out of one’s comfort zone – and success – to stand on such a precipice of adventure and freedom.

    Bravo to you for taking the leap.

    Surely your writing talent will lead you to the doorstep of the work you envision.

    Keep your heart open and it will never lead you astray.

    Namaste,

    Desiree
    Colorado

    • melvin danny said:

      Desire,
      i would like to engage your help in getting me a platform for my advocacy for industrial hemp as a nutritative. i have made many hemp food products that are with out prreservatives and are functional. I need someone to make me a website that would be fighting against the cargills and monsantos of this world who are trying to capture food production. If you would like yo know more and get some samples please let me know

  364. Mike Gault said:

    I LIKE!!!!

    nous avons besoin de plus de voix comme celles-ci…

  365. Alex Greene said:

    Great story and great essay. You summarized everything that is wrong with the news networks and public policy in this country quite well. Good luck!

  366. Don’t agree with all the snippets of political views expressed here, but the principled stand taken is admirable. Well done. Start a newspaper – the Canadian Guardian-Observer.

  367. "Ratty" Arbuckle said:

    Jon Stewart is a pompous blowhard, and so are you.

  368. Wow… you are very daring! Amazing example of FREE SPEECH… It’s suicide for your career in TV Journalism.. but there are many more ways to express yourself without ” Big Brother” breathing down your neck! Good for you! … I will keep watching for your updates…

  369. Eagle64 said:

    Impressively said – and it took you a much shorter time to recognize the ills of the industry than it took me. 15 years after I began, I, too, walked away this week, for many of the same reasons you spelled out. (Not all, and I’m not Canadian, so…)

    Our business has changed, and it is painful to watch.

  370. Jason said:

    I would vote for you

  371. Nancy A. Chiavario, Vancouver, British Columbia said:

    As a long-ago, former journalist in the USofA, I want to compliment and agree with you. I am a ‘child of the sixties’ with dual citizenship as a Canadian and an American. Grew up between both countries as I have a Canadian Mum and an American Dad. Chose Canada as me home when I left college because it was a place to really be able to follow my heart into journalism. (And later into politics.) Now, as Kai describes so well, the Americanism of Canada is near completion with this move from journalism as a media for making money as opposed to the place to learn the truth in the news. Sad days, and extremely frightening for the/our futures.

  372. Louis Montreal said:

    Thank you for saying out loud what many people are thinking. Quite simply brilliant!

  373. Neill said:

    Keep tweeting!

  374. patcon said:

    Dude. This is the bravest thing I’ve seen someone pull in awhile. This is the sort of shit that interns fantasize about doing after 2 months of corporate disillusionment and coffee runs, and even they still often don’t act on the sentiments. And in positions even much less lofty than yours, few have the cajones to make this leap. What you’ve done is inspiring, man. Truly.

    Young of our generation are disciples of an ethic than few of us are living. We see that shit’s broken, but most choose to keep riding things out rather than slow down and consider what needs fixing.

    I guarantee any kid who’s reading this will give a second thought to what they’re doing with their days, and how they might do better.

    Hell… I am.

    Thanks. Really.

    Oh, and you should give that Matthew Carroll guy a call. He’s good people, from what I’ve heard.

    • FL said:

      Infowars.com, pretty brave stuff here.

    • ek said:

      What a load of 60′s style drivel you are spoon feeding each other. Yay!! Let’s go change the world!! Make a difference!!! They did that in the 60′s too and it didn’t come to much. Mainly because the ‘kids’ grew up and realized they needed jobs.

  375. Paolo said:

    What about starting a show like “Democracy Now” but for Canada. Democracy Now has a million viewers, has integrity and is independent in the US. I’ve always wanted to see someone start one up in Canada. I would do anything to help if you started it.

  376. FL said:

    Infowars.com and Democracy Now…Kai, do it!

  377. feauxa said:

    Bonne chance, Kai! It took guts for you to do this, and I wish you courage on the journey ahead. We need more people like you, who walk the talk with integrity…

  378. Carmen said:

    Yes, a moment of clarity can change all things. Stay well with your journey, your passion will serve you well.

  379. Juanita joe said:

    Your passion and spirit has moved me, I have no idea who you are but yet I feel so proud of you. Letting go and opening up to your own possibilities is a powerful place to be. Thank you for sharing your inspiration. I wish you wellness

  380. Marthe Lépîne said:

    Kai, you write well, show great courage, and have a lot of interesting things to say. Unfortunately, I did not really have the time to read all of 500+ other comments, therefore someone may already have made my suggestion: It seems to me that you could do a very good job working with my favourite investigative journalist, Greg Palast (author of The Best Democracy Money Can Buy and of Armed Madhouse), or even Michael Moore. You probably already know at least one of them. If you do not know Greg Palast, you would do well to take a few minutes checking his web site (I do not have the address with me right now, but he is not difficult to find on Google or elsewhere). I think people like them, who have been working hard for some time now, need to recruit some young talented people like you to succeed them. And whether or not you follow my suggestion, which is probably just one out of 10,000, I wish you the best, you have a lot of talent and the willingness to use it well, this is a good start.

  381. Well said.

    There is far to much polarization of our Right and Left political bodies, and it’s so hard to support either and further to listen to either. The Right spews out binary shorts for news and damns anyone who dis-agrees and the left harbours protectionism of every hair on the head of any socially desirable idol and again dams anyone who dis-agrees.

    The sad state is that honest reporting no longer makes the money that flavoured reporting has to offer, but fortunately the internet provides much of honesty and facts to news that people can search for. It is our greatest invention that truly can not be tamed, by anyone person, group, economy or country and I love it.

    Bravo and good luck on your journey, I believe we will see more of you in the future.

  382. good for you man, congrats on having the gonads and intelligence on doing this, i’m happy for you. you do well by yourself and your family for standing up for what’s right.

  383. Simply , I salute you.. Simply , I salute you..

  384. Andrew C said:

    This is awesome, I agree with everything you said about the TV news industry and I know how you feel. I’m studying journalism now and thought I’d go into TV since newspapers are running out of jobs, but the more I learned about it, the more I saw it’s just some cookie cutter replacement for real news. Actually on the topic of real news I recommend this website: therealnews.com , they have in depth discussions of issues most media outlets don’t touch. I’m so glad the internet offers alternative sources of information.

    Good luck on your journey of self-discovery man. I’ve found that lasting happiness can only be found inside you, not in anything external.

  385. Rene Breton said:

    I will keep it brief because I could go on and on for hours: this blog post is a diamond! Very inspirational and it’s exactly what I’ve been think for a long time about Canada, politics, TV, journalism, religion, science, etc.

    I’m a university scientist and I’ve been more than frustrated to see the way that ideology has been running the show for a while now, just as if we were back in the middle ages. The same applies to other spheres of the society like government spendings and international politics. I just hate how the population is being levelled down to the dumbest common denominator and encouraged to switch down their brain rather than encouraging critical thinking and opinion debates.

    I wish that your text will be picked up and published at large as an exemple of what we should aim to become as a society before we die from the inside.

    All the best in your endeavour!

  386. Hey Kai,
    I don’t have a TV, and if I did, probably wouldn’t watch CTV news, but your observations here and your willingness to tell it like you see it and back it up with personal action (and sacrifice) are admirable and inspiring.
    We’re a small community of alternative thinkers – once you arrive out West and feel settled and ready to explore, please look us up – I know there would be many here who would make a strong connection.

  387. Mary Howard said:

    Good luck, Kai. Follow your heart. You show a lot of courage and are an inspiration.

  388. Alyssa said:

    Absolutely fascinating view on the world on reporting. I watch the news closely, but it never really struck me that those telling the story are forbidden from telling their own view. I always assumed that it was the view of the reporter and of the station. I guess I make the mistake of seeing CBC and CTV as whole entities, not individuals who make up the larger picture. I assumed that the reporters had the same internal views as the corporations (or they wouldn’t be working for them). Thank you for your side of the story. My mind is opened.

  389. Theresa said:

    The sad truth is that there is a contingent of viewers who are unsatisfied with the superficial level of news reporting across all news organizations in Canada. Barely do we here about an issue when we’re off to the next sound byte. We want depth, scratches well below the surface, and debate. I periodically watch PBS news for its broad and in-depth look at issues of the day. I wish Canada has an equivalent. While I watch CTV national news (and long ago left CBC), I am left wondering most nights why we stop at the description of the issue without spending another 5-10 minutes to get at the heart of the matter. I believe CTV has the journalists who could deliver more intellectual and thought-provoking content, they simply choose not to. Kai cites Harper’s dismissal of the long form census as an example of Harper dismissing facts and evidence because it might run counter to his ideology. This is exactly the type of questions that the news should be asking. While Harper is sometimes more subtle about it, the census issue was obvious, and yet I bet most of the electorate was oblivious to it or could care less. (I suspect it is the former.)

    I wish Kai all the best in his next pursuits. I would also like to let him know that this it is not just his generation that struggles with these issues. I find the same filtering and political nonsense happening in the public service where one is purportedly working for the public good.

  390. Wow. Based on this worthy piece, and the fact that numerous fellow mainstream journalists have tweeted their support, I think this paints an interesting picture of the gulf between media owners and those of use who present, write and shoot the news.

    When I was at a small community weekly paper years ago, fresh out of college, and mentioned the phrase “journalistic integrity” the entire newsroom burst into laughter for like 10 seconds. However, I also had a GREAT boss who let me write whatever was important even though he was conservative.

    This is somethings I’m struggling with as a freelance writer and photojournalist – freelancing let’s me be just that – free – but also BROKE. I’m considering going back through the ‘paper curtain’… Now I’m not sure, now that you have reminded me what it can be like in the industry.

    Kai, I hate it when people give advice unsolicited, and I admire your choices. So take this as a friendly, nudging challenge. What I want to challenge you and others in our field to is continuing to explore the line between blindly reporting what the bosses want us to, and recognising the huge privilege of being a journalist – the bigger the audience, the greater the responsibility.

    Recently I recall a journo prof talking about the responsibility of fair reporting because free journalism is such a vital aspect of a functioning democracy.

    I respect your choice so much – having made some difficult ones in my life – but I hope you can figure out how to use your huge gifts and privilege, not just abdicate them. For instance, in Canada we desperately need a reputable Democracy Now-style alternative news roundup, and there is a thriving alt media scene already (rabble.ca, Briarpatch, This, Tyee, Georgia Straight, Monday, Now, Xtra!, Candian Dimension, Adbusters, Geez, Real News Network, The Media Co-op).

    Your career isn’t terminated. It’s just begun. With your skills, reputation and moral integrity, there is a place for you in the alternative media movement! Welcome.

  391. Old Possum said:

    What a pleasure to read such an eloquent and intelligent essay. I agree 100% with what you have to say, Kai. I came to Canada when I was 21 and am about to officially become a senior citizen. While I still believe Canada is a great place in which to live, I despair at the kind of thing that passes for journalism these days: the obsession with so-called “celebrities” being the most obvious, but worse still, the fact that journalists have to filter the news through the boardroom, before Joe Public is allowed to read it!

    Keep up the good work! I hope you find what you are looking for!!

  392. This is a great essay and I could not agree more with your views. If you ever find yourself in Portland, Oregon you can crash on our couch.

  393. David said:

    Very interesting post. You should take a look at Col John Boyd’s “To be or To do?” (http://dnipogo.org/john-r-boyd/to-be-or-to-do/). I can say that it’s a truth for Cdn military – you can either decide to “be somebody”, get all the checks in the boxes and likely abandon any of the reasons you joined and get promoted, or DO something, and likely be forgotten by the system and see people you thought should be fired promoted ahead of you.

  394. jason mutch said:

    So many replies perhaps you will not see this. Anyway, I like this piece. You mentioned you wanted to better yourself intellectually. I offer you this site and one of its mandatory readings on economics. Once you get a hold of these basic concepts of fiscal and monetary operations, you will be more outraged at the current governments. Best,
    Jason
    Warren Mosler is a well known economist, has been on reuters, bloomberg, huff post etc.
    http://moslereconomics.com/

    this book by him (free on his website) is simply brilliant and a quick read

    http://moslereconomics.com/wp-content/powerpoints/7DIF.pdf

  395. Karen Spencer said:

    You had me at “hello”!. Jerry McGuire, I salute you.

  396. Kai, so based on the embarrassing number of typos in my comment a moment ago, might I just blame it on my iPod’s autocorrect, and not (simply) on horrendous spelling. Journalism has INDEED become lazy. :-)

    The point that I see most clearly is the self-censorship that we do, especially when we are trying to ‘work up the ladder’, afraid of getting knocked back down or being found out to be imposters.

    Never mind that one of journalism’s creeds is in fact, “to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable,” and that the role of free speech and fair criticism has ALWAYS been woven into the fabric of journalism. The fluff being sold now is obviously more comforting to the mainstream and corporate sponsors – but I always try to remember the great journalists out there – the Robert Fisks, Naomi Kleins, Avi Lewises, Arundhati Roys, etc.

    Apart from the shallowness of news presentation and ‘picking from the bottom of the tree,’ we need to be particularly attentive to the way our privilege as journalists so often biases our stories, makes us present two false opposite positions (the myth of “balanced reporting”), and rush to meet deadline at the cost of missing out key stakeholders, or new angles.

    Best of luck to you, I hope to meet you.

  397. Wayne said:

    wow Kai, i sincerely wish you the best, I know you can begin to line up the dots. Nothing you do is a waste of time, it just enriches your capability to perform better. The media will be your calling now you have created your online sensation. Go deeper and show the world how Canada cares.

  398. iolarah said:

    I really hope what you’ve said gets enough exposure to make people think long and hard about what constitutes news. I’m so frustrated by the political apathy that’s infected Canada in the last five years or so, and I suspect not many will demand change, but maybe we’ll get lucky and your act will spark discussion that will set off a chain reaction towards change. A butterfly in Texas…

  399. Rein said:

    Thank you and well put. Although I have not found myself in a position of influencing people on any important matter, I have found similar disillusionment in the past. The steps I took to break away from seemingly prosperous paths towards paths that aligned better with my beliefs were all worthwhile. Good luck.

    Your story reminded me of a book called The Corrosion Of Character by Richard Sennett. I recommend it if you haven’t read it. I think I’ll go back and read it again.

    • Rein said:

      Oh, and I would like to add, there are some beacons of excellence that should be recognized. One example I would cite is Steve Paikin at TV Ontario. Despite occasionally splashing about in the shallow pool of professional sports entertainment, he generally conducts and leads some of the best researched, thought out and relevant journalistic programming currently available. I wish there were more like him on Canadian airwaves.

  400. Cindy said:

    Ce que tu as fait est très courageux, et tellement inspirant! Je suis certaine que plusieurs jeunes de notre génération saluent ta décision. La désillusion se fait vite sentir lorsqu’on commence dans ce métier, et il est tentant de se fondre dans le moule pour gravir les échelons. J’ose espérer que les médias télévisés retrouveront bientôt leur dignité, que quelques braves renverseront enfin la vapeur… mais rien n’est moins sûr. D’ici là, trace ton chemin, que ce soit dans ce milieu ou dans un autre, tes convictions te mèneront loin.
    Merci pour le partage! J’ai été très touchée en lisant ceci. Et ça m’a rassurée sur mon propre avenir.
    Bonne chance!

  401. I admire your courage to cease to forward a cause you no longer believe in. While I disagree with many of your statements concearning the conservatives, I’m probably not the best one to be trumpeting their cause either , since I refuse to join their party , i support them yet do not want to become too close to them…

    television as a medium is dying , but this does not mean journalism needs to die. Viral video’s , with commercials built right in that are too hard to get rid of (ie: your microphone has a brand name on it , so does your jacket) are the obvious next step. People pay for those brand names and you just cut those video’s free to scatter to the internet where-ever they please.

    Unbiased journalism vanished a long time ago , and I have been waiting decades to see if it will ever make a return.

    And I am still waiting.

  402. prinkipo said:

    Bravo! A very courageous act and a very nice essay. I think something very healthy and very encouraging is going on among a lot of twentysomethings in this country.

    Long live Kai Nagata and Brigette DePape!

  403. Chudwick von Hotsauce VII said:

    Way to puss out you “tired looking” dingle berry

  404. Dear Kai,

    I cannot even begin to imagine how extremely difficult this choice might have been for you, as society places so many expectations for you the be the “best journalist” that we can get a hold of. You really have taken a bold move and stood up for honesty within our world. I would love to meet you and say these words in person if I ever could do that.

    Self-reflection and a time to really make the real choices are something I have personally taken so much into my life, as I have (through different circumstances) come out of the closet (quite literally, actually!). Our world is not kind for us to have a sense of personal autonomy and in having a quest for honest integrity within every facet of our lives possible. I have immense respect for you, because you have done something that only “a few” have ever dared risked with.

    You seem very observant and very aware on the impact of your words. I hope the absolute best for you and that you get to use your newfound energy for a good cause. Wherever you go, they would be most definitely happy to have you.

    I would love to meet you and I wish there was a way to contact you. I am a university student at Trent in Peterborough and I am also deeply concerned with the state of the Canadian society and governance. Alas though, I hope you are enjoying your new venture in being a self-reflective human being. Welcome to the group(s)!

    Take care,
    Will Brereton (The Coffee Soul)

  405. T said:

    Thank you for having the courage to speak out loud what’s in your mind and heart. It’s so refreshing to hear from people who can still think for themselves and have formed an educated opinion about the state of our media and Government. I’ve been really disheartened lately about where our country is headed and we need more people like you, to take our government to task. I hope to hear more from you in the near future.

    Good luck in your journey. At 31 I’ve finally started mine and it is amazing to live life as you want to live it.

  406. HI Kai,

    I recently (2009) left a career and executive position in the mainstream media to pursue a socially conscious venture I’m calling “The ONE Network”. http://www.theonenetwork.ca

    I’m also exec producing a doc on people who have picked up and left their jobs/lives to pursue their passions/do something more meaningful/follow their heart etc. Please contact me if you’d like to know more, I would love to discuss how we could work together.

    Richard Garner

  407. Frank said:

    Bravo, you said what many of us think but not many of us have the balls to lay a job on the line for those beliefs. I wish you all the success in the future, I have a feeling this isn’t the last we will hear from you.

  408. Muriel said:

    So very well said. I hope you continue to write and cover politics independently while owning your own opinions.

    I quit radio news some time ago for similar reasons although I could not have articulated them so well.

    Every Canadian should read this, especially the section under the heading “coming out of the closet”

    Bravo!

  409. Pista said:

    While you hit the nail on the head with this country (and others) playing out Ken and Barbie theatrics on the evening news, you still seem to be caught up in the act yourself. It seems clear that you obsess over the artificial left-right paradigm that is used to prevent people from delving into the real issues that face us. Your thinly veiled attempt at presenting yourself as a political moderate just doesn’t work. You talk about wanting to wake people up, well then start with waking yourself up! You made a stand, fine, you should be congratulated, but stop playing into the very non-sense you claim to have stood up against.

  410. Jean-Yves Pelletier said:

    Bravo!
    Je suis un vieil homme mais j’ai ressenti de l’espoir en vous lisant.
    S’il y avait plus de jeunes comme vous (qui se donneraient aussi la peine de voter), on ne serait sûrement pas sous le joug d’un gouvernement comme celui de M. Harper ou de M. Charest.

  411. Derek Lipman said:

    This is a courageous, poignant, and insightful post.

    Cheers, Kai.

    Derek Lipman

  412. noah said:

    Its good that you have taken the first step to freedom , but the “whole trip” is going to be a lot harder.

    The most important thing content creators can do is edit properly.
    Deliver information on stories that matter and/or bring to light fun issues that interest and stimulate.
    We need a staged process to organize and filter,

    long form – video- radio- short form- twitter….

    If the story is important enough there should be enough talented people that can “attack” the issue from different views angles and vantage points therefore hopefully shedding real light on the facts.

  413. Scott Lanaway said:

    Great blog, very thoughtful and open analysis. Congrats on your decision.

  414. Michelle said:

    Your posts are beautifully written and inspiring. I hope that you do continue to use your talents for writing, storytelling, and reason-based commentary. You are much needed. Clearly, the response to your personal decision and eloquent public explanation show you how many people out there crave a voice like yours.

    Kudos, and all the best in your adventure. You’re going to be flooded with offers, you’ll have your pick once you’re ready.

  415. Andre said:

    Moment of clarity! Congratulations on your new path Kai. Follow your heart brother. Namaste

  416. Scott said:

    Absolutely amazing article. You nailed it. Our thoughts are in complete parallel. Good luck with whatever it is you’ll do next, I hope some day we can meet for an even more detailed conversation.

  417. Henry S. said:

    Good luck! We need more people like you

  418. adelle said:

    I sincerely hope you don’t leave journalism. I hope you eventually consider documentary film-making, Perhapes you will find one of the few independent media outlets left and consider taking a position there. It can be frustrating since there are fewer resources but it is rewarding. I agree with so much of your argument but I hate to see another good journalist leave the industry just as the industry needs them. Our profession is not an ugly monster that must be staked in the heart as some here have suggested. We need better patrons and we need to explain our relevance to an audience that, like you state so clearly, would rather eat white sugar. At the same time, I think the time has come for some kind of real accountability in journalism.

    May your journeys bring you joy and wisdom.

    When you are done travelling, perhapes come back to us.

  419. Well Kai, if your journey should lead you to Berlin, I’ll buy you a beer. (Really. The beer’s fantastic here.)

  420. Heywood said:

    Sure you’re not clinically depressed?

    Sure you didn’t lose out on a promotion?

    Why not try to change the culture from within, rather than flouncing off in a huff?

    I’m sure that whoever replaces you will be grateful for the opportunity, and life will go on, and your rant will fade into the tapestry of TV news history.

    Those viewers who like to be attracted to their reporters? They’re part and parcel of the process. They were your employers, just as much as the network executives were. And multicultural “tokens?” They’re part of the picture, too. Read the copy, look good. That’s the job. Maybe you should apply for a job WRITING the copy for the anchorman, if you want to have a greater influence.

    Question: You’re a kid, not a jaded, tired old guy–didn’t you bother to watch “Broadcast News,” and “Network” and even the farcical “Anchorman” before you decided to get into the TV reporter line of work? What in hell were you expecting?

    It’s a daily grind. Newsflash: most jobs are. It’s a rare and lucky person who can get their delight from the thing that provides their daily bread.

    • Kal136 said:

      Question: do you receive all of your understanding of society from movies?

    • I'm almost 30, WHERES MY GOLD WATCH. said:

      If I may, the point here appears to be that taking a stand by quitting is not altruistic when compared to working through the less pleasant aspects of an industry and earning the respect of ones colleagues and superiors up in hopes of supporting or initiating the changes you believe are necessary.

      Question: Do you think focusing on the least intelligent remarks in a post and then disregarding everything else that was said is a logical way to improve your understanding of alternative view points?

    • PAM said:

      Dear mister Hey, please get out of the woods and start to look at your comments…

      This guy seems perfectly happy to me.

      Certainly more free than most.
      I would understand someone to be jalous of him.
      After all, few have his guts.

      I have seen this behaviour in small towns where people goes after the head of anyone who rises above.

      Are you from a village?
      Or do you have that calm demeanour that show the village is in you?

      Any fact to trigger your judgment?
      Are you a training psycho something?

      What kind of psycho and what is your path?
      Is this part of any training?
      Or are you just living a miserable life?

      I am so please to see you showing us your IQ.
      You know, I have tomatoes in my garden…
      They seem in harmony with my potatoes and my onions.
      And farmers certainly have more common sense than what I see here.
      At least the let the plant grow before cutting it and eating it.

      I really hope you don’t see any insults because 2+ 2 = 5.
      I guess you missed that one also…

  421. Tracey said:

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. For saying it like it is.

    Looks like this change will let you find your voice.

  422. brian said:

    I applaud this man’s decision to move on. Newsrooms across this country are running on skeleton crews and the focus has shifted to simply maintaining a job, rather than pursuing stories.

  423. Michael said:

    I enjoyed reading your blog. Best of luck on all your future endeavours.

  424. Impressed and Hopeful said:

    An exceptional piece, Kai, but it couldn’t have been anything but. Hard to trump authenticity, and so vital we follow our hearts if we are to establish and maintain genuine personal integrity. As others have said in many different ways, congratulations on declaring your freedom. It is indeed refreshing and a relief to know there are ‘next-gen’ citizens such as yourself who simply won’t sacrifice their souls to the ‘game’. You are not alone and while the way forward may not yet be clear there is much potential and plenty of room in the world for a thoughtful, authentic voice.

  425. James said:

    Great article. You speak so many truths it’s scary.

  426. Not Another Reporter said:

    Bravo! Well said. There truly is nothing like the feeling of real freedom to express one self, and not have to fear being fired for it, or having it patented and claimed as company property. I wish you luck in your journey!

  427. Hugh Heibein said:

    Thanks….someone who can literally explain how I feel.
    Hugh

  428. Patriotik said:

    Good going Kai! Thanks for taking a stand.

    The problem is the corporatisation of information as a commodity (and just about everything else frankly), so when there is a monetisation expectation (profit motive) for information (news/journalism), we’re doomed. Have been for years.

    The only way around this is an arm’s length, fully-funded public news organisation, with legislated, guaranteed annual funding to support its critical work. This would be governed entirely by a citizen utility board (which, incidentally, is supposedly the CRTC, but it’s not because they’re so handicapped by political expediency and corruption). We’re close with the CBC, except that it has become too dependent on commercial interests and therefore cannot hope to uphold journalistic integrity, by answering to competing masters, the government and advertisers. Really, the only constituents a broadcaster of news should answer to is the public. The CBC needs to be completely separated from any commercial considerations.

    Bell’s increasing monopolisation of ‘media’ (often confused with news) such as CTV and a host of other outlets is a shameful example of the CRTC’s failure, and the overriding imperatives of corporate demands rather than serving the public interest.

    The financial armageddon coming in the US will only highlight where we have derailed, if we look (or are informed), about 40 years ago, when we were hoodwinked into allowing our civic commons to be usurped by monetarists (the privatisation of the money supply). This actually is a great example of where news outlets are failing the public, by not revealing exactly why we’re in the state we’re in. We never will have truth so long as news broadcasters (and print too) answer to profit pressures. No mystery. It’s all related.

    The daily revelations of Murdoch’s ‘news’ empire (so far in the UK) imploding are great examples of this as well. What lengths ‘news reporters’ will go to to create, let alone report, news. Again, money is at the root of that too.

    All the best on your epiphany and personal journey for “Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

  429. Abbie V said:

    courageous and perceptive artice. May your new beginning be filled with happiness and success Kai.

  430. e.dalian said:

    good for you!!!

  431. Carrie said:

    As a current intern at CTV news, I wholeheartedly agree with your viewpoint and decision. I am only here for a short time, but it definitely is hard to cope with the commodity of journalism that TV brings out so well.

    I’m only here for the credentials, and I once thought that I would be able to change the nature of the beast from within (like yourself). I know this is naive.

    I want to teach news literacy to high schoolers so they can have an understanding about media’s relation to ideology vs. sponsors vs. the public good and notions of democracy. Why many well-meaning journalists exacerbate problems on issues they personally espouse.

    Cheers Kai! Hope to run into you someday.

  432. Marango said:

    Kanaigata, you should have looked for a job before quiting so that you don’t end up being homeless and without money. Anyhow, too late but I am glad you followed yor heart. Good luck and I wish you a bright future.

  433. kyei said:

    In response to kai nagata “why i quit my job” i feel he is correct about most things, especially of how in the news people either in court or in the world can find the whole story about what really happened, or what else was added to the evidence; stuff like that. in my eyes i thinks its crazy of what is going on in the media, but then again i think it really suck for Kai because he had so many ideas that he wanted to share but the world has to realize that all ideas are going to get unravelled in the media, and really its not going to be the persons idea. if i were him i would do the same thing and quit because seeing everything that is going on in the broadcast; in addition, to the media and how they rather rake up money then get the real story and showing everybody what ‘really’ went down in the certain situation. also on another note, kai is correct about how news broadcasts worry more about the attractiveness like hiring pretty woman or good looking man, so that the news can get high ratings and large amounts of money coming their way.i applaued to kai’s actions and how television news is not the best use of any persons short life

  434. mike e said:

    Interesting article, i like your opinions about political, social, and media issues in Canada. It was very insightful about our countrys direction right now.

  435. Natalie said:

    I am a better person for reading this.

  436. I’m happy for your change and honesty, and I hope you continue to do journalism if you’re not afraid of saying what needs to be said. I watch the news on TV and I know it’s garbage, but at the same time, I know there’s so much not being said and avoided about our country and I won’t know about it. If our country was as well off as we are made to think, we’d have successful peacekeeping, we would work on fixing our economy, and education and health care would have better funding and results. You need to have a show like 60 Minutes, which I find quite informative on issues and subjects that I otherwise wouldn’t hear of on TV at all.

  437. Your parents should be very proud of you. I’m old enough to be your mother, and I am pleased to know young people like you exist.

    It seems to me that Canada and the United States are more alike than I realized, although I think Canadians are still politer to each other.

    I wish you the best of luck in your future endeavors.

  438. Leslie said:

    The truth is Canada is not unlike the States. The folks we have voted in ensure distraction is happening. Fear and Distraction is what allows the truth to be hidden and we as a nation will ultimately suffer. We are complacent Canadians and it is refreshing to see someone like Kia refusing to buy into the BS. Congratulations to him on his bravery for living a truth instead of living the lie.

  439. Harry Jaako said:

    Thanks for your thesis. Refreshing, candid, sincere, uplifting.

    All the best in your future. You will do well at whatever appeals to you to do. Never lose your perspective.

    Harry Jaako,
    Vancouver, BC

  440. Robert McKenzie said:

    I know some very bright people – John Grant is one of them – who have survived in the monosyllabic world of TV news bulletins. Those who survive know and accept that it’s no place for introspection or thoughtful analysis. If you come to terms with that, you can stay on, make a decent living and have a lot of fun doing it. Sadly, it’s no place for anyone searching for Truth with a capital T, Virtue with a capital V or the Advancement of Mankind with a capital A and a capital M. And, sadly, one resignation will do nothing to change that.

  441. Felix said:

    Mr. Nagata, well said. This is verbatim how I’ve felt about mainstream journalism in the West and the attitudes and actions of our government. If only you and more people like you were in a position to change things for the better.

    Thank you for the excellent read and let us hope the future is better than the present.

  442. Alexander Pushkin said:

    Inspiring.

  443. Welcome to the real world of standing up for your beliefs. It sucks but at least you get to go to sleep with a clear conscience. You need the sleep to battle the dragons in politics. It is nice to watch them fall. That and two bucks ‘ll get you a coffee in most places in CANADA.

  444. andrewo said:

    Spectacular, now can you please explain how the second law of thermodynamics works and how it relates to the theory of global warming? You didn’t cite one argument buttressing global warming that was based on atmospheric physics.

  445. Teresa Williams said:

    I’ve just been waiting for someone to start a revolution, maybe you’re the guy. I somtimes think back to the witch trials of salem. I’m afraid to say what I’m thinking because I’ll be burned at the stake for thinking that buying a house was the worst mistake I’ve made, or that getting irate when the media uses adjectives such as an “iranian” man, or a “black” man or a “muslim” man has killed someone. As if that some how makes it worse. When a poor young woman was raped, and she was going to university and everything, it somehow makes it far worse than someone that wasn’t smart or pretty. Oh, I think I’ve just begun my own story. I’ll leave the story telling to you, but if you ever start a revolution, I’ll be happy to be your right hand man … even though I’m a woman.

  446. He’s making a personal choice to be able to own his own thoughts, beliefs and creative work. At 24, it’s pretty hard to compromise on those things and give it all to The Man. How many people do that, however, in order to feed their families? Trapped. Run while you can, Kai, and I hope you find work that’s better aligned with your vision and spirit before you are forced to make soul-destroying compromises again.

  447. Kia Nagata, I wish you GOOD LUCK.I don’t really believe you understand Canada at all yet. I hope you won’t be too disappointed, perhaps you will be lucky and get a good job. I hope you do because Canadians are not the nice people we want everyone to believe.Just maybe you’ll luck out.My own experience has been dreadful.If you think you are broke now try being blacklisted for over 25 years and being told by hi priced lawyers that the powers that be have said you will never work again.And I was trying to develop cancer cures.Google my name E.A.Greenhalgh to get to my cancer website,Good luck , kid, I really really hope you survive, because I have taken one hell of a pounding standing up for my rights.ATB Ed G

  448. Lauren said:

    What an incredible piece – the industry needs more people like you, but I understand your desire to make a difference in a new way. Bonne chance!

  449. Awesome, Kai! This is a wonderful and brave essay. Can’t wait to see what’s next for you.

  450. Akshay said:

    There’s a general lack of inspiration left in people these days, and clawing on to the security of a job is our biggest failure. To be shaken up and active and to think is the best thing one can do for themselves. Kudos to you. And hopefully at least one person might learn from your actions. I am happily shit-job free as of 2 months ago. Joyous.

  451. Dennis Murphy said:

    I am humbled to read your essay, even more so to have you share it with us. Your courage is palpable. Just don’t get drowned in the torrent of comments your essay has generated. Know, rather, that you have touched us all either by reminding us of what courage means, or by reminding us that we have forgotten what courage means.

    Dennis Murphy

  452. Greetings,

    Wow. I haven’t read as clear and concise an indictment of what is wrong with the current political and business ‘environment’ in a long time. You’ve pretty much echoed what I’ve been saying privately for a while…especially with regards to Harper & Co. I commend you for your insight, and I hope you fare well in the future. :)

    Regards,

    B.V.V.

  453. Sam said:

    Congrats on your courage to move on! Miracles happen when we make space for them. Expect this to be the best decision you ever made, because I know it can be. Having made a similar leap of faith a few months ago, I offer the advice I have found most helpful: “Embrace the excitement and release the fear. Trust your heart and trust the process and it will work out in amazing ways you can’t imagine from here”. The world is desperate for good reporters and perhaps you will join others in creating a new venue?, or something far different and even better is around the corner. If you ever go into politics, you have my vote. I have found unity online radio at http://www.unity.org to be spiritually inspiring without as much religous baggage, though you probably have an abundance of resources of your own.

  454. Congratulations on making the right choice for you. Good luck on your journey. I have been struggling for quite some time now to figure out how best to be the change in this world that I want to be.

    it starts with one step…

  455. Gray said:

    While age is not always a determiner of wisdom, there are things that occur, often, at similar intersections of development for any generation, despite the year on the calendar. Not everyone ‘wakes up’. From my perspective however, that awakening is just the beginning if, you become the difference you want to see. Go home, talk it over and get a hold of your ‘us versus them’. You say you are not partisan but your awareness may now make you one. You are talking about things as if you are not part of them but no matter where you go you are a part of the system; just from a different perspective and with different leverage to make a difference. You can make a difference if you are involved. Social media might allow you some access from a distance and through editorial but as some have stated above you will need to find your way back into this system if you hope to influence it. Good luck!

  456. Keith said:

    Isn’t this a sweet stand to take… previous generations of such forward thinkers did things like throw their aprons on McDonalds’ grills during a Friday night rush, walked out on kids’ wadding pools, refused to take out garbage at the end of their shift. Really, now…what you are going through is just late adolescent angst… too bad you gave up a job that many in your generation would have given up their Blackberrys or iPhones to do.

    Enjoy you travels across Canada…

  457. Chelsea G. said:

    Kai,

    Thanks for crystalising what has been in my mind for a long time on the current state of affairs in our country. All the best, I sincerely hope you find your passion.

    Chelsea G.

  458. Wallace Harshaw said:

    Well thought, well said, and bravely done. One has only to read the comments for backing examples to your thesis and your examples.
    Best of luck to you.

  459. Rudy Rogalsky said:

    What a breath of fresh air! Such clear and honest thinking is a rarity in Canadian journalism and I fear it’s going to get even more scarce in the next 5 years. Bravo! It saddens me that so many of the critical responders to your statement seem to have been captured by ideology. Good luck in whatever you do but I hope that there’s still a journalistic home somewhere in Canada where your principles will be honoured and allowed to flourish.

  460. Matt said:

    Generation bitch n’ moan strikes again. As a part of this group by birth I hereby apologize for this tool’s childish narcissistic entitlement.

    • Ken Burch said:

      Why do you see his blog as just “bitching and moaning”? Is there a reason you assume that he could only be quitting a job on principle out of self-indulgence?

      And is your implication that maturity means ABANDONING all your principles and standards(which Kai Nagata would have to have done to remain in the MSM)?

      Why?

      If you can’t give a clear answer to that question, then we must assume that you’ve simply been paid by CTV or the Conservative Party to post a drive-by dis.

    • Fraser said:

      If you want to change the paradigm you should be working your way to the top not giving up because you can’t stand filtering out your own personal agenda.

      Maturity means not “ABANDONING” a pursuit because there is unpleasant work to be done along the way. Censoring your own opinions and being an objective journalist as defined by your employer is doing a job not “abandoning principles”. You do the job so that one day you can earn the right to editorialize or sign off on the editorializing of young journalists bellow you. You change the system from within because, generally, starting from scratch means redoing lifetimes of work.

      The sense of entitlement that is being decried is Kai`s assertion that he should be allowed to speak his mind and show his own personal biases while reporting news even though he is a young journalist with little experience and no credentials to suggest his agenda is in anyway worth broadcasting.

      If he stuck with his job, toed the line, and moved his way up, then perhaps then he would learn why things are the way they are and be able to convince CTV that his ideas about how a news station should be run were worth some experimentation.

      Quitting and writing a blog complaining about how the system is flawed because it does not stand up to his idealistic preferences developed over a career of less than 2 years shows hubris, and impatience.

      Hopefully Kai is happier in his new life and doesn`t waste more time incredulous that society refuses to be the way he expects it to be.

      • Dan Perillo said:

        I completely and 100% disagree with you Fraser. You are saying that him not working up in a company that does not share his morals and goals is abandoning something?

        So you would work for a company that is against your moral code and general happiness? I sure wouldn’t. Not to mention that he may be able to change 1 stupid company from doing it. That is so short sited and small.

        Kai is looking at the bigger picture and realizes he can do a lot more than change that one station.

        Open your eyes and look at the big picture man. Its not about every little detail is about the big picture.

        I would NEVER work for a company that did something that I disagreed with.

        • ek said:

          Are you fucking telling me if a company did one thing you disagreed with you’d quit? Or not even consider working for them? What sort of odd little ideal planet do you live on, and how many jobs are there? I worked for Rogers broadcasting for many years and the company creed was ‘company first.’ If you don’t like that then work somewhere else. They are not designed to fit your sense of right/wrong/policy/politic whatever. I think you will be hard pressed to find a place that simply fits ‘you.’ It’s not like CTV or any other station is selling babies from China. Fraser you are on the money.

          • Marthe Lépîne said:

            to ek: It is your way of thinking that explains some of the hanky-panky that went on in some companies like Enron in the US: The boss said to cook the books, the drones cooked the books… Same thing with some of the US “great” investment advisors who defrauded billions (Madoff or whatever his name was) – A company creed that says “company first” and is “not designed to fit your sense of right/wrong/policy/politic whatever” means that anything goes if it makes money and whistleblowers are simply traitors, or people unable to do their job!

          • Dan Perillo said:

            I am saying that I would not be a software developer for Exxon Mobil or for Haliburton. I would not work for a company that has values that I do not agree with.

            And for your information there are A LOT of jobs for software developers. I am not in the broadcasting field.

            For people who think outside the box like Kai he will find another job that fits him and makes him happy. That I believe is the goal instead of just having a job to get a check.

            • ek said:

              It’s easy to say you wouldn’t work for those companies now that they have been exposed. I wouldn’t either. However Kai is not dealing with a company that is actually poisoning the environment. I would not even compare them. CTV is a respected news source and deals with all kinds of stories, and yes the odd fluff piece. Look no further than W5 for solid investigative stories! I’m also saying most companies value making a profit over you desire to have Christmas Day off for example. That’s not bad, it’s business. Nothing will be a perfect fit even if you started your own business. You will have to do things you don’t like. I’m glad there are lots of software jobs, you picked a good vocation for the digital age! Jobs like Kai’s are not as plentiful and he will regret his move once he grows up. I promise there are plenty of people in journalism right now asking “Who does this guy think he is?”

            • Dan Perillo said:

              I cannot continue to argue with someone so short and narrow sited.

              Regret is something that Kai will not feel about this. He is looking for something WAY bigger than anything CTV can offer.

              Having a job and a paycheck isnt the most important thing in the world. At least not to everyone.

              If it is to you then that is fine. You are clearly showing that a paycheck is more important than your pride. That is fine for some, but for the truly intelligent and free thinkers, that is not enough to be happy in life.

              So yes your calling is money, Congrats EK, you have found it. Not everyone is so simple. So please open up your mind and think for yourself for once. I know its hard for people like you, but you should try it.

            • ek said:

              Good. That’s because you can’t back up your arguement with anything less than emotional, leftisit garbage. And I’m not even a right winger! Hate to blow your bubble. I quit my journalism job last year to be a stay at home dad. And in case you didn’t know the money in journalism actually sucks. So having a steady paycheck isn’t the most important thing in the world to me. Kai is looking for something WAY bigger than what CTV can offer? How romantic. I have dreams too…but they edge out reality.

  461. Evelyn R E said:

    “What I need is to better myself spiritually, physically, and intellectually, so I can effect meaningful change in the world around me. ” Thank you so much for sharing. Good luck to you and it seems you are already on your way. Reading this was very refreshing and it put a smile on my face to know others out there. Keep that flame going ^_^

  462. B B said:

    Kai, you’re a breath of fresh air. Your insight & clear thinking are so refreshing. You have given me hope for our future! My most sincere best wishes to you, I am so looking forward to seeing your career progress. Thank you!

  463. Doc McCoy said:

    I wish him all the best! Anyone that can stand up for what they believe in should be commended. Taking a great risk and challenging the norm are ideals to hold in high regard.

    I do feel that if he is going to make grand statements such as “war against science” and so on he should do what he can to uncover and bring these situations to light. It seems that those statements have as much weight as the “weapons of mass destruction” claims made by others. If you are truly free from the shackles of your corporate masters, you should probably use your obvious talents to freelance report and document your accusations.

  464. rance said:

    Brilliant!!! D. You have a big enough set to carry in a dump truck. Wish I was half as brave.Peace.

  465. Robert Hart said:

    Mr. Nagata, you have nothing but my deepest respect and admiration. Would that there were more Canadians with the vision and integrity that you have. All the best, sir, and I hope you do choose to write more. We desperately need people in this country who are able to help the rest, and based on what I have just read, I believe that you can be one of those people.

    Robert Hart, Halifax

  466. Patrick said:

    My first thought was “Tthis guy should be in politics. I would vote for him”. But then I fear that the requirements of our political system would ruin you. It is no better than the system you left. In your message, you spoke for millions of people in this country. We feel disenfranchised, abandoned by without recourse. IN short, we feel the same way you do. That’s why your message has spread so far and touched so many. Thank you, brother. You have guts, you have heart, and you have soul. Thank you, brother.

  467. Something will come up – it always does.

    Love is the highest goal to which a man may aspire said Victor Frankel in his epic “Man’s search for Meaning”.

    We really do need to be passionate about what we do.

    If you need a place to crash in Ottawa on your way through give me a call 613-356-6594

  468. tlahui said:

    A great future awaits you! Congratulations!

  469. Steve said:

    Have you considered starting your own political party and changing he government from the inside?

    • Melanie said:

      I was thinking the same. Time for a new party.

      • Melly mel said:

        I think he is someone I would def vote for! Kai for PM!

    • Ken Burch said:

      And the reason you say that is…?

      (hint, you don’t PROVE that something is “total BS” simply by stating that it is. You’re actually intellectually obligated to MAKE A CASE for your position).

  470. TV News is far from perfect. Just the fact that you had no desire to own a TV set should have been your first clue that you picked the wrong job.

    Best of luck with your next choice…… and with paying your bills.

    Yes it’s really that simple. No your blog post will not change the world.

    At least you had the balls to walk away from good money and a pension when you realized it wasn’t what you wanted to do. Congrats on that.

  471. James said:

    AMAZING! We need more people like you to speak the truth!!

  472. John Zimmerman said:

    Perfectly summarized my own frustrations with an apathetic media and a political right which seems bent on lulling us all into complacency. Thank-you.

  473. I really enjoy your written style. Write a book. I’ll buy it.

  474. I hope that your journey brings you peace and the sense of direction that you and every other human being deserves and has a right to.

    If the courage of your convictions as you have written for all to see are any indication, you are in for a truly incredible journey which I for one envy.

    May you find peace, happiness and true direction in life. Please continue to share with the world, as we all need people such as yourself who can be a guide. The world has enough sheep, we lack good shepherds.

    Jimi

  475. I can really relate to what you wrote.For a healthy democracy we need journalism that takes the time to cover stories not just sound bites of entertainment. I think everytime someone like you in a position with a good job has the courage to speak out if is so important it helps shake up the status quo. I hope that you continue in journalism or that your words inspire others who are in journalism to find ways to do good journalistic work. I know people like Naomi Klein and her husband Avi Lewis [formally from CBC] are doing great work and they are amazing journalists. So there is a way to carve out way that feels right for you. Also I think Real News started up in response to problems with mainstream media and a number of them are former CBC journalists so there is a growing movement to affect change in journalism. Good luck look forward to see what is next.

  476. My favorite reporter and personal hero, Robert Fisk, said recently “reporters should be neutral and unbiased on the side of those who suffer”. Having been a broadcast reporter myself recently, who also walked away for similar reasons, I must say that this is one of the most difficult standards this profession attempts to adhere to (if at all). The constant push to maintain objectivity, to be “fair and balanced”, and, as you’ve put it, to be profitable; has undermined our ability to inform the public about power, and to hold power to account, in the face of that power. Mr. Nagata, walk proud and tall – and never stay silent. You’ve taken a step in the direction of what you believe, and I will gladly walk with you in whatever direction you choose to take. Take care.

  477. Corey said:

    Many thanks for making this timely and affirming decision!

  478. S. Callaghan said:

    Where do we go from here? There is a generation emerging of activists/intellectuals that are interested in changing how things work at all levels of social or political existence who are no longer interested in the reform vs. revolution trap, or the liberal vs. conservative gong-show. A lot of us are reading Deleuze, Badiou, Klein, Negri, Ranciere, Klugman, Stiglitz, anything that can help us figure out what the heck is going on around us, and how to think through change or alternatives to what we have. And we have an opinion about it. Problem is we don’t have access to the public ear the way the networks (and their corporate interests) do. Internet is providing some possibilities, but it’s being dominated by the likes of Rebecca Black, and cute kids/animals doing cute things. You have touched a nerve. We’re listening. We’d love to help, argue, act (we are!). And we have a lot of ideas. Build us a forum. Light us up, and we’ll burn brighter than any spectrum could handle. Give us the means and resources to research the hell out of issues, and we’ll burn with the joy of the pursuit. Not for truth, or legitimacy, or power. But for a sign. Just the smallest sign that grace, wisdom, delicacy, and care still might count for something.

    Honestly, if there were a forum or space for people to spend their days focused on thinking through and acting on the kinds of issues you’ve touched on, we’d run ourselves into the ground to keep it vital and thriving. This space used to be the University, but even this is slowly capitulating to market interests. The anorexic job market is forcing us to design our interests to fit institutional needs. We thought it might be the media, but you’ve quite eloquently showed us why it’s not. We need something else. A think tank, political party, alternative news station, interconnected blogging site, or all of the above. Or something as yet unheard-of.

    We have a voice. We just don’t know yet quite how to make it heard.

    With you’re help…

  479. Wow ..what courage!!! Thank you for that.. I have been concerned about ethics, thoughtfulness & morals of many 20 plus kids in my life .. you are an inspiration. I would forward this to many of those ‘kids’ but the majority of them don’t have the patience for anything more than a ‘tweet’!!! May you have a wonderful life! DMcArthur, Vancouver

  480. Don Alexander said:

    Thanks. I agree with your observations and your course of action. I am commenting from a “television pioneer” perch going back to 1955. Seeds were planted then. The national broadcaster maintained some sense at the beginning.

    We discovered a powerful new medium. The possibilities have been frittered away and are sadly denied the public.

    When I quit TV, I reminded myself I am a “communicator” and that broad term has served me well this past half century.

    Don Alexander

  481. TimAnthony said:

    2nd last paragraph: “I’m broke, and yet I know I’m rich in love.”

    Those first 2 words are by themselves a pretty good reason to move on to “greener” pastures. No need to appeal for understanding, really.

    But, in the meantime, why the HELL are you BROKE, Ken?!?!?!? Are you irresponsible with your presumably substantial pay cheques? WTF! I’d love to hear your response – bet we all would. (Hint: it could affect your overall credibility with a lot of people.)

    • TimAnthony said:

      Got his name wrong – Kai, not Ken.

    • He’s 24, maybe he has school debts… a car.. a house ?!

  482. Grateful said:

    As a retired citizen in his sixties, I feel that I owe you and succeeding generations an apology for not having taken principled decisions during my career as you have just done. However, some 35 years ago I came to similar conclusions about Canada’s media to those you have articulated so well. Seventeen years ago I disconnected the TV for good, choosing not to contaminate my children with its mediocrity, commercialism and political spin. At that time, Nielson’s, the TV rating company, told me that I was one of a growing number of British Columbians who had become disenchanted with TV. My children are now grateful for my having taken that decision. They like most of their friends do not watch TV. Instead, they watch movies and surf the web. Ironically, one of them wants to be a foreign correspondent for a major TV network. It was she who sent me your blog. I reminded her that you and she have an opportunity to communicate honest opinion without compromising your principles and values — George Monbiot of the The Guardian is a good and very successful example. Indeed closer to home we have some good columnists with The Tyee. I look forward to hearing more from you. And best wishes for the next step in your career.

  483. BrentB said:

    While the inability to tell some stores that need to be told may cut into ones enthusiasm for the job, having to read mindless comments like those posted here by the silent majority of Harper supporters is what would drive me from the job.

    – the endless bird brain explanations of how the fact that Canada got 2 votes in the last election for a seat on the security council shows how well Canada is regarded internationally,

    - the insistence that mindless regurgitation of government press releases and statements by Ministers is the only reporting possible,

    - the people who are so happy to get their news from a conservative media which controls the agenda totally

    - that it is not the job of the Canadian media to hold the government to account … now that harper is in power … but hear then whine about that when the Liberals were in power.

    - and on and on and on

    The radical right has found its voice and taken over the country. Fortunately it is a small group. It is merely a matter of finding a way to get the new silent majority .. those under 30 who are ignoring the political space … to pay attention and this bunch will be relegated to the 4th division where they belong.

    The problem is convincing the new silent majority that they have to pay attention.

    What is the solution?

    • ek said:

      The solution is hold an election and vote them out, this is Canada after all. We did that a couple of months ago remember? There was a huge push to get the under 30 vote. Look what happened!! Harper majority. I don’t even care who’s in office, the point is this IS Canada not Lybia. Quit whinning.

      • ek said:

        oops! Libya…my bad.

  484. Bravo, très courageux et bonne chance pour la suite.

  485. After reading the blog, I could only think one word: “exactly”

  486. gary champoagne said:

    Très courageux indeed. To thine own self be true. This young man is trodding where most fear to go. Is easier to simply fall in line. Park your brain at the door and believe the nonsense they are feeding you. Put your head in the sand. Play ostrich most of your life or again live the illusion that you are changing things from the inside as Leonard Cohen says: “they sentenced me to 30 years of boredom trying to change the system from within.”
    Bonne chance.

  487. Jennifer said:

    A long explanation but well worth reading. Thanks for sharing in that much depth. Very inspiring! Good luck in your journey.

  488. I applaud your courage. You have followed your heart and surely you will find your way. I feel honoured that you shared your story with us and unveiled so many truths. I wish you much love for your journey.
    You are a remarkable human being with the rare qualities of integrity and conviction. Any chance you would run for Prime Minister!!? No, on second thought that would be a waste of your wisdom as so few would recognize the truth. Best of luck, spiritual friend.

  489. This will take a few minutes, but for a thought provoking and inspiring read, it’s worth it!

  490. Lorilea Miller said:

    I call that integrity. Go with it. Thanks for sharing.

  491. Steph said:

    Have you considered politics? I would vote for you! I would wish you luck, but I am sure you won’t need it to succeed in whatever you choose.

  492. Congratulations. If you’d like to come and have a stay at my farm you are most welcome. Louise May

  493. Good luck in your quest to speak the truth out loud and in doing so change the world. Keep it up.

  494. Robert Way said:

    I think you should narrate this speech in your own voice with a youtube video montage.

  495. Just me said:

    Thank you.
    You have neatly summed up in so many well written words the feelings I have for my country.

  496. Glad you figured out that mainstream media does not provide real news. Most of us knew that out before you were born. As for the rest of your blog post, I must say, your earnestness is matched only by your naivetee and narcissism, which must be why you have become a CBC hero. Sanctimonious 24 year olds are as old as mankind. You’ll realize soon enough that you really haven’t lived yet at all. At least you’re a thinker, although you are a rote dreary leftist right now. You’ll get it some day.

    • Grant said:

      Nice bit of mindless generalizing there. Arrogant twack.

  497. Grant said:

    Dude. This is the blog entry of the decade. You are so bang on it’s scary. Well done. This from another former reporter in the trenches who left the superficiality of TV news to try and make a real difference in peoples’ lives.

  498. Lisa said:

    I don’t own a tv, so I completely understand where you are coming from. I stopped watching Canadian TV news online a long time ago because there was no news. I admit, I watch Al Jazeera online because this is the only way I can learn about Africa, the Middle East, Europe and see what Canada looks like through the eyes of the world. What you describe about TV is also how I view print media. For years if I wanted to know what was going on around Canada, I had to go online and read newspapers from Montreal, Calgary, Halifax and Toronto because it’s as if the two dailies in Vancouver completely isolated readers from what was happening across the country. Now it’s the same story in all the newspapers, so we are nationally isolated and fed what they want us to absorb. It’s as if those in the media are “dumbing us down” ever so slowly, so we don’t realize it. The media in Canada just don’t get it – we are turning away from traditional mediums because we want to know what is going on within our borders and outside our borders, we want to hear new viewpoints, to learn, to expand. I learn more new things, more interesting viewpoints which I’ve never been exposed to before by watching one broadcast on AJ, than I ever would watching a whole year of CTV news. Good for you, and happy trails, it’s all about the journey, not the destination!

  499. Having read your essay and moving onto some of the comments, it baffles me how many people missed the point of your post entirely.

    This showed up on my facebook stream after half my year linked to it. It’s created a good bit of buzz and I’ve got this link sent to me from all sorts of circles. I’m recent grad and while I’m more of a techie, quiet a few of my friends from the program are going into journalism so you’ve definitely struck a chord there. Your post was intelligent, honest and eloquent deconstruction of some of the things that go on in the news room and effect what we see and hear on the morning (or evening) news. The other thing that resonated with me was your stance on integrity. You touched on it a bit, but as always, actions speak louder than words. You made the tough but right choice, standing up and refusing to compromise your integrity. Shrug off the cynical, ignorant and in some cases downright bashful comments. You can’t please everyone and some people have nothing better to do than to hate. There are hundreds more who support you. Good luck and if you’re ever make your way towards Toronto, you got a free beer and couch to crash on.

  500. Right on man. That’s awesome. Cheers from the Costal West (not Harper’s “West”).

  501. Daniel Cho said:

    I’m so happy that you are on a journey be a meaningful being in the world of media. I hope that that journey will bring passion to many others you may meet. I think it is quite absurd for people, who have bent over to the will of profit or viewership motivated people, and who naively think that journalism is something separate from you. I admire your courage to be an agent of change and refreshment. May the light that shines in your life guide you and keep you. May we all someday hear the wisdom from your journey.

  502. Nathan said:

    Cheers buddy,

    It is always refreshing to see someone stand up for his ideals. The soul is all we have left. You should never regret following your intuition. Try meditation, simplify everything in your life, shed your emotional baggage and there my friend you will find abundance and true liberation!

    You may loose faith in people, systems or politics. But never loose faith in yourself!

    Your great works have yet to come,

    Blessings,

    Nathan, salt Lake City, Utah

  503. Jay M. said:

    Kai,

    I’d like to shake your hand! Well said. Godspeed.

    Jay

    PS About 3x your age.

  504. nat said:

    congratulations, it sounds you will finally have a well deserved holiday and hopefully have some summer fun with family and friends. you are obviously smart and no doubt bold. we need a revolution and a way of organizing, gathering momentum and speaking the collective voice of so many that feel as alienated and baffled with the Canada we were once so proud of. I sincerely hope you will use your social status, fearless nature and perfect timing to encourage more silent and seemlingless helpless feeling comrads to take as fierce a stand as you have.

  505. Dave Piscopo said:

    The author is dead on in every aspect. He could have mentioned the asbestos issue also and much more. People need to wake up and read the issues out there. See what is going on. In Canada as Kai mentions yhe conservatives are destroying the Canadian fabric, but who cares!! Go watch America can dance as it to sinks into major finance problems. We always joke here amongst my fellow gov workers at how dumb the avg Canadian is when it comes to politics. They have no idea of the real goings on of the people they elected. Very sad indeed!

  506. T said:

    Here is a young intelligent soul not for sale , not for use as corporate shill , someone who chooses dialectic over rhetoric. awakened to the ownership of his journey ,lifes work and social contract , I am inspired and hope many more are aware of the deeper meaning of this declaration of purpose and the ability to see through the traps of tacit contracts the world is plunging itself into .I am 20 years senior to this man and I have rare occasion to hear of this type of conviction of conscience , I hope that this is to become the rule and not the exception for our future communities . You are a capable communicator , could I dare to suggest that you write a piece on how the social contract works in this country , few seem to have a grasp on how the “constitutional monarchy” allows despots to thrive under private legislation through letters patent ( monopolies) from the unelected authority of governors and lieutenants generals ,and how rented politicians set up statutes ,acts and legislation as platforms for there “personal ” (corporate personhood) gains after leaving elected office, Jim Flaherty ( minister of treasures) says “Canada is open for business”, I”d like everyone to know what that means. Thank you for your candor and constitutions

  507. John Marzolf said:

    First off, you are an idiot! The world is not a place as simple as you. At 24 you seem to think that you have seen the light and ran blindly towards it. What you have really done is ran home to Momma. She will protect you and make you feel better about yourself. There was not one original thought in your rant, but fools will lap it up and you will be smiling in the same media you apparently despise. Strange.
    Enjoy your fifteen minutes. Life is hard, even harder when your stupid. Your simple story has been told a million times, try telling a first-person story of living a handicaped life, living in real pain everyday for 45 years, being shunned by society, working and trying to find love and friendship. I haven’t, but my completely unknown sister has, and will continue to do so until she dies, unknown to the pitiful flock that follow the slop you wrote for no good reason.
    There are thousands of wonderful people living their lives,paying taxes and carrying burdens far greater than your distaste for your proffession, that make this country boil. Yes after, five hard years in the media, run away. Truly the type of mettle we need in our leaders!

    • Amen. Narcissism always backfires in the end. Take John’s advice, Kai, and grow up.

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      That amounts to telling a starving mexican to shut up, as ethiopeans have it way worse….

      That is called a sophism. You’re trying to establish an authority to serve as an axiom that will discredit the subject.

      Unfortunately, you don’t earn authority points in this life for being a better ”sufferer”. Sorry about that. You can get compassion, empathy maybe.

      All I read in ”envy”. Of the worse kind. You wouldn’t be able to get away with this, so no one should. This is actually pathetic.

      As for calling Kai an idiot…..well, if you cannot see the intelligence, the talent and the passion, you’re blind…..or the best idiot around here.

  508. Just did something similar. Now backpacking around India. I took seven years out of the western workforce and ‘career’ earlier in life, and it was no problem at all. No regrets. When you want to go back to the west, they’ll throw jobs at you. Don’t worry. Live. You are right.

  509. tkillian said:

    just another spoiled youngster upset with democracy and tv news because it doesnt reflect his own leftist thought. grow up, stop whining and get a real job in the oil sands for a couple of years and then come back and talk to us.

  510. I’m 60 and been working as radio reporter for more than 10 years in the 80′s. I was alone and making the show, giving the public the most reliable information on the community’s politics, economics, social views… Not everyone agreed with the role, because it was straight forward, but the result was solid. I had to move and never went back to making the news, because of the control on the content.

  511. Worldbeatboy said:

    Welcome to the other side mate. There’s a hefty minority of us over here. Not sure if we can right the balance, but we’ll have fun trying. I too am on the road, but no truck. Just motorcycle heading west. A lot older, more experienced, but no wiser than ye. Your blog helped with my courage quotient as I read. Will continue to follow….but don’t let all the fuss go to your head. I don’t think you will….

    http://allpoetry.com/poem/8510527-A_Sane_Revolution-by-D_H_Lawrence

  512. While Harper makes it easy, demonizing him helps foster the real problem; our country is increasingly less tolerant. We need to address our reoccurring problem, not identify a culprit so we can distance ourselves from our own applied weaknesses and vulgarities.

    Science – the method – is unquestionably a powerful tool (albeit by times misused for marketing) with extraordinary potential. Science – a proper noun used to identify an omnipotent force – carries more religious charge than solution. As a tool it can only lead to improvements if we drive it, not follow it repeating its name with misguided faith.

    Change is an odd beast, societies long for it, fear it and fight against it simultaneously. We strike out at what we don’t understand and therefore fear; which unfortunately works out for the most part to be people who do not appear to be ‘us’.

    We need to take back our parliament from big business by energizing our communities and sending representatives to Ottawa rather than having them send their recruits to us. (Frankly I think if we won back our literature we could see the power of storytelling where things do not lend themselves to perfect little packages, desirable and undesirable intermingle, good and evil are two views of the same thing.)

    News reporting is perceived to be reasonably objective like yelling ‘fire’ when required. Obviously it can’t be, existence is too complicated to be expressed objectively. It must be interpreted to be understood and in that interpretation lies the lies. Maybe you direct your talent to writing plays.

  513. Well done, you now have a global audience! – A Canadian scientist in Singapore.

  514. Christopher Richardson said:

    I found your blog and looked forward to reading it since I – as a journalism school graduate 25 year ago – have always believed that TV journalism was fundamentally flawed. (You can’t avoid journalists becoming celebrities themselves – a major problem).

    Unfortunately – what I found was left wing talking points. You lament we have no Olberman or Maddow? Wow. You repeat the same tired characterization of FOX. You whine about Harper. You use the same language of the left down south: ie..a war again science.

    I applaud principled decisions. I’ve made a few in my career too. And I agree strongly with the short-comings of TV journalism. But there a whiff of holier than though in much of the above.

    I wish you luck.

  515. john said:

    Facts, absent valid context, are not ‘News’. Sadly, throughout his manifesto, Mr Nagata has used the same hackneyed euphemisms to describe the age old drivers in society. Perhaps he is not as courageous as he wishes to believe. Stating ‘conservatism’ when the issue is Divine Right vs. Your Rights. Stating ‘left’ when that expression is used to denigrate the issues of concern to Classical Liberalism (you know, that which birthed the Parliamentary model and base personal liberty?).
    Perhaps Mr Nagata needs to understand that Rome never died, that togas were merely exchanged for Mitres…and that the same old crowd has been subverting the Commonwealth and the uSa for quite some time.
    Additionally, nothing he has stated is anything new. Only todays generation has been lulled to such an extensive sleep as to consider his musings to be ‘novel’.

  516. I’m proud there is a Canadian in the media who would say what you said. Awesome.

  517. Mary Spence-Thomas said:

    My partner, the late Jim Reed (CBC, CTV-W5 host for many years) wrote on his blog ReedWrites.ca: Journalism is nothing but the effort to get as close to the Truth as possible. Attention to detail and a respect for facts are the hallmarks of good journalism. Read accurately, analyze carefully and don’t jump to conclusions.”

    He was a man of high integrity, a seeker of justice and a tireless campaigner for peaceful solutions to situations on both global and local levels. Years ago he gave up his lucrative position for some of the same reasons you did and never looked back. He died recently with his soul intact.

    I smiled as I was reading your post as so many things that you wrote were reminiscent of Jim and his values.

    I wish you the very best on your new journey. Life is about Truth, beginning with ourselves. Everything else will fall into place.

    Thank you. You’ve given me hope.

  518. john said:

    ‘Journalism’ is a science and an art. It is a science, in that it is simply just another organization of data. It is an art, in that that data needs to be formed in such a way as to inform of not only the action in play, but the allegiance of the players…to whom do they pay duty? Not only to the political parties involved, but the religious composition of said…where does the guidance for said always come from? Not only to new issues, but to those issues that are ancient…and are they merely revealing themselves in new guises until properly dealt with?

    I see no hope generated by someone who has chosen to remove himself from the fray. I do hope that, in his reflections to come, he will chose to undertake the truly good fight, start a real news service with the aid of other ‘silent sufferers’ in the business, and become what he seems to subconsciously desire…a philosopher reporter, blending the best of science and art.

  519. Alex Gagnon said:

    Wow! What a post! You’re without doubt a talented journalist! Wish you the career you deserve! If you want it!

  520. Chris said:

    You will no doubt be hailed as a free thinker. In fact all of Quebec thinks that they are free thinkers, free from the religious dogma and conservatism that plagued the last generation. But for the most part, the political opinons I hear around me in Quebec are shared, which means they didn’t ‘free think’ them up. They only think they are free thinkers because they have been told they are. I fear the same is happening to you. The proof is that a free thinker would come up with new ideas and push for change, not just criticize and quit.

    Criticism is easy, change is hard. Why not work for the former than lay back into the former?

    • john said:

      Very true Chris. However, how much change would you think possible from a generation whose understandings are limited by poor education? No real understanding of history, thus no real understanding of the present.

      A pause on the part of Kai does not necessarily mean quitting the fray completely. Removing from a censored environment is all thats happened…so far.

      • Chris said:

        Thanks John,
        I don’t think that the opinions here (I’ve been in Quebec for 15 years) are so much the result of lack of education. They have grown up, rather, alongside increased education. One might argue that a collective throwing off of the catholic church’s authority and english bosses has left Quebec with a general desire for freedom without knowing what that freedom should be.
        However, what I see in Kai’s views are really just a reflection of Quebecers views in general. “every generation thinks it is more advance than the last and wiser than the next”. From harper to religion, to gay marriage to war, he nails the Quebec public opinion and has taken them as his own. Probably just because he’s young and he soaks up the ideas and views around him. It would seem that CTV’s views simply are not congruent with those views.

        But i appreciate your point about leaving a censored environment. I just hope he can now really sift through the views and make his own decisions, rather than reflecting Quebec’s popular opinions. There are some good, some bad.
        He writes well and has some good insights into the system, so I’m sure he will find a good job elsewhere.

        • john said:

          I’m afraid you are sadly mistaken regarding the throwing off of the Church’s control in Quebec. It has merely insinuated itself in society via different facades and ‘crypto’ catholics….and has done so throughout the ‘protesting’ West. But, you should have no trouble selling that to the more ‘latin’ of individuals. Those with a more Norman bent will always dispel such fanciful notions. All the best…

          • Chris said:

            I’m really curious about your point of the church’s continued control in quebec. What i see on the ground (after countless discussions on religion with Quebecers) is an almost complete dissociation from the church among the under 40′s. The #1 religious identification I hear is “catholique non-pratiquant”. I’m really curious. What do you mean ‘crypto’ catholics? and facades? Are you here in Quebec? Thanks for your comments.

            • john said:

              This is Kai’s blog, not mine. If you are truly curious…undertake some research. It’s not as if they have been particularly stealthy in their actions. They’ve simply gained quite a lot of elbow room via diversions, conditioning, and others erroneous assumptions.

  521. Michael Batchelor said:

    follow you bliss Kai

  522. plasante said:

    It takes a lot of courage to quit a job just to be free. On the other hand would you have done the same if you had been married with kids, a mortgage, and a dog to take care of?

  523. Thank-you for your honesty and courage …. As a middle aged man and long since employee of radio and the film business I find my misgivings of the industry and it’s politics mirrored in your comments … And it heartens me to see a young journalist find truth and honesty in his own heart and humanity rather than a pay check

    • john said:

      Jessica who…?

      • Max LeBlanc said:

        Jessica ”I’m trying to get bigger by stepping on someone’s face” Hume.

        I think even less of journalism since I read her. Envy bitterness, frustration, ”mauvaise foi”……soulless.

        Totally national post worthy. La Presse is not doing better…. The article is not that bad, but the title is horribly biased.

  524. I had no idea who you are before I was sent this blog entry via email. But now that I have read it, I’m sad to hear that someone like yourself has left the news media industry (at least in this particular capacity).
    There are many, many people across Canada who identify with and appreciate your perspective, and I’m sure we would all like to thank you for so honestly voicing your opinion and observations. From the outside looking in, you can only be so certain about these issues. Past a certain point, you become a “conspiracy theorist,” who loses all credibility and is effectively cut out of the conversation.
    I’d like to thank you, as so many have done, for your honesty, and your courage, and also your efforts. What you have done holds meaning for many of us.
    I wish you all the best in the road you travel.
    Thank you.

  525. Thank you for your courage in speaking out about this. This was an interesting and informative post. No matter what happens, Canada will be better because of it.

  526. Vic Lewis said:

    Really enjoyed your point of view, I agree with a great deal of what you wrote and respect your courage to put your convictions first. Looking forward to reading more of what you have to say.

  527. Mike Bromley said:

    Kai, I urge you to read up on the “science” of climate change. You view that hundreds of years of “tradition” have been thrown out the window by “idealogues” is correct: except you chose the wrong idealogues to heap that distinction on.

    Science does not advance on “concensus” it advances on debate. Climate Change, or whatever it is called this week, is not the disasterous crisis expounded by the “consensus” people. The same uncritical press you complain about is responsible for that ‘view’. The “responsibility” of government regarding this issue is to make damn sure the science is heard, not quashed. That it appears to be a convenient response by Harper et al is a natural interpretation for those who ‘believe’ in AGW and all of its supposed consequences. The reality is a different data set altogether.

  528. All I have to say is, BRAVO, BRAVO, BRAVO !!!!!!!!!!!

    At long last, someone with BALLS.

    …and HEART.

    THANK YOU.

    If you ever need me to carry the Flame with you, I’ll be there.

    Francine Dozois, Montreal

  529. Regardless of your opinion, your closing statement in this blog post is incredibly refreshing and inspirational. Everyone should experience this bliss at least once in their lifetime.

    “Right now I need to undertake a long-delayed journey of personal discovery. Having given away all the possessions that didn’t fit into my truck, I’ve set out on the road again, heading West. I know I need to go home for a while. I need to surround myself with family and friends. I need to consult, meditate, and plan the next steps.

    I’m broke, and yet I know I’m rich in love. I’m unemployed and homeless, but I’ve never been more free.

    Everything is possible.”

    Thank you for sharing.

  530. Blair said:

    Beautiful. Although I would like to comment on: “But in an environment where a lot of top executives are women, what I’m talking about [how objectification] applies to men as well”. This is a relevant and completely important comment to bring up. Objectification occurs towards women and men, a too often forgotten fact in the discourse. Although, just as it is myopic to claim sexist objectification against women occurs only from men, and a result of the male gaze, I would like to point out that objectifaction of men is not only from women. It is a societal thing. In which as a socitey we have opted to idealize and enforce very specific gender norms and beauty to the detriment of both men and women. It is not one against another, male vs. female, or us against them. Feminism and the fight against sexist objectification of men and women is a communal activity. Thank you for making a mention of this.

  531. I forgot one word : BRAIN

    ( after, before, or between, Balls and Heart ) !

    Francine Dozois, Montreal

  532. I certainly hope that others will follow… Perhaps enough to start your own journalistic journey!

    Hang in there, Kai; and good luck! I hope our paths will cross someday.

  533. Ron said:

    Congrats Kai on allowing your values and natural instincts to win over social and financial comforts. You are a young, bright and clearly brought up by a solid family. All the best on your journey and keep questioning.

    Cheers,
    Ron

    A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan.
    Martin Luther King, Jr.

  534. Ozzy Bourne said:

    You have done the right thing. These days, TV news is just plain stupid for the reasons you stated. Congratulations for speaking out against the dumbinification (is there a word like that?) of our minds by the powers that be at our major networks!

  535. Former Media Employee said:

    Wow, I applaud your life decision. Enjoy yourself.

  536. Gilles said:

    Kai,

    I guess you read my mind and that of countless other Canadians left voiceless in the for-profit media. Good luck with all your future endeavours.

  537. Don’t listen to the naysayers or the Internet soapbox. You are inspiring and your life is sure to be inspired as well.
    Good luck and safe travels.

    Sylwia
    from Montreal

  538. ron said:

    Evolution is not proven either Kai. There are many holes in that theory as well, as romantic as it seems. Trust me, your well written essay did not evolve from an amoeba. If you are truly open to working with all religions then as you learn about the religions of the world you owe it to yourself to not only read the Bible and the Quran, but while you are enjoying your time of contemplation… read “The Case for a Creator” BY Lee Strobel… I think you’ll identify with him as he quit his job as a journalist with the Chicago Tribune. KAI, IF YOU DO ANYTHING WITH YOUR NEWFOUND TIME, REMEMBER YOU WILL TRULY BECOME A WELL ROUNDED PERSON ONCE YOU HAVE SEEN THE WORLD FROM ALL EYES. DON’T FORGET TO TRAVEL TO COUNTRIES WHERE POVERTY AND SOCIALIST GOVERNMENTS ARE THE NORM. WHILE ASKING WHY IS ROMANTIC, DON’T FORGET TO LISTEN TO THE ANSWERS OF THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE LIVED ON THIS PLANET A LONG TIME, AND HAVE SEEN WHAT YOUR GREAT GRAND PARENTS HAVE SEEN.

  539. Thank you, Kai. Your essay and especially the follow up note are as incisive as everyone said, but far more inspiring and moving than I expected. Thank you.

  540. Ron J. said:

    Another young journalist who doesn’t get it. They want to tell me what to think. I don’t want or care about his opinions. I want the facts. Let me form my own opinions.

  541. Found your post via CBC and read it with interest. You very astutely recognized the gap between your industry’s values and your own, and decided to do something about that instead of ignoring it for the next 30 years. I don’t know if you’re still reading comments this far down but what you’re talking about dovetails with the rise of the economic story in North America, which has become our central story – not just in media, but in education, health care, the arts, libraries, prisons, etc. – I wrote about it in a book that’s just out called Monoculture: How One Story is Changing Everything, and if you’re interested, I’d be happy to send you a free copy to encourage you on your way forward as you start moving toward something else. Good luck! Finding your own story is a great adventure – not easy, I think, but rewarding.
    Best,
    FS Michaels

  542. Alexis Deschênes said:

    Kai,

    You arrived at the National Assembly one month after I had quit my job of political correspondent on the same hill for TVA. I am now back at university studying law. In parts, I felt the way you do. I just want to tell you that the courage to experience freedom is rewarded by an intense feeling of serenity that will follow you for long.

    Congratulation.

    All the best.

    Alexis Deschênes

  543. Thanks for this, Kai.

    You are a shining contradiction to the apathetic, unengaged, sub-30 Canadian. I hope this article inspires MANY others to speak up and act as you have.

    Cheers,

  544. Kushal said:

    I’m surprised that the same people who want science to remain alive are so willing to abandon all critical analysis when it comes to the issue of global warming. Not to undermine your knowledge on the subject — I assume you are well-read on it — but I’d like to ask anyway: Have you seen “The Great Global Warming Swindle”?

    Even if you forget that, just look at the graph that Al Gore shows in his documentary and zoom it to look at it more closely. Earth’s temperature doesn’t follow the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere; it’s the other way around. There’s often decades (sometimes centuries) worth of gap between the rise in Earth’s temperature and the increase in carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere (the former precedes the latter).

    Of course, it doesn’t mean that renewable sources of energy should not be explored. But when the future of an entire body of research (such as that on global warming) depends on government funding and the fact that the findings ought to be in favor of the hoopla surrounding the subject, one might want to be a little more cautious in what they consider “scientific” opinion.

    I’d say that if Canada has decided to not give in to the hype, kudos to them. They’ve managed to stay a little more rational than the rest of the apparently developed world has.

    Good luck on your journey. I wish you all the best.

    P.S.: If you can offer research that can refute what I’ve said about Global Warming, I’d be more than happy to go through it, and if required, change my position.

  545. I can relate to this Kai.
    It’s heartening to encounter your well spoken understanding of our culture’s actual situation, of the dangerous compromised illusions we need to dispel, in order to focus again on the basics of caretaking civilization. You’re so right to point out that very hard won gains are, bizarrely, slipping away for seemingly the most trite and arbitrary ‘reasons’, at a time when we urgently need to move ahead, on the steady shoulders of those gains, to take grander, even more rationally coherent and grown-up steps as cultures.
    Good wishes in whatever endeavors your decision takes you into.

    Simon, in Halifax

  546. DNW said:

    I recently made some job decisions that have left me feeling guilty and confused. And now I’m convinced I need to leave the traditional print media period.

    I feel inspired though that someone who “had it all” can walk away. Thanks for that.

  547. lawlythelawlbster said:

    Journalism will be and always has been an expression of opinion. Nagata’s view is his opinion of how the media operates in its current state. Though I profoundly agree with him on many of his views they are solely his opinion and his view of how the media represents itself. This man does not deserve adoration but he does deserve our respect for having the “brass balls” so to speak to let his view be known. I for one would never continue to work in an environment where I felt my creativity and views were suppressed rather then warranted. At the very least I would expect some type of feedback rather then suppression. Kai you have earned my respect though it may not mean much I wish you the best in all future endeavours and hope to see something monumental happen for you in the near future, Indy journalism needs its face and its supporters and you obviously have a good start to being one of the best.

  548. Camila said:

    one word: INSPIRING

    If you’re interested in starting a completely new adventure where you might be able to travel the world and help people achieve their goals, please email me. cami_br@hotmail.com

  549. Ahhh… young idealism and ego. It is so not refreshing. Rather than tough it out and work to change the system within, you have quit your job to join the legions of other kids and a few old hippies who never got out of the liberal rut who preach their own brand of intolerance.

    Your essay is long winded, erudite, and ultimately trite. But that is ok. You are supposed to go through this phase, and it sounds like you might have the guts to be honest with yourself going forward. Who knows, perhaps you will figure out a way to do it differently. Perhaps you will come to grasp the falsehood of purity, in any industry or belief. Perhaps you will give up on media and simply be another critic.

    Idealism without a financial model influences few.

    Good luck out there.

    M

  550. Krysia Amero said:

    I could not agree more. Canada has lost so much – including our voice.
    I thank your for sharing yours – and hope for a domino effect. We need voices – bias or not. I want to know what the left has to say, I want to know the right – I want the middle too while we are at it! I don’t care what Kate is wearing to the stampede – - – I care about what my country is doing! Voices, whether we agree with them or not help to generate our own and form our own opinions. Opinions that this government has enjoyed not having to hear. As journalists you need to spark this talk. I understand the fine line you all walk, but they cannot be scared – walk that line as close as you can, sometimes even taking a step over! I want real news that makes me think – not something to put on in the background while I make dinner.

  551. Ken said:

    skiwest….. This guy has TRUE balls. Dont be jealous because you are too feable to do anything drastic in your life! Kai, you are not gone…..you area very much still here! You have followers now, go with it!

  552. Dan Perillo said:

    kai nagata,

    You have said a lot that I completely agree with. I cannot 100% agree with everything but 98% I agree.

    I am in a very similar situation to you except that I live in the USA and we are FAR worse than Canada in most of these respects. Even worse is that we as Americans are influencing the rest of the world and are acting as moral police everywhere.

    I am ashamed to be an American in days like this when we value war over education and that is only the beginning of where I feel sad. Prison over rehabilitation, money over happiness, dirty energy over clean energy, lack of clean water, and wasting billions of food when others could benefit from it. Not to mention 100s of other problems we ignore or pretend do not happen.

    I am very happy for your new found freedom and I 100% support it. I am currently a software developer and while I am not restricted to what I can say and not everything I do is owned by my employer, I still feel held back. I feel like I have a larger place in this world and can help many people.

    Yet I am unsure how I can make it happen. I have spent time thinking about it but have not found my happiness yet. I plan on moving in less than a year. I am moving west where I will be more free, rather than being a wage slave trying to always be better than the next person living near New York City.

    I just wish more people saw it like this and noticed that life is not about money. It’s about experiences and happiness, but the way our world is going happiness will be outlawed by either religion or corporations in our near future.

    • Vahan said:

      Dan you should not feel ashamed for being American and we should not be ashamed for being Canadian. Relatively speaking both countries as infants, yet we have the best democracies, a great quality of life, fantastic infrastructure, education system, healthcare and more. And we have thrown this together in a short amount of time. Yes there are groups of people that want to change that and bring us to third world status, they are slowly eroding our rights, but that will only happen if we sit on our hands and not do anything.We should all be proud of our continent and fight back the powers that want to taint it. Get out the votes, write letters, join in and participate but never be ashamed. We have done good and others look to us. democracy is easy if you work hard at it.

  553. Joel said:

    This is such an interesting piece. I’m considering a career in journalism yet am reticent to get into the industry for the very reasons you mention. I feel that though much of what you said is spot on – it’s a blatantly sexualized industry and superficial stories dominate the agenda – there are exceptions. There are a handful of thoughtful reporters who in addition to explaining what happened provide thoughtful analysis which allows the viewer to make sense of the story. Judging from this post, I you were among them.

    Best of luck with you future endeavors. And if I may provide an unlisted recommendation, I encourage you to pick up David Remnick’s “King of the World”. It’s a brilliant biography on Muhammad Ali. After winning the heavy-weight champion of the world, Ali had fortitude to stand up and declare his conversion to the Nation of Islam. At the height of his career he refused the draft. Ali’s actions alienated huge swaths of America and cost him a tremendous financial tole. Yet look at how he is now remembered – as an exemplary human being who always stood his ground.

    Congratulations. Your in good company.

  554. Deon said:

    It’s interesting how one persons journey and take on politics and media in this country has created so much roller coaster contrast responses. To the negative side – I hope we all can one day see both sides of an issue/opinion. While I think there are positives to our current state( very little), pull the wool from your eyes and see the sad state we are actually being molded into the cookie cutter. Left or Right, they aren’t looking at us “regular” citizens the way our forefathers would have hoped. Read George Orwell’s “Animal Farm” like they made us in high school, they probably don’t allow it anymore. As for Kai…. good on you! Live an existence you can be proud of, no matter what Left or Right or society would say.
    We need more people of the new adult generation (20′s-40) to stand and not except this status-quo world, politics, media, unquestionable ideologies that’s been put before us to
    just accept and not question.

  555. John said:

    You are my hero. Good luck.

  556. ek said:

    Skiwest you hit the proverbial nail on the head. If Kai is so concerned about his opinions he should not be a journalist. I think he will soon realize he let a good thing go, especially when he has a family and mortgage! When those things come into play ideology tends to go out the window and one realizes what is truly important–(hint: it ain’t news). Kai, well done, but get over yourself. You’re at 14:32.

    • Ken said:

      Drone. I cant stand the reference to “mortgage and kids” anymore. You made the choice to have kids, now live with it. Dont be so jealous of Kai and his yound freedom. Let me guess? large SUV and huge house in the suburbs? Just becasue you have kids, it doesn’t mean that you have to forefit all of your freedoms with huge amounts of debt. maybe that is why you sound so angry…..or maybe it is the rush hour traffic? Wake up and learn to question why tou are here as a human being.

      • Vahan said:

        Well said Ken. People feel that because they have kids and mortgages, that they have a right to work for the “man” and “suffer” through it and everybody should follow suit. They want everybody to live the same pain they have chosen to live. I have kids and a mortgage. Big deal. I decided a while back to downsize, move into the city, get rid of the cars and I am laughing all the way. I have actually even lost weight am healthier for it, do not need the WalMart X Brand stretch jeans and the goatee to hide a double chin. I don’t have the summer weekend huge honking BBQ parties just to have an excuse to get fall down drunk for the regret of having to slug through traffic everyday to get to a hate filled job. You dance with the devil, why take it out on us. But see this is what the right wingers dream of, they call it the doughnut electors. People who live off islands or in the burbs, they sell them fear that someone is going to walk buy and take away what little they have. It is working for now, but what is going to happen when the rug rats are all grown up and they have left home at 40, who is going to take care of all the diaper wearing seniors then, certainly not the government they will be out of business then if this continues.

    • Ken said:

      Oh, and please stop having so many kids……this isn’t the 1800′s

      • ek said:

        Wow! Did I ever get smeared with one brush! Yep, in the burbs(no SUV), moved out of the big city because I didn’t want my family living in a shoebox. No, not angry either. Miserable that I had kids? Not even slightly. Actually I’m a former radio journalist who quit last year to be a stay at home dad. Ken I did wake up a learn what it is to be a human being on this planet, that’s why I left journalism, it’s not a family friendly job. And no Vahan I don’t have a goatee or double chin for that matter. The point is Kai is young and ideal…if he had kids he would have thought twice(I’m not saying stay in a job you hate for your kids). The stuff he speaks of has been going on long before he was born and is simply part of the job. It’s entertainment and ya some people on TV look good and we like to look at them, deal with it. Many many more are average. Kai is pointing out nothing we didn’t know already, does that make him some sort of hero? I think he is a narcissist. Just look at his blog. There are plenty of people who would kill to have the opportunity he did with CTV, and while some might enjoy what he’s done, those looking for a job have just been slapped in the face. It’s the height of arrogance especially in this economy. Kai will look back at this day and realize what an ass he’s made of himself.

        • truth said:

          my kids have inspired me more than anything to stand up for and support anyone who wants to live a life of truth and integrity I will never teach my kids to make choices based on fear of being unemployed…I am sorry you do not feel the same for life is much more than just a paycheck…children are a blessing and they must learn fear will only hold them back from achieving great things

          • ek said:

            I totally agree life is much much more than a paycheck!! That’s why I quit to be a stay at home dad! Does that make me a hero too? In fact I think that makes me MORE of one. Kai just strikes me as a spoiled brat who did not earn his place yet. Intelligent, sure. But again he talks of nothing new and now it has turned into a HUGE leftist rant. Oh well.

            • truth said:

              Yes taking care of your kids fulltime is a noble gesture and yes that would make you a hero in my eyes…let’s stop the division that others have created by making labels of us such as left right don’t we all want the same thing clean air water food and the truth we are all one under the sky let us reflect that and support each others actions that achieve our common goals for the greater good

            • ek said:

              Agreed, but his actions are nothing but romantic and will do nothing for the greater good. Who asked him to anyway?

            • Dan Perillo said:

              You have to be trolling. There is no way you could actually believe this. And if you do that is incredibly sad to live your life like that.

              This one action of Kai has already caused a ton of people to rethink things and a ton of people agree. He already has done something for the greater good.

              But are you going to measure the rest of his life and the greater good he will do right now? Why?

              He has many years to make changes and even if they aren’t changes that you set out to make they are still good changes.

              I just don’t see the why give up before you even try mentality. EK that is all you are showing. Is that you are bitter and have failed before you have ever tried to make a difference.

              Like I said, try to open your eyes and think for yourself for once instead of thinking only what society tells you.

  557. Skookum1 said:

    Just to note – I had a look at the Globe & Mail and other news sites yesterday, including ctv.ca…..no mention of Mr Nagata at all, other than as bylines on fluff stories; no mention at all of his resignation. I imagine the same will appy if I look up TorStar or other private-monopoly sites – who still drub is with the Conrad Black story, and have carried resignation stories, even on their own staff, in the past. Only CBC has something, and only by way of the story becoming viral, which made it (to them) newsworthy.

    CTV is treating him like a non-person, IMO.

    Vote with your dials, folks. Find out who owns which cable networks, and stop watching CTV or anything owned by them (BellMedia).

  558. Mark J. said:

    Television news always has a slant. He thinks it’s fine for media to push an opinion. He just didn’t like that it wasn’t HIS opinions that were being pushed.

    • Skookum1 said:

      There’s a brag from a right-wing publisher that surfaced on the BC Mary blog a while back (http://bctrialofbasi-virk.blogspot.com, don’t know exact date/page) about how all media outlets west of the Great Lakes had gotten rid of all non-right columnists/reporters by around 2001, and they’ve enjoyed “lockdown” in that region since. There’s also a post somewhere there on a strategy about defaming non-right writers/bloggers in all the terms we’ve seen here attacking Kai, and those of us in support of him. Formulaic, repetitive, hateful, and always claiming neutrality while advacing the right-wing critique of the left….seen the same crap in Wikipedia talkpages and discussion boards where anyone talking sense is ridiculed, insulted, ultimately driven out…….money talks, and bullshit walks all over the rest of us…we’re tired of it…..the number of good colunnists/reporters who left their jobs without being fired, but on principles like Kai’s, is very large. Despite efforts to condition us all to conservative/neo-right ways of thinking (which are actually very radical, rather than conservative at all), it’s clear that people still have their own minds and aren’t fooled……and yeah, of course he didn’t like it that his own opinions were not possible to present, in order that he could keep on feeding the credit maw that Big Capital has opened underneath anyone wanting a career in this country.

      Enjoy your smugness; your comeuppance is coming.

      Death to Big Media, it’s time to die….the internet is pointing you knee-jerk propagandists out for what you really are.

      Cf. Caritas, the right-wing organization that targeted all this media takeover long ago.

      McLuhan must be rolling in his grave…..the medium is the message….but now the media has lost control of the message, and is now the internet……

  559. Whatever you say Kai about your deception over your career belongs to you and is a personal feeling no one should be allowed to judge.
    What particularly struck me is your view of where the Canadian society and our journalism’s focus is pointing and I see it too. I have lived in Mexico, conducted business in the US and abroad for years. It has given me a broad perspective looking at things from 50,000 feet so to speak.
    News in Canada keeps the population ignorant and does not tackle the real issues we should be addressing. When 1/2 the time is allocated to violence, car accidents, fires, it does not elevate our conscious very high and does not provide for a constructive discussion on the role we could, as Canadians, be playing in the world. On the other hand, news in Mexico are more educating than in Canada in terms of world economy, politics, social issues. Yet it is still considered by most Canadians as a developing country, one that still has to catch up with the 1st world.
    The problem is that Canadians are growing lazy. We are completely out of shape. Our government and big corporations want it that way. We are like slaves working like crazy to meet ends, in pursuit of some happiness through consumerism, don’t have time to pay attention, while they profit from our numbness.
    We even voted for candidates we did not know, did not live near us, we did not even know what they really stand for. YES WE did this in Quebec. Now tell me we are acting with responsibility. Even a father can kill his children and not be “responsible” of his acts.
    I think it’s time to wake up before it’s too late. We need to put the collective good, the essence of a democracy ahead of irresponsible individualism or else the Canada we have come to admire will disintegrate.

  560. Ken said:

    I love how the people that are with Kai are SO MUCH MORE well written and can see beyond our current societal norms. Thanks for the great, soothing comments. Sorry if mine are so heated, but I get tired of these people that cant say anything beyond…”go smoke another joint Kai”…or…..”go get a job”…..or “have kids and you will change your mind” Newsflash, the planet doesn’t need anyomore kids and maybe those people should have smoked more pot! Instead, they are mindless drones that dont question anything.

  561. Coco Rico said:

    It looks as though your last story has become your biggest and that is exactly as it ought to be. Congratulations, best of luck, and please don’t become a stranger.

  562. J-dog said:

    Standing up for what u believe in may chart u a new course, but the destination will be worth it .. dig it!

  563. David said:

    Wow! Hats off to you Kai! You have so eloquently laid out so much of what troubles me about Canadian journalism, and Canadian ideological bombast masquerading as politics. You rightly attribute the Murdoch school of newsertainment for the serious breakdown in the role and integrity of the fourth estate. Its so much easier to stir the winds of jealousies and resentments from the unthinking hoards than it is to push sound, factual, logical, and reasoned reports into that tornado of emotion. We can only hope that the beginning of the end for the Murdoch era is underway in Britain, and that it is highly infectious. You are also correct that Canada is increasingly guided by lowest-common-denominator knee-jerk wants and dislikes instead of facts and science. It is an inescapable fact that humanity will go extinct, but it is astounding how a self proclaimed ‘intelligent and responsible’ leadership cabal pursues an idiotic path of denial as they hasten that eventuality.

    I congratulate you for the courage you display as you break free to clear your mind and your heart. Though it will be financially challenging, surely there are many of us who would be happy to stake you to a meal or even put you up for a night or two if you need it to see you through. You’ve just risen to the top of my list for the award for journalistic integrity. I’m not of your generation, but I wonder how many think as clearly as you. I’m impressed. Kinda makes me envious of the Arab spring.

  564. Shannon said:

    I think what you are doing is courageous, and we need more people like you! I hold dual citizenship of Canada and the United States. Though I am Canadian Born and Raised, I did live in the U.S.A. for a few years (before readily moving back to Canada), and was able to partake in the last election in the USA (and of course now that I am ‘home’, voted here as well). I love both countries for different reasons, but I love Canada more. It is sad to say though, after living in both countries, that Canada is slowly losing what has kept is sacred and beautiful. We, as a country, are becoming more and more “Americanized” than we realize. We watch more American television than we do Canadian, for example. I used to be able to see the difference between watching American news vs Canadian news, but that line is becoming blurry.
    Our journalists can not be objective, because the companies and politicians tell them they cant be. They dictate, ultimately, what the journalists are able to tell us and report on, or they will no longer have a job. I cant believe that this great country is getting to this point. We need to stand up and let them know its not right! We need to get our voices back and make a difference. Some people have their head in the sand, and they need to wake up! People don’t think they can make a difference. There is power in numbers, but it only takes one to get the ball rolling! “If you think you’re too small to make a difference, you’ve never been in bed with a mosquito!”
    Way to go! Keep up the good fight!

  565. Orwell warns we will be overcome by an externally imposed oppression. But in Huxley’s vision, no Big Brother is required to deprive people of their autonomy, maturity and history.

    As he saw it, people will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think.

    Huxley v. Orwell: comic strip where you can actually read everything
    http://www.nvnews.net/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=135828


    Huxley v. Orwell: comic strip put to cool music ala video

    Foreward to Neil Postman’s 1985 book, Amusing Ourselves to Death.

    We were keeping our eye on 1984. When the year came and the prophecy didn’t, thoughtful Americans sang softly in praise of themselves. The roots of liberal democracy had held. Wherever else the terror had happened, we, at least, had not been visited by Orwellian nightmares.

    But we had forgotten that alongside Orwell’s dark vision, there was another – slightly older, slightly less well known, equally chilling: Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World. Contrary to common belief even among the educated, Huxley and Orwell did not prophesy the same thing. Orwell warns that we will be overcome by an externally imposed oppression. But in Huxley’s vision, no Big Brother is required to deprive people of their autonomy, maturity and history. As he saw it, people will come to love their oppression, to adore the technologies that undo their capacities to think.

    What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one. Orwell feared those who would deprive us of information. Huxley feared those who would give us so much that we would be reduced to passivity and egoism. Orwell feared that the truth would be concealed from us. Huxley feared the truth would be drowned in a sea of irrelevance. Orwell feared we would become a captive culture. Huxley feared we would become a trivial culture, preoccupied with some equivalent of the feelies, the orgy porgy, and the centrifugal bumblepuppy. As Huxley remarked in Brave New World Revisited, the civil libertarians and rationalists who are ever on the alert to oppose tyranny “failed to take into account man’s almost infinite appetite for distractions”. In 1984, Huxley added, people are controlled by inflicting pain. In Brave New World, they are controlled by inflicting pleasure. In short, Orwell feared that what we hate will ruin us. Huxley feared that what we love will ruin us.

    This book is about the possibility that Huxley, not Orwell, was right.

    – Neil Postman
    Foreward to the book, Amusing Ourselves to Death

  566. It’s not Canadians who’ve gone to the right, just their media.

    “Lawrence Martin has written several articles about the Canadian media’s rightward migration. In a January 2003 column headlined It’s not Canadians who’ve gone to the right, just their media, he quoted an unnamed European diplomat saying “You have a bit of a problem here.

    Your media are not representative of your people, your values.”

    Too many political commentators are right of centre while the public is in the middle, the diplomat continued. There is a disconnect.”

    http://pushedleft.blogspot.com/2009/11/under-steve-harper-we-are-no-longer.html

    ……………………….

    In chart form, the 2008 Canadian Federal election:
    Here’s how the people voted (click to enlarge):

    And here’s how the media voted:
    http://crawlacrosstheocean.blogspot.com/2011/02/corporate-media.html

    ……………………….

    Newspaper endorsements in the Canadian federal election, 2006
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newspaper_endorsements_in_the_Canadian_federal_election,_2006

    ……………………….

    News Announcer, DJ and Radio Tech outs all the dirty tricks he was forced to use on air
    http://www.facebook.com/#!/note.php?note_id=205613029454871

  567. reposted from Thomas Dowswell: I can assure you when I was in news at some stations I HAD to push PC; play all but PC spots at half volume, use negative intonation on all but PC news, was told to read FALSE polls on air, more tricks let me tell you.

    So forget the media as they must push PC or lose advertising $$, but we can win with the Internet and Facebook and one on one and get the truth out. The media will / can not help.

    We must be kind to Harper or lose our jobs, advertisers are huge fans of tax cuts, cheap labor, ect., and if a station pushes anything other then Harper, advertising dollars go south. I was forced to read false polls, use negative intonation, play all but PC spots at half volume.

    The answer for voters is the Internet , we can and must use it to get the message out. Can’t blame the media when they get threats of revenue loss.

    I know for sure some radio news and on air staff get a scolding if they help anyone but PC as the station would loss CORPORATE advertising dollars. Been there done that , did not want to do it.

    Spin Doctors WANT division, have plants insuring division, even get folks to join the other party’s to help elect a poor leader, or one easy to vilify. Some how we have to find a way to work around the “hard headed” attitude that is put there “on purpose.”

    This is how Harper rose to power. Remember in the French debate in one of the last elections, the translators’ voices were different for each candidate. The voice chosen for Harper was velvet-voiced Urgen Wurtz (sp?). I knew then, how sneaky this guy was. The other voices were kind of average sounding in my opinion. I alway remembered that, for what its worth.

    Another tactic I have heard is placing progressive-toned articles and commentators next to the comics in newspapers. It’s a subtle pyschological move that most people (well, practically every reader) will never catch unless it is brought to their attention, and repeatedly.

  568. ribsca said:

    wow someone so young with integrity. I hope it prevails after life sets in a bit. You could always work for a non profit, we could use someone like you. However you’d have to keep living in your car. No one seems to want to pay anyone whose goal it is to make the world a better place.

  569. Mike N said:

    thanks Kai you are doing a great deed to all including yourself by living in the truth…
    “The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing.” Albert Einstein

  570. JP Morgan said:

    It appears that some are totally fine with the constant bombardment of ‘brain dead news’.. I don’t care about Will and Kate.. I don’t care about Lady Gaga.. I don’t care what dress XYZ wore to the awards show last night.. this is what news has become.. a distraction…

    I’ve had to turn off my morning news (CP24) because it is all Entertainment Tonight.. repackaged as morning news.. People are going broke (no jobs etc).. but they’d rather distract you with Kim Kardassian… who cares? and if people defend this type of of ‘news’ and the current state of the media… then that speaks volumes on how dumb our society is becoming…

    • What an ignorant and arrogant post. Quite frankly, most don’t care about what you care about – so this makes them dumb? hmmmm…

      • Ken said:

        Stop twisting words and see beyond his words…….. he is saying there are probably more important things our society could learn about right now besides the things we see right now. The problem is that the news focuses mainly on this brainless shit. Yes, we may all like the brainless shit sometimes (yes even I do) but it needs to be balanced with things that affect the human society in DRASTIC WAY.

        • ek said:

          Probably more important things? Like what? I know almost every journalist broadcasting in every medium in my town and I dare say none of them are reporting on brainless shit. Most of it deals with stories that affect you and me.

  571. truth said:

    just watch the skies on a clear day…how can you not notice the high altitude planes spraying creating artificial web like unnatural cloud formations across the horizons…they know about climate change they try to hide it to keep the oil game going…

    FYI vapor trails last only about 10 minutes if they are not creating clouds then we have one heck of an airplane pollution problem going on

  572. RC said:

    Last year, I also quit my media job. I couldn’t live the lie anymore, and although I’m 33 years old, broke, and sometimes scared about what the future will hold for me, I’m committed to putting my skills and passions to better use, for the people I love, and for the world I live in. Congratulations Kai — it’s heartening to know that there are people like you in the world. Best of luck!

  573. Greg Bennett said:

    The world doesn’t need more opinion in the news – it’s already full of that. It needs accurate, unbiased reporters and bureaus. People who want their voices to matter are the problem with news today, not the solution.

    • Scott in NS said:

      I agree. The real danger is the people who haven’t quite – the people who stayed and tell us they are presenting “unbiased news”…. all the while… presenting their world-view and agenda as if it was untainted.

  574. luggnutz said:

    FINALLY…SOMEONE IS WAKING UP TO REALITY! YOU WROTE THAT 1ST BLOG KAI, NOW YOU’VE RETURNED TO REAL JOURNALISM. WE DON’T GET PAYED OUT HERE, WE WORK AND DO THE READING AND RESEARCH AND EXPOSE THE TRUTH ALL FOR FREE. WE ARE NOT LIVING IN CONFUSION, WE ARE NOT SELLING OUT OUR OWN, AND WE SLEEP AT NIGHT WHEN OUR HEADS HIT THE PILLOW:)

  575. truth said:

    keep together there is something really wrong going on in the supposed free world maybe it has always been this way it cannot not be denied anymore…people have paid the ultimate price for what little rights and truth we have…soon the shills will be here posting comments to divide us against each other keep together in the truth stay united keep living the truth your heart knows you should live

  576. Toke Lover said:

    Follow your bliss man…life’s too short, you weren’t happy there, you did the right thing.

  577. thanks for that.

    there’s no such thing s “objective;” we just try to tell the truth as best we can find it out.

  578. Nichola Bloom said:

    All I have to say is thank you, thank you, thank you for your decision to speak out. I am the same age as you, and aware of and concerned about the every issue you spoke of.

    Some of us are awake to what is going on in Canada, but most Canadians are not, and this scares the living crap out of me.

    Maybe you should become the next Keith Olbermann? What ever you choose to do, know that Canadians like myself are proud of you and your decisions.

    I have been really inspired by what you’ve written, and sincerely look forward to whatever you will do next.

    I wish you all the best luck for the future. Recharge, and get back out there when you’re ready. Canada needs more people like you if Canada is to lean towards being a more progressive, accountable, leader nation in the world.

    PS. I didn’t use my real name because I am afraid of what our federal government will denie me/how they will treat me in the future. How sad is that.

  579. Eric Elder said:

    After reading this I felt depressed as everything he wrote was true and as a Canadaian I have just let this happen and now the Harper Government that we have seen over the last years prepare for its majority are in power with an agenda that will essentially dye the fabric of what we thought was Canada to something that few of us will recognise in a few years, when the Will and Kate show gets more coverage than the real issues of this country we have a problem. Rick Mercer’s rant on the issues of the day are probably the closest we will get to common sense and unbiased journalism Im just surprised he has’nt been neutered yet.
    A very brave move to recognise that if your not part of the solution your part of the problem

  580. Sam said:

    Hi Kai!

    I respect your courage!

    I’d like to recommend a book I call an ‘essential read’. It is called ‘Living Energies’ by Callum Coats and covers the work of an Austrian Hydrologist named Viktor Schauberger who studied water and came up with approx 33 properties for it, including ‘male’ and ‘female’. It probably seems as though I’m going on a tangent but what Schauberger has essentially revealed is that science has it all wrong as it doesn’t adhere to the natural forms found in nature.

    This book also references ‘Kundalini Yoga’ and I became an instructor because of it. Schauberger explains that ‘energy is the cause and form is the effect’. So matter is secondary to energy. Energy moves or vibrates and results in matter. Although we are matter, we are energy(soul, spirit, consciousness) beforehand.

    Schauberger also explains that we are in the 3rd dimension driven by material wants and desires and that humans for the most part tend to vibrate at frequencies that are way too low and that we have the capacity to vibrate at higher frequencies of consciousness and that kundalini yoga was a technology that allows one to accomplish this.

    If you are familiar with the chakra system, humanity tends to vibrate on the lower three, the root, sex and navel or 3rd chakra, so we are driven by ego, subsistence, sex and status(all of which tends to be imbalanced), all of which is reinforced by news and multimedia outlets much like the organization you formerly worked for. But we have the capacity to vibrate from other regions of consciousness.

    Once you understand how the mind actually works(negative, positive and neutral aspects) you realize that politics and news preys upon the negative mind’s tendency to ‘protect and react’(95% of psychology currently deals with issues surronding the negative mind). The news is therefore formulaic as it fosters a constant state of fear that drives people into a protective and reactive mindset and permits politicians to stay in power as they claim to have the answers to resolve the world’s ills. This is in turn reinforced by the mass media outlets whose news content constantly revolves around, death, crime, disease, fraud, violence, sex etc…doesn’t matter which channel you tune in to. Ego is our survival tool provided at birth to allow one to recognize themselves as an individual, this individual is hungry, that toy is mine etc…but as we grow, we do not surrender the ego, instead we feed its insatiable appetite into adulthood, so we are essentially premature babies in an adult suit. We don’t own anything, we experience, the only thing we take to the grave is our word, not the car or the house or the yacht etc… So, people are driven to acquire these things and politicians such as the ‘Conservatives’ foster platforms and assurances to protect those things, on and on it goes.

    I’m probably sounding off as a nut as there are a few thoughts here that might not seem connected but i just wanted to offer my support and share what I believe to be one of the answers you might be looking for in your quest for spirituality.

  581. kevin boland said:

    the kid has broken — hell, blown to smithereens — one of the cardinal rules of tv jernalizm.
    keep it tight.
    keep it bright.
    or keep it to yourself.

  582. kevin boland said:

    p.s. sure, i know, that’s not how you spell jernalizm. fact is tv news writers (and sign writers), with precious few exceptions, are the world’s worst spellers. i saw enough of ‘em in my ten years of scribbling at CTV News.
    p.p.s. oh yeah, as the young fella shows, Ted Baxter is alive and well, if out of work.

  583. Forests of Hope said:

    We need more journalist like you! Thank you for saying what many are affraid or don’t care enough to say. I guess that is how democracy gets lost and dictatorship is born.

    “The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing our thinking.” — Albert Einstein

    You are the first to change the thinking! Thank you!

    I immigrated to Canada 20 years ago. I am catching myself thinking more and more to move back to Europe. Canada is no longer the country it was when I came. I feel no longer proud to be a Canadian.

    The current government and the direction it is taking is truly oppressive and irresponsible to the future generation. If things aren’t going to change in the next 4-5 years we’ll be like the Americans – broke and dismantled as a society.

  584. James C. said:

    Some of what you say is correct, some not. There are things that the current liberal discourse tells and you believe without checking the facts. To make it clear, let me an example of the kind of misconceptions. Check the flat earth part of “scientific mythology” article on Wikipedia.

  585. Jillian Lynn Lawson said:

    Dear – yes, dear Kai – I agree with the person before me, Forest of Hope, we do need more people like you – and we all need to speak up, as you have done, to retrieve our Canada from this truly oppressive government, from captive media and corporate rule.

    Take heart, Kai, you – like the young woman who wanted to “Stop Harper” in the Senate – have great futures ahead of you. Canada needs you.

    Jillian Lynn Lawson
    Porcupine Hills, AB

  586. Hi Kai,

    I too had a wake up call a while ago, in which I realized I was doing all the wrong things with my life. I was pursuing money and things. I saw the essential uselessness of what I’ve been doing with the bulk of my time, and the supreme importance of doing something meaningful. Doing something meaningful to me is about working to change the world. Working to help people. Working to fix the mess we’ve gotten ourselves into.

    No one is coming to save us – not the government, not new technology, not industry, not our neighbours next door. There is no “someone else” who is going to take responsibility for our challenges and work to resolve them. There is only ourselves. If we don’t do it, no one will.

    A partial answer for what I will do in response to this understanding is beginning to take shape at http://www.therealizedself.com

    I hope that your, and my, and others’ awakening is representative of a larger process unfolding. The world desperately need people to ask themselves: What am I doing, and why? Why is this important?

    I wish you well, and if you’re ever on the west coast of BC, look me up.

  587. Anita Büchert Roy Naïmi said:

    Hey, we’re out west in BC. You’re welcome anytime, we’ll put you up. I left the NFB in 1994 as a small time whistleblower – it was such a relief. Wake up calls are great, but there’s usually several in a lifetime. We don’t have a TV, so I don’t know your reporting, but I get the general picture. So we’re a family of East Indian, Danish, Iranian origin and you would be most welcome.

  588. Marthe Lépîne said:

    Dear Kai
    I would like to add to my previous comment. After reading many negative comments from other people here, claiming that a job is a job, it is supposedly more responsible to persevere in a job even if it is not what you expected, and that you can make changes from the inside if you stay long enough, I feel an urge to share a little of my experience. I am old enough to be your grandmother, and things were different when I was young. Therefore I feel that my life has been ruined by that quest for security at all costs. Since I was bright, my parents were convinced that I should be an accountant (there is always work for accountants, they said). The fact that I was gifted in the visual arts and just hated accounting did not matter, I had to earn a living before I amused myself. This sort of thinking, a result of my parents’ having to live through the great recession of the late 20′s and early 30′s, is one thing that has contributed to destroying our world, since the underlying principle is that money is the only thing that counts, and this has been infecting a lot of what my generation has been doing.
    Go ahead, follow your dream. This is the right thing for a thinking young adult to do. Changing things from the inside is definitely not realistic – by the time you might have reached a level where your decisions will count, you will probably have had to sacrifice your own voice for so long that you will have simply lost it. We need people with your talent, who are willing to look at the world around them with a fresh mind and the courage to speak out and to refuse to blend in with the crowd. And you are also gifted with an excellent writing ability, which is unfortunately no longer very common nowadays. Do what you like, and you may not get the big earnings, but you will find that you will manage to make ends meet.

  589. bowet000 said:

    Thank you for writing such an great insight into why you left your job. Even though Canada has significantly gone the way of the US in the previous 15 years, with the dumbing down of TV, the lack of any actual news, and government policies based on ideology, it is reassuring to read how one man chose to rise above this. It’s also reassuring to see the posts on here of others, who similarly chose to follow things that were more important to them than money and stuff.
    Canada is an amazing nation, with well educated people. Unfortunately, sticking our head in the sand and pretending like there isn’t a massive problem brewing is not going to solve anything. It’s important to see and have hope that one person at a time we are really waking up.
    Good for you Kai!

  590. Moose said:

    Great to see one of the media mugs standing up for the true north strong and free! ‘Effin’ about time somebody shook up this dopey country — let’s hear from the rest of you! We at Moosedialogues.ca figure it’s about we kicked ass in Canada. They’re bamboozling us with bullshit! Go get ‘em Kai! — The Moose.

  591. Rex Randall Shoop said:

    HI Guy, good read very interesting and to the point. It is a rare day when one can sit, put pen to paper, write truth and feel free. We out West pride ourselves on being free thinkers and staying untouched by the confines of, proper and safe. Come on out and take a look at what we have going on at the present time, I am talking about the HST and the citizens of the Province standing up on their own and for their own. I believe this is maybe one of the purest acts to play on this country’s stage in a long time. People standing alone and saying, “Enough”. We need someone with courage, convictions and who owes only to himself to chronicle this endeavour and compile the truth so future Canadians can read the true story what ever it may be. Stay free and stay true.

  592. may said:

    If only all those old and wrinkled “Ken & Barbies” we regularly see on TV retire, will the youth graduating in the future get ahead in life. By Canada has to push up its normal retirement age from 65 by at least a few years, has made the situation even worse for the youth of today. We come across, old foggies working past 65 daily in our life, and that I think can be great, and maybe due to the expensive and costly living standards of today, but they take away jobs from the youth of today.

  593. Max LeBlanc said:

    Indeed. It’s easier to bash a great idea to hide one’s cowardice.

    • PAM said:

      A lot of those bashers may be hired gun.
      But to tell you the truth, they are doing a pityfull job.

      The best I have seen so far: you should do it from the inside…
      The worst: I would give my wife for your job…

      So no real bashing here.

      Just narcist (one used that term… I like it) who want to show themselves without having any clue.
      What is so funny is that these guys are so clueless that it is not even funny to shoot them down.

      They have the brain of clay pidgeons…
      Would really love to track them down and put their real name in the open.
      It is reasonably simple you know…

      Would be fun to track down a CBC manager.
      To know who is behind the scene.
      40 years since my first program showed me: once you really want to do something and you can define the problem properly… The answer is obvious and the path so simple…
      Just need a few days of thinking and researching…
      Just keep it simple: track down the post of these guys with a search engine… Then accumulate behaviour and ask to the moderator…

  594. Why was I directed to read this diatribe? I can’t imagine a bigger waste of my time. Some young man quits his job and a friend on Facebook says: “check this out, very interesting.” Nope.
    I mean, I accept his reasons for quitting his job. I get it. I too had a moment in my life where I decided I could no longer sell my soul to the corporate world. I’ve been self-employed ever since. So, I hear ya, Kai. But I didn’t bore people with a 3000 word monologue.
    I don’t know – perhaps it’s your equivalent of the “stop harper” sign that (I’ve already forgotten her name) page in the Senate held up. Who knows? Maybe Mike Moore will give you a job offer too. Think of how objective you could be working for Michael Moore – the crown prince of objectivity.
    But it’s not objectivity that you are really aching for, is it? It’s the freedom to express YOUR opinion. You’ve done a good job with this blog. You were way off the radar screen before this. Maybe you can figure a way to make a living off it. But if you want some advice, be more concise or you’ll lose readership. Big media already knows this. That’s why all the coverage of the royal visit. It may piss you off, but you MUST learn this: Media is, first and foremost, entertainment. And let’s face it – the people want to see Kate’s bum.

  595. PJM said:

    Hmm, welcome to adulthood Jimmy. While well-written it does have a hint of the self-indulgence about it. Work the solutions from within; you gave up a valuable position from which to effect change, albeit indirectly. One year of anything is barely a taste.

    You are clearly well-educated and thoughtful and no doubt you will find something rewarding to noodle away at.

    Question: What crazy industry makes a 23 year-old the chief of anything? That I find curious and a little discomfiting; others perhaps may find my opinion ageist.

    • ek said:

      Bureau Chief just means he’s the only reporter in Quebec City for CTV National. Sounds spceial but not in charge of anything really. Just him and a camera man.

    • PAM said:

      Let’s talk to you…
      You do not seem like a tourist.

      Intelligence is your motto…

      Self-indulgence too… I am using your words here.
      You are repeating the work within ad nauseam.
      Seems it is a message that is spin over and over.

      Is there a communication firm handling the damage here?
      I mean…
      who came up with that message: should have work within the organization.
      Who came up with the message: giving up a valuable situation.

      Seems all people bashing Kai are using the same word.
      I am very proud of you… You are indeed adding more substance to the fact.

      But let’s be clear: through your compliment, you are trying to manage the damage.
      So you are clearly a hired gun repeating the same thing others said.

      Let’s review your message:
      WORK FROM WITHIN: well the whole organization is corrupted… It goes from Harper all the way down.
      Can you really say that CBC has not been hijacked by political agenda… It started with Rabinovitch and has gone downhill since.
      Please do indulge me mister: do you know what Rabinovitch did 5 years ago?
      Seems you have no perspective:
      You are either a tourist or a hired gun!

      Question: what organization makes a 23 years old chief and then hires a communication firm to go after him?

      Real question: is he that dangerous?
      Subsidiary question: Could you please show you real name, phone and employer?
      Just to answer you reply: my initials is based on my name, my email is public and I do invite you to come after me… I will enjoy this fight.

      You need to prove me you are not a tourist.

      So far you have been repeating a message coming from a public relation firm.
      Are you with National?

      • exposed said:

        I am with you this ek seems like he is a shill troll working to divide and stop people from supporting the ones who take a stand for what’s right… I always wondered how much they get paid to sell out humanity must have had a troubled passed to do this to his fellow man

    • PAM said:

      So basically, anyone 23 years old and younger should be what?
      Can a 23 years old person become a chief?

      Please tell me: at 23 years old… where was Bill Gates?

      • ek said:

        Cripes, do you two know any english? Troll? Nope sorry, just someone who has a different opinion. But to conspiracy theorists like yourselves that isn’t allowed.

        • Dan Perillo said:

          I see you have missed the overall point EK.

          I am just glad that most others here do get it.

          Cheers to individual and free thinking!

          • ek said:

            Ya know I’m open to the idea of having missed the point, but I don’t think that’s the case. Just like i don’t think anyone is doing my thinking for me. So far all I see on the board are people who hate the Harper government and feel living in Canada is tant amount to living in North Korea. GARBAGE!! We live in one of the best countries of the world…my thoughts, not what some faceless media conglomerate is spoon feeding me. I think just as freely as you do and if I don’t like what I see on tv I turn the channel. As I’ve said before I know plenty of journalists in my town who are pounding the pavement everyday bringing important, unbiased stories to the airwaves. Not all of them are Ken or Barbie and not one of them has reported on Kim Kardashian. And if you don’t like Harper, vote him out, it’s a free country.

            • I won’t disagree entirely with you, but I do disagree. Do you live in a country where your ancestrial point of view is disreguarded and actively pushed to annialation? Have you ever lived on a reservation or know what it is like to be dismissed before you are even given a chance to be considered? But when anyone says anything about it then it is just so much of “get over it already.” Or better yet lets throw you in a school and then tell you that everything that you ever learned about your family and ancestery is wrong and barbaric(heathens/infidels).

              The truth is the third world is here and there. Let me hold you down spit on you and then see how your thoughts are focused.

              How does that wool feel on your nose?

              I have to wake up everyday and see retard after retard dirty my ancestral homeland, all the while saying that we are to insignificant to damage something so vast.

              If what I read was true then according to ancient European belief bathing on a weekly basis is dangerous because of the bad spirits in the water, when in reality you were simply bathing in your own filth. Finally after 400+ years “western ‘civilisation’” has finally brought that filth here.

              I challenge you. Prove me wrong.

  596. ek said:

    Soo…this has become less about the quality of news and much much more about getting rid of Harper. Another major rule of journalism broken. WHAT IS YOUR FOCUS?!!!! This is getting old fast. Next sound bite please.

    • exposed said:

      it’s not just about harper don’t forget the oil bandits and weapons dealers he works for…

    • Max LeBlanc said:

      You’d like this idea to die….It’s not dying……these 3000 words resonated on a lot of people……and you are scared to lose the income from your dirty sideline. How petty.

      Next sound bite? The two words ”Kai Nagata” are now used by spammers, that’s the kind of impact Kai had on the public sphere.

      All of this happening, while you are trying to shove your stupid populist denial down people’s throat. Creationism, anyone?

      Go away troll, you have no real purpose and the world needs you like another Exxon Valdez disaster.

  597. Miskitta said:

    Oh wow! Are you ever dim! You sound like a tube-fed fundamentalist propaganda drone. Oh wait, youre from Calgary. I think that’s where the factory is kept.

  598. Howard said:

    I appreciate your honesty and searching for what’s important. Good luck! It seems to me that “us viewers” want to relate to the person or personalities in the media. That’s why we make a big deal about the news anchorman (or woman), the sports hero or the Hollywood star. But I appreciate someone who shows their true thoughtfulness and character, not just keep the “public image” that’s expected. So you can keep me on your “news” list.

  599. Miskitta said:

    Not you, Pam. I mean Doc.

    • PAM said:

      OK!
      Good reaction…
      I must admit that given the smear campain that was run against Kai by CBC (look at the message and you can induce who sent them…) I am pretty sensitive.

      I even did a fight with RAD even if we had the same values.

      But there is true dirt coming in under orders of CBC and I feel them like I feel Harper’s value.

      These guys are allowed to come here but we are here among equals and my words bear the same value as those lazy bashers who can only come, spit their dirt and run away like cowards…

      Sometimes, I am like sand paper to polish those bashers away…
      The fun part: the minute they feel any kind of polishing, they run away like the sissies they are when any challenge comes toward them.

      Do I enjoy doing this? not at all.
      Will I keep doing it? You bet… They better start to show some intelligence in their post… The only one was Kiki…
      So I am now going to go back and ask her again to prove she has anything to deliver, any intelligence except more subbtle bashing…

      Kiki: I love you! Are you the lady who came to my place to wear a thai mask?
      Novergian song: I once had a girl…
      Playing with these bashers is way too easy!
      I should pay for this!

  600. If you really meant what you wrote and I really hope you do
    But if you do
    I want to post this

    Maybe some one with your gift can help??

    Cheers …thank you and good luck Sir

    I really enjoyed your article and agree 110%

    • PAM said:

      So you are saying he is a green?

      Any proof?

      This is really great..
      First you are qualifying as a green (to prepare the next bashing).

      And then you finish by saying you are right mister.

      Great job.

      Quality of managing this crisis has gone up…

      I will need to sleep and then I will come back to see the results.

      I do expect the following:
      - associating Kai with green
      - bashing green;
      - Bashing Kai…

    • PAM said:

      Not saying you have wrong motives.

      Just saying that Kai is under attack by a public relation firm hijacking this thread.

      If you are indeed candid… Then you need to understand how they will try to spin this…

      So if you are for real, go back and read the thread…
      Look how the message was already spinned by those media specialist…

  601. Andrew said:

    If you want to see the left wing bias of the CBC and CTV just look at what they don’t say rather than what they do. Look at the tame questioning of Layton after he was caught with his pants down and imagine how they would have acted if Harper had been caught naked in a brothel. Look at their attitude to immigration and the Sri Lankan boat scammers despite the fact that their own comments section was overwhelmingly against that abuse of our hospitality.

    Kai seems to be getting upset because there is an alternative view now. Its OK for people like Michael Moore to make blatantly biased movies but the right wing view should never be heard. He seems to be upset because he can’t have his own views and rant about them. Why doesn’t he get a job on the CBC and get a job like Terry Molewski has? Then he can do it on the taxpayers dime and pretend to be objective too.

    • Andrew, there was no evidence found that Jack Layton was engaged in any kind of sexual encounter 16 YEARS AGO and that supposed heresay was supplied illegally by a former police officer in a cheap attempt to smear the NDP. There is massive evidence of Harper destroying our democratic processes for which you care nothing.

      Kai is courageous and correct that the CBC has been moving to the right and dumbing down its content for years, but it’s still too supposedly left-wing for extremists like yourself.

      • PAM said:

        Well Harper is borrowing from Bush’s book.
        After all, there are brothers in soul…

        We all saw what Bush did so we know waht to expect from Harper.

        Mark my words: by choosing 2015 as thge reference year for a Cap and Trade in Canada, Harper will split Canada…

        He has already showned that he is playing the fear and division approach to politics…
        He is indeed a true operator, a manipulator.
        The name of Harper will be related to Bush in history and he will be remembered as the worst prime mimister since confederation was born.

        It may not happen in five years, but twenty years from now: Harper will be associated with shame. distrust, lie and destruction.

        It seems so obvious to me that Harper is even worst than Trudeau…

        For the ones thinking I am a liberal: the best prime minister in the last 50 years (I am 53) is Mulroney.
        Ask any civil servant about the Mulroney period: it was one of empowerment where they were supported in their job.
        Still Mulroney was able to cut a lot of employees in the government and put us back toward fiscal balance (Martin reaped the benefit).

        It is not a matter or parties and lip service… It is a matter of what you do:
        Do you really think we can judge an executive during his time in office?
        No you need to wait years before seeing the results…

        I have done a lot of computer projects where the team leader was replaced and the next one just surfed on the wave that was done by the first team leader…
        Results: the surfer gets the applause, the other one is a skapegoat.
        But who really did the job?

        • I have do disagree with anyone who knocks the man who truly man Canada a country in its own, with a Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Yeah, Okay he put the country in debt but, he was fighting the trend of the time. Canada wasn’t the only country that suffered from this growth in debt.

          I openly dis agree with anyone who doesn’t like what Trudeau did for our PATRIATED country, or would you all prefer we have remain just a colony of Britain/UK?

          And as for Mr. Mulroney what the f*** was he thinking when he signed NAFTA, it has tied us to the sinking ship of the US economy, and he substantially increased Canada’s debt from $250bil to like $650bil where as Trudeau only took us from $18bil to $250bil.

          Thanks to one of Trudeau’s Cabinet ministers, who later became Prime Minister Jean Chretien Canada’s debt was turned around and economic recovery truly began. However it was just in time for the PC’s to take credit.

          Or am I wrong. Please enlighten me.

          P.S. the dept began during WW2

    • PAM said:

      Layton was caught in a human situation.

      Harper is a hired gun from oil industry.

      His green agenda is so dark that it goes beyond belief.

      Attack Layton and we will feel free to look at Harper’s history.

      It is so simple:
      Harper was in the the think tank that proposed to split Quebec if Quebec would separate…

      Harper proposed to split Montréal in two in 1995.
      That was his idea.

      Do I need to spell it out: Harper wanted to destroy Québec…

      Why do you think NDP had so many elected?

      Harper is the worst thing that happened to Canada!

      Harper = Bush.

      Harper wanted to keep soldiers in Afghanistan DESPITE the parlemient decision…. And he did.

      Please do enjoy attacking Layton… I don’t like him, really don’t but Harper is the worst evil this country have seen.

      Ask Atomic energy of Canada. Ask top civil servants, Ask diplomats.

      Ask anyone…

    • Scott in Nova Scotia said:

      Well-said Andrew.

  602. Gregory said:

    I admire what you did Kai. I remember you from your short-lived passage at CGG. I lost track over the years, probably because I do not own a television, and maybe because I have been abroad for too long. Spending time away from my country, what do I realize? What I thought to be Canadian values are now at odd with the ruling party values, but well, apparently all Canadians are naturally conservative.

    I wish Canada was not becoming the isolated island you talked about. At least, I realized there were still young people out there with a critical mind.

    You made the right choice. I am pretty (damn) sure only of few of us would have taken a similar decision. Be proud, you are a man of action, not words.

    G.

  603. PAM said:

    I really like the idea of a public relation firm hijacking a thread.

    what is so nice is that other journalist, former colleagues… Might find a story in this…

    Go ahead!

    how much damage can you handle ataacking a journalist?
    Are you sure you want to play this game?

    • ek said:

      You are the most paranoid on here.

      • Max LeBlanc said:

        The urge you are communicating to ”move on to the next sound bite” sounds bizarre ek.

        Count me in the paranoid side. As if public relations firms never highjacked an internet thread. Give me a break.

      • PAM said:

        Care to justify?
        Are you paranoid?

        I am going to enjoy seeing you explaining your point…

        Go ahead, make my day.

  604. PAM said:

    You do understand that others can see the:
    `Work from within“ message?

    You do undertand that journalist are reading this thread?

    You do understand that the more you are doing a concerted effort to attack Kia, the more it will be apparent?

    You do understand that increasing the scope (not reducing it like you try to do) will bring more damage?

    So here is my approach:
    the more you attack Kay, the more we will try to increase scope and put things in perspective;
    The more you are bashing, the more we will try to look at the reason for bashing;
    The more you will try to associate Kai with someone that was not in his text, the more we will show that your are trying to spin us.

    Go ahead, make our day…

    With the number of people supoorting Kai you are just putting oil (a la harper) on the fire…

    I am really enjoying this…
    Keep it on guys…
    Keep attacking Kai.
    You are just making a proof of his case…

  605. Stunning. I am drawing parallels to my own life. I can’t thank you enough.

  606. Halleluja!
    Thank you for saying this better then I could have. I am glad you quit your job. I had the same realization 4 years ago working as an intern at CBC. News, and traditional media satisfy our sugar and salt and grease cravings, but leave us hungry for real nutrition. They measure their success by attracting and keeping more fast food media junkies. It does not inspire us to grow as humans, and as a communities.
    Since then I started my own project and media company (Green Dream Media=Slow Media+Love+Green+Poetry).
    I am trying to make media in a way that is nourishing and fun for my own spirit and for others. Well, I am still figure this little money detail. if you have any ideas let me know.
    I would love to keep in touch and have further discussion about ‘Slow Media’ etc.
    you can see some of my blog posts on the subject
    http://www.maiaiotzova.com/category/slow-media/

    Good luck!
    maia

  607. Carol said:

    What you say is true. It has always been like that. Unfornately good reports are lost due to decisions made in boardrooms. Mr. Nagata you will do fine. By doing what you are doing at this young age is great. I did not follow my heart until I had wasted 38 years of my life. If I had regrets it was not following my beliefs sooner. Good luck on your path in life; I wish you all the best.

  608. cmajka said:

    An excellent article: spot on in every respect. If you are not already familiar with it, I throughly recommend Jerry Mander’s superb book, Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television” (Quill, New York, 1978, 371 pp.). Mander (who I met and interviewed) developed very penetrating insights into the systemic problems and shortcoming of television as a medium to convey anything of substance. Thirty-three years later this book is just as sharp and relevant as it was in 1978. It’s a shame that so little has changed – and some of it for the worse – in the interval. Much of what he says is of direct relevance to your current critique of television journalism

  609. Anca said:

    I’m sure you will accomplish great things and we will hear from you in the future. A lot of people are going to follow you. And I will be one of them. We need more people like you who are intelligent and intellectually independent. Not willing to follow any corporate direction no matter who wrong.

    Thank you and good luck. You are rich indeed.

  610. Anca said:

    I’m sure you will accomplish great things and we will hear from you in the future. A lot of people are going to follow you. And I will be one of them. We need more people like you who are intelligent and intellectually independent. Not willing to follow any corporate direction no matter how wrong.

    Thank you and good luck. You are rich indeed.

  611. A thoughtful, interesting read. This may not have been the best fit for you but I have no doubt you will make your mark in our society. Best of luck and I look forward to hearing more from you.

  612. G said:

    I agree with much of this. But certainly not the Barbie and Ken thing. Just the opposite I see. The CBC especially seems to hire frumpy unattrative people who with chubby bellys go thru senseless folksy ho-ho’s more than they read the news. Which is why I dont watch the news much. To much folksy chat – no facts. I guess the biggest and saddest truth here is, in the end, its the people that appear to want this white sugar TV instead of the truth.

  613. melanie janisse said:

    As I am in the process of closing the doors of my two businesses, having begun the process of straying away from the script, so to speak, being in a beginning process of knowing absolutely that the only way to true knowledge is through the heart, I commend you. So here we are, two people at a cusp. We drop the rock and live without masks. I am sure there are many others. I wish you a pirate’s journey.

    Melanie Janisse, poet

  614. Melanie said:

    Don’t let the negative comments get you down. What you have said is clearly true. I know because I watched stanly cup hoopla on the CBC news for days without getting more than 5 minutes worth or Real news. Same goes for the royal visit. It is incredibly frustrating. If you can get me real news I will follow you to any network/ paper/ blog… Best of luck.
    Ps if public office interest you I’ll volunteer for your campaign. It would be nice to actually be represented by someone who’s views I can relate to.

  615. Glenn said:

    Thanks for sharing this. While some of your positions don’t agree with my own, your story changed my thought process. Instead of blindly following the ideologies that we’ve been conditioned to believe in, we should consider the experiences of those who go against the grain and sacrifice normalcy for moral excellence.

  616. michael said:

    the government has been brainwashing its ”citizens”for years with the help of religious nuts and enviro”mental idiots”

  617. Raymond LeFort said:

    There are no real leaders of the LIberal party. Why don’t you choose politics if you want to try to make a difference; or is journalism no diffent than politics?

  618. Douglas said:

    Hello Kai,

    I read your article and your ideas with a big smile on my face. You’re a smart guy and one who has tapped into a true sense on honesty and authenticity. I’m not talking necessarily about the commentary on the state of media and the particular media format you worked in. Those points were very insightful and educationaly to read.

    But rather, I am talking about your “soul searching” or insight into your personal being. Your last statement rings the most true and I applaud you for it and thank you for it. What you figured out at 24 I have figured out as well – just at 40. I just resigned my own job, well paying, respectable title, great step on a career progression, yadda yadda. I have no concrete plans but I have a direction and a true sense of what I would like to do and achieve for myself and for the good of others.

    So I’ll be interested to follow your path and see how each of us finds new and fulfilling free lives.

    Thanks for sharing and being so honest and open about it.
    I wish you very well and always be happy.

    D

  619. Rupert said:

    Capitalist media! Supply and demand! I often complain about the quality of the news but who cares about my opinion. The masses want will+kate+8, tot mom and tiger affairs – they want the tabloid news and they want it immediately when they turn on their tv, internet, iphone, etc.

    Facts, truth, honesty is inconsequential. Attention spans have withered to milliseconds. Why make corrections when viewers don’t remember the mistake.

    Go change the world, the problem is the world won’t change with you. Optimism will give way to realism.

    Money is made feeding the drug to the addict vs trying to cure them. Blame falls on the dealer and while we coddle the addicts.

    Soon you will be 24 + 15 minutes… did you hear about Tiger Woods… what was your name again?

  620. jt said:

    This blog just illustrates the conflict for people who have gone through journalism school where 90% of the students and profs are left of centre, who then discover that only 50% of the general public is left of centre. Your complaints against the current government are largely unfounded and misguided. “War against science”? Utter nonsense. It’s the government’s fault we don’t have a seat at the UN Security Council? C’mon.

    I’m a faithful CBC listener and don’t identify with any political faction, but if I had to hear these poorly reasoned opinions whenever watching or listening to the news, I would turn off the TV/radio very quickly indeed. I want depth and impartiality in news reporting, not misguided and superficial opinions.

    • Scott in Nova Scotia said:

      Quite true.

    • Chris said:

      Actually, close to 61%, so still the majority and still some hope.

      • Scott in NS said:

        I know someone who dropped out of journalism school at King’s College in Halifax for that very reason – the school insisted you be super-left leaning. If you wanted any hope of a good mark, you had to be pro-gay, ultra global warming, anti-family, anti-business, pro-abortion, and of course, very very anti-US. She said it was not an education, but political indoctrination.

        • Vahan said:

          I know somebody who knows somebody, who knew somebody too. But I didn’t believe them.

  621. Scott in Nova Scotia said:

    This expresses a few things that most of us have always known:

    1) Journalists have opinions – and it leaks out all the time – in the stories they choose to cover, and how they choose to cover them. The super-thin veneer of “objectivity” that we try to put on Canadian journalists not only makes them boring, but it’s seen through by most everyone.

    2) The interesting journalism is when we let people express opinions. For example, the only CBC I ever watched was the political panel (which I think they’ve now given up). Why? Because they argued points of view – it was interesting. They all had biases, but I knew what those biases were and could filter accordingly. Our news broadcasters generally assume the news audience is not intelligent enough to do this.

    3) As much as they “protest too much” to the contrary, most news people are quite left leaning. At first, Mr. Nagata tries at length to say he is politically neutral. Then, the next few paragraphs sound verbatim like they came from an NDP “playbook”. This is a human problem, and nothing unique to Mr. Nagata. In our own mind, we have “points of view”, while others have biases. We have informed opinions, while others (as Mr. Nagata puts it) have “ideology that doesn’t reflect reality.” This elitism is rampant in the Canadian news industry, and won’t be going away anytime soon.

    It’s too bad Mr. Nagata’s voice – now that it’s free – will probably go silent in a short period of time. His blog is a story for the media this week (like Will & Kate’s visit), but next week there will be something newer.

    We try to avoid all things American in Canada – and one of those things is the polarized news coverage. But the reality is, as much as we may not like it, news is a commodity that has consumers – and consumers make choices. In the real world, news is “Rocky Road” and “Carmel Fudge Ripple” – but we always want to report it like every story is “Vanilla” – and it’s just not a great fit.

    My 2 cents.

    • ek said:

      Thank you Scott. Well said.

  622. garry butler said:

    It’s a shame that the Canadian media is losing such a great talent. As private and pubic broadcasters race to the bottom it is becoming more and more difficult to find the real news of Canada and the World. Good luck and I hope we haven’t heard the last from you. Garry

  623. FANTASTIC!! COURAGEOUS!! INSPIRATIONAL!!!

    Eat some raw honey and get some sleep!!!!

    • Chris Owens said:

      Agreed! Thank you, Kai. It takes courage to be free.

  624. Thanks Kai for this excellent article!
    As one who is increasingly distressed about the suppression of stuff for fluff increasingly evident in all media outlets, it is good to have someone from the inside saying the same thing!
    As one who spends his free time posting stories about homeless people (www.homelessguide.com) I have lamented the issues homeless people make visible to all of us – the decline in our social infrastructure, our indifference to the mentally vulnerable etc – are avoided in the news. We don’t want to tackle the real issues anymore. Sound bites are about all we can stomach. We stay away from the more complex stuff and settle for the white sugar drool of entertainment TV where even journalists are forced to spend more time in make-up than delivering anything of substance!

  625. Thanks Kai for this excellent article!
    As one who is increasingly distressed about the suppression of stuff for fluff increasingly evident in all media outlets, it is good to have someone from the inside saying the same thing!
    As one who spends his free time posting stories about homeless people (www.homelessguide.com) I have lamented the issues homeless people make visible to all of us – the decline in our social infrastructure, our indifference to the mentally vulnerable etc – are avoided in the news. We don’t want to tackle the real issues anymore. Sound bites are about all we can stomach. We stay away from the more complex stuff and settle for the white sugar drool of entertainment TV where even journalists are forced to spend more time in make-up than delivering anything of substance!

  626. chris mura said:

    Hi Kai,

    It will be an uphill battle, but don’t give up. The world needs more people like yourself.
    I’m a bit older than you, and by now I kinda’ know you can’t win, as I couldn’t, but nevertheless, I feel you can’t play on the other side…as I couldn’t.
    I’m just an engineer, hence…just a few words…though I’m sure you understand…
    Just know…there’s still a few of us left…don’t despair…
    The world needs more people like you.

  627. Amanda said:

    Good for you!!! As a somewhat recent grad from Broadcast-Television who is entering the world of corporate opinions and jobs which are turning my brain to mush, I completely understand where you’re coming from. All the best out West :) A real inspiring read!

  628. SpinHB said:

    Bloody brilliant – well said Kai and you are not alone!

  629. Chris said:

    Bravo. The consequences of selling out to the right-wing, Murdoch Empire can be seen in England as we speak. In today’s apathetic Canadian climate, we need more people like yourself, making the hard, mature and well-focused choice to fight and hold on to your ideals. It’s far to easy to give up and drop them these days.

  630. Erin Despard said:

    Thank you for this. It’s both disturbing and inspiring. I hope that whatever you do next allows your voice a prominent place in the public sphere.

  631. Gord said:

    Best of luck Kai. You have strong social values and beliefs. I know whatever you do, you will leave a footprint and this world will be a better place.

  632. Lu said:

    Please go into politics!

  633. I am struck at the thoughtfulness and deep reflection of this young man. I can, I think, relate to his plight more than most. You see, I also used to be a broadcast journalist at a very young age (starting at 18, to be precise) – in then communist Poland. Young and idealistic, I landed my great opportunity at the age of 20 – becoming one of the co-anchors of a fast-paced, “western-style” news broadcast called Tele – Express. As a first such endeavour behind the Iron Curtain, we were given a considerable leeway by the communist government. They hoped that using our broadcast as a safety valve they will diffuse the unrest. So we were allowed to broadcast live and had full editorial control, frequently criticizing the government. The result was essentially an overnight stardom. We were watched every day by 18,000,000 people – almost half of Poland’s population. People recognized me on the street. High school chums wanted to be friends again. Most importantly, I was making a difference. I was pushing the envelope. Then, only a year and a half later, as quickly as it started, so it ended. The government in 1988 decided there was too much press freedom. The censorship was re-introduced in the last gasps of the regime. Our show was recorded, not broadcast live. Our editorials were censored and/or written for us by “somebody upstairs”. So I did the only thing that made sense, the same thing Kai did. I quit my job. I left the country (merely a year before the fall of the Iron Curtain) and headed for Canada, where I imagined the press free and untethered and people demanding and getting truthful, provocative reporting they deserved. What I found was exactly what Kai described; a medium calcified by self-censorship, political expediency and market pressures. Journalists more interested in landing a senate appointment than asking tough questions (Mike and Pamela, stand up, take a bow!), lazy editors, reporters who could not spell integrity, let alone implement it. And, with all the alleged openness to newcomers, nobody wanted journalists with – gasp! – an accent. So I toiled in Canadian broadcasting for another 9 years, before making the best decision of my life – quitting journalism altogether and becoming involved in the non-profit world. Took me much longer to come to this point, but my conclusions were the same: life’s too short to shovel manure. Now, each day I help change lives for the better through my efforts – a work that I am proud of and that brings me satisfaction. And the one-time broadcast career, all 16 years of it, feels like remote dream. Or a nightmare.
    Congratulations, Kai. I hope you’ll find your vocation.

  634. Filomena said:

    This essay is the best thing I’ve read on-line all month. I praise your courage and honesty and it serves as a salve for the wound of poor journalism.

    Thank you. Mr. Nagata

  635. Yves said:

    Well said. I would be proud to call you my friend. Having been a long time supporter of the CBC, I now feel it is time to stop all public funding as I feel they no longer represent Canada’s best interest. I think that the problem with the CBC goes far beyond monetary issues.
    As for climate change, may I suggest you look up to the sky for answers as I truly believe there is an influence which affects our climate not only on this planet, but on our interstellar neighbors as well. Ie, huge storm on Saturn taking place right now, Jupiter losing a ring, Polar caps on mars melting, etc.
    Finally, evolution, like faith, is a tricky thing and up until recently my faith is now compromised and difficult to maintain. In a sense I guess you could say, I have been deconstructing myself from most of the things I have been taught in school. When you really think about it, evolution makes a lot of sense to a young impressionable mind but I now find myself with more questions than ever before. And the big bang, well, that’s another thing.
    In closing, I would like to say that I truly hope you represent many young canadiens with your integrity and your quest for spiritual truth. I have no doubt that you will achieve your goals. You may not wish to hear this at this time, but I think you will be back doing what you love most with the greatest success.

    Sincerely,

    Yves Schmidt

  636. Mary-Ellen Kennah said:

    Bravo – I can only wish you the best of luck and a speedy recovery from the antics of the Federal government which, as you have indicated, is, indeed, shirking its responsibility to the people it serves and to the generations to come. Freedom always has its price, but the alternative is far more expensive to the body, the mind, and the soul. I commend you for the work you have already done and will continue to do. This is what the world needs now.

  637. E. Watt said:

    Coming from a long line of journalists whose work reflected their convictions about what was right for our society, I can only say “bless you.”

  638. Heskin said:

    Good luck on finding space to make the world a better place, Kai. As a media scholar, I can support your observations about the trends in the media, particularly the race to the bottom. Some of the comments posted in response to your article suggest that many readers find the bottom the only place they understand. My students, who hope they can shine a light on difficult issues and help people make well-informed public policy decisions, will no doubt face the same challenges you have. Perhaps, over time, if more people understand how the media actually works, we will build a media worthy of a modern democracy.

  639. Outstanding and what I saw too!
    Barbie and Ken, Will and Kate..the machinations of society and it’s illusional constructs, grind on as the babies are dying on the reserves in Canada and the refugee camps on the Horn of Africa.
    We are turning away from what our elders speak such as Suzuki and Atleo.
    We dwell in chosen ignorance.
    Sad and sick:(

  640. Anthony Pierre said:

    Hope you become the spark that ignites our revolution, like that fruit seller in Tunisia! Harper and his minions have been so brilliant at hiding their steel fist in a velvet glove, we need a flame like you to turn that glove to cinders! Sometimes all it takes is a spark!

  641. wil said:

    Wow it’s been a gazillion of years since I have not seen a piece of paper containing such an insightful, sincere, and eloquent thoughts regarding this professional field of work. Good for you Kai stick to your ethics, and beliefs.You’re absolutely right people are gravitating towards a new trend of getting the facts……pretty soon good bye TV news network , and hello Social news network . Things will eventually fall in the right place for you; enjoy the journey of self discovery.

  642. Hi Kai,

    I heard your interview on the Current this morning. Very good. One major manifestation of what you have talked about is how people begin to police themselves about what are “good or bad stories”. This internalized control is heavily influenced by those who pay the piper calls the tune. Harpers recent pronouncement that Canada has now entered a conservative era reinforces the closed space that people feel they can operate in. It is scary. Thanks for the stand you have taken. Don Kossick, http://www.makingthelinksradio.ca – non commercial radio.

  643. Nermis Ferter said:

    I don’t get this. The guy is bored and he needs another job that’s why he balsts everyone with comments dependent on factual observations. If I were the English teacher I would give this “essay” a C. lacks topic integrity, the msg is not clear. So I wouldn’t dwell on this article much. I guess people are not happy because he attacked a few territories, but to me they’re short sighted and tactical to raise attention.

    • Ken said:

      Surprise, surprise……..some troll (Nermis) is attacking Kai’s english skills and trying to get peole off topic…… when clearly has no english skills whatsoever. Nermis, it sounds like you are the bored one.

  644. I admire your sense of purpose. It’s refreshing for me to hear a fellow Canadian express opinions likes yours. Good luck on your journey

  645. Jason McPherson said:

    I agree 100% with this brave ideologist. Talk about putting your money where your mouth is.

    You get one vote every four to five years between a handful of candidates, none of whom you fully agree with, and the only information you get to aid your decision is spoon-fed by a few large corporations that have a vested interest in aiding one political party.into power.

    This is not a democracy, but a media-ocrasy.

    We saw Fox “News” so-called “fair and balanced” reporting assist the dumbest man in the history of politics in becoming the most powerful for eight years in a country that should know better.

    It’s too bad you can’t truly instill objectivity in the media.

    Good luck to you Mr Negata.

  646. I don’t know you personally or from TV, I gave up on TV news broadcasts a long time ago.
    But I would like to say I am glad you are out there. I am glad you were in the right place at the right time to call BS on an industry that I can only describe as narcissistic. I appreciate your taking the giant leap into the great unknown, and I hope for only better things to come your way.
    Forge on my unknown friend.

  647. Brad said:

    If Canada needs a Jon Stewart (or a Rachel Maddow or a Keith Olbermann), might I suggest that person be Kai?

  648. marcela said:

    Los periodistas han de ser sinceros y honestos

  649. Ken said:

    watch this video. Direct parallel…..Instead this was done in 1958 in front of a bunch of executives and corporations.

    Is this guy spoiled? I dont think so. He is AWARE. Stop trolling losers. There is a big difference between being aware and being spoiled. Stop twisting the blog to your own shitty agenda. Go do something crazy with your lives…..get that apartment in downtown Manhattan…..quit your job and move to Thailand for 6 months…..good lord already, stop judging other people actions just becasue you think the ultimate goal in life is to have a 9-5 job and 4 kids. lamos. Kai rules and he is brave….not a spoiled narcissist.

    • Ken said:

      ok this is a reinactment from a great 2005 movie…..but the speech is word for word.

    • Glenn said:

      “…..good lord already, stop judging other people actions just becasue you think the ultimate goal in life is to have a 9-5 job and 4 kids. ”

      I once stated this within my circle of friends, and was ostracized for it. The response was hostile, similar to telling a religious person that God is a hoax.

      The reason is that the preconditioning of a 9-5 job, house, and family sets a persons’ reality, the same as how religion can be the basis of one’s reality. When you force someone to question their reality, expect a hostile reaction.

      Breaking away from the ‘normal path’ is exciting and can give rewards beyond what you think is possible. Those are the stories that wind up inspiring others to look beyond their perceived limitations.

      Below is the story of how my wife and I met. Everyone told us that it was impossible to spend a future together, but by forging our own path, we made it happen.
      [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdKjIQWyydQ&w=560&h=349

  650. Jodine Baluk said:

    Dear Kai, heard about this on CBC-Radio Canada this morning; fantastic, fabulous, good-for-you, and the the rest of Canada! I mean this with the greatest respect as I agree w/you. I can’t tell you how often I hunt the TV-news channels just to find a truthful, well-written, in depth, better explained story.
    I believe it’s still an issue of the aged old-boys-club in Canada and sadly they are all becoming quite geriatric and apparently now mentally slow. Which is surprising in a market this educated (apparently the most per capita worldwide), where PhD’s can’t find suitable jobs in their respective fields, and aging Gen-Xer’s like myself hop from mediocre-keepdown-MacJob to job, sideways slipping ourselves through boredom in our professional lives, that the TV-newsmedia hasn’t taken the opportunity to run with the fact that we’ve out educated our elders and are now officially “bored silly” . . . zzzzzzzzzz (oops sorry i fell asleep there, just like I do watching the evening news.)
    Thanks dude and best of luck. It is your job to stand out of the crowd and talk about things you do care about to a level that is profound – nicely done. You give me greater hope for the future of this country that I love, respect and want to contribute to, in a way greater than am ‘allowed’ by present industry in Canada.
    I wish you great success in whatever you manage to get in to. Crap, I wish us all greater success in getting fed-up and into trouble, it’s the only way our industries will survive over the next 7-10 years.

  651. Thank you for quitting your job. Clearly, someone who has such a bigoted view of Christians, conservatives and anyone who dares disagrees with you on “settled” issues, which you determined settled, shouldn’t be in the mainstream media.

    By the way, when pro-lifers say abortion kills children, that is not a mere opinion – that is a scientific fact (speaking of settled science!). How we value preborn life may be debated but not that it is human life.

    And do you really believe that that left-wing groups, artists and activists have a right to government funding? That’s not a conservative position. That is taking away my right to choose as a taxpayer!

    I suggest, before ranting about things you don’t know, that you actually be a journalist and investigate the ideas you attack. We do have good reasons to believe in pro-life views or that conservative social policy is more compassionate or that microevolution does not necessitate macroevolution (do you even know the difference?).

    Start with Stand to Reason – a group that defends many of these ideas based on reasonable logic. STR.org

    BTW, the fact that the Star printed your left-wing rant and not a counter to it, tells me your paranoia against conservative media is nothing more a smokescreen to impose even more left-wing ideology on the Canadian public.

    • Ken said:

      ! Your post is alarming. Im sorry, but many christians and religious people are not god-loving in my eyes anymore. They hate and judge things that they do not understand. Many of them dont believe in global warming, they pollute, have 5 kids, drive SUVs and dont even try to recycle. Then these religious idealists have the audacity to judge a gay artist who rides his bike to work everyday, and tries to minimize his impact on the planet and not judge anyone all the while. Its time for the extremely religious people towake up and realize that they are destoying the world. You take EVERY SINGLE OPPORTUNITY to push your hateful agenda and then you call it “freedom of speech”. WAKE UP! Theres NOTHING wrong with being left thinking. Left thinking people actually have forgiveness in their hearts….not vengence. You are the picture perfect postcard of who I NEVER want to be. I was raised catholic, realized I was gay, judged, wanted to kill myself, and then realized it is all just a bunch of BS and I learned that indeeed I am a good person (better than most “christians”) and I can do great things with my life. Stop poking your nose into other peoples lives and trying to control them…..you will NEVER suceed with the tactics you are using. The world just keeps getting more and more full of violence and hate and people like you are at the root of it. Basically, you are saying that you think there is nothing wrong with how the media is today………stay on topic and be a real christian. And for GODS SAKE……go get a brain and stop referencing the “tax payer” That is SO conservative of you. You should be ashamed. Your life must be miserable without any art or entertainment in it……….grrrrrr……..you are such and idiot

      • Scott in NS said:

        Both posts – Jose’s and Ken’s are extremist and alarming.

        • Ken said:

          yah, you are right. I was angry at the time.

        • ek said:

          Ya, but finally a post from Ken I kinda like;)

  652. Linda said:

    Way to go…stay true to yourself. Enjoy your quest!

  653. When you said(wrote), that there are peeps who vollunteer to spread their truths, that hit me. Right here(pointing to my heart). I left a few replies I ask that you read them and let me know what you think. Because they are already there you can’t edit them which I think is the goal.

    To those of you reading. Don’t let money dictate choice. Because when it comes down to it can you eat that paper that is supposed to be worth so much. Sure, it can by food. For now, but how much, and for how long. Don’t be afrid to be the front line in a charge for freedom, because you might be the first to hit the other-side, and if not then you just made it easier for the one who followed(the kids).
    Say it, feel it with me. The BUCK stops here.

  654. Austin said:

    Wow. Honesty and Sincerity. What a concept. Too bad you had to quit your job to show it, but I understand why you felt you had to. I could probably write another 3000 word essay in response to your blog furthering your comments. But suffice to say, I agree and people all over the world need to evaluate their lives and decide if their interests are truly affecting and making the world a better place to live in.

  655. Kai, you’re my hero.
    I’ve been a journalist for 20+ years in a small community, and while my situation has been different, with somewhat less coercion from the bosses, I understand your angst.
    You just came to your conclusions at a much younger age. You’re piece is brilliant. Ignore the naysayers – they just don’t get it and only underscore why journalistic integrity is even more crucial today.
    While the tools of communications have become more sophisticated, as are the strategies of control through communications, the old axiom remains: the pen is mightier than the sword.
    We need to keep telling the stories that count.

  656. mel_inc said:

    Judging by your beautifully worded essay and profound insights, I think you should be Canada’s Jon Stewart … take the path less followed and you will reach a wonderful place that others will want to see!

  657. MandyK said:

    Kai, if you are looking for spiritual, physical and intellectual growth I highly recommend you take a trip somewhere where traditional belief systems are still intact. Unfortunately Western culture has all but eliminated the opportunity for spiritual growth whereas countries such as Peru, where I currently live, still have a large population that believes that spiritual healthy is equally as important as any other facet of our well-being.
    I wish you well and am happy to say that I am proud of what you have written because as a Canadian overseas I am often not very proud of our actions.

  658. bat said:

    I am glad he quit, maybe he will take some time to look at the realities in life and pull his head out of the sand. His views on conservatives, Christians and even the realities of life show the usual liberal entitlements and self-centeredness and ignorance of their responsibilities that has become are so prevalent in the media.

    I hope he takes some time to look at the realities and truths of life and his role for the negative and positive in this time on earth.

  659. Michael Johnson said:

    Bravo Kai !
    Vous êtes une source d’inspiration.
    Courage et bon chance mon ami.
    mj

  660. Derek said:

    good for you dude. It took a lot of balls to write that and put it up for everyone to see. You speak truth, that is very honourable. Of course some people are going to slam you, your ideas threaten the status quo.

    I work for a giant bureaucracy so I see the bullshit that goes on every day, and its abundantly clear there aint much truth floating around here that those in control want to accept. And when people become coopted – usually out of necessity, as we do need money to live and its much easier to keep the job we have than quit and find a new one!! – and begin serving the needs of a system, they accomplish nothing but perpetuate the status quo.

    If you ever make it to Edmonton and want a free coffee or lunch, let me know, I’d be glad to help out. After all, you did the gutsiest thing anyone could do…crazy to some but perfectly sane to me.

    “Insanity is the only sane response to an insane world”. Erich Fromm

    Good luck and take care!!

  661. poliwise said:

    totally agree with you . the media and its agenda is becoming more and more transparent everyday.all news and events wars,revolutions etc, etc ,etc, are totally scripted dramatized to keep the people of the world transfixed on the outer,diverting them from their own reality.Been going on since we came here. there is no consciousness in the news.Its all drama with no integrity.they vibrate at the same frequency(old boys club)Follow the money.Its all about the money,(worthless paper) GET IT?????

  662. Right on, Kai! I have every one of these same feelings you describe (and quite possibly because I, too, have never owned a television), along with a similar deep trepidation about our circumstances and concern for the human prospect at “the end of history”. Your essay resonates with me very deeply.

  663. Right on! You should run for Prime Minister of Canada instead of indulging yourself on the ‘inner search’. How about contributing to the country mate? We need views like yours. Glad you wrote your blog — keep writing!

  664. Finding out who we are is extremely important in life. Good job for figuring out what you needed to do and for having the courage to do it.

  665. chari said:

    I applaud your courage. If more young people would indulge in a time of self-gathering there would be far fewer wasted lives and a much better world.

  666. Don’t let the reactionaries get you down… the souls of petty-minded political resenttiment. Gratitude to life is still the best antidote to resenttiment… and an objection to the political reactionary.

  667. Reeve Wilkie said:

    Naga… Nagat… Well, nagunna work here anymore… I still work at CTV and If I find the real reason you were fired, I’ll post it here.

  668. Jen said:

    All of his narcissistic rantings tell us exactly what we already know. “Mortgage and kids” argument aside, don’t you think it would be an interesting notion to focus on personal growth and positive contributions to our society, instead of dissecting the media?

    Yes, it is a feeding tube shoving ideals down our throat. But does the amount of people who want integrity with journalism outweigh the people who want the “fluff”? Does arguing on someones blog make a difference? I’m not saying by any means give up. But isn’t listening to this guys opinion on CBC a bit of an oxymoron? People can keep their minds open and draw their own conclusions, we are still able.

  669. Yuppa said:

    Congratulations on having the courage and integrity to follow your heart.

    I respect that you stand up to the corruption of Government and Media.

    I appreciate that you took the time to present a well thought, well written perspective on the current state of affairs, and the challenges other journalists with integrity face.

    May your travels fare you well, you have won the hearts of many canadians.

  670. we could really do with a lot more people like you willing to stand up especially in South Africa

  671. D.V. said:

    Nice read! Good Luck with life and I truly wish you all the best in your journey. I’m going through a similar “journey” but alas I need to stay home. 3 kids and all! ;-)

    You got a good head on your shoulders, mate.

    -D

  672. Ken in NVan said:

    2 things Canada has no shortage of – ultra left-leaning journalists and green 24 year old kids who think they know everything already. So… the “loss” is not that great.

    • ek said:

      Amen brother!!!

  673. John said:

    Sounded like a typical, dime-a-dozen, lefty rant. Not too difficult to come across similar rants every day in Canada. What’s the big deal?

    Do people still watch TV news? I stopped in 1977. Would NEVER expect to get any meaningful, objective reporting from a TV newscast. Pure foolishness to think otherwise.

    I am confident that the sun will continue to rise and set each day even though Kai has bailed on his pathetic little news job.

    Incidentally, this article was a mess. Never really went anywhere. Just a young man trying–and failing–to sound intelligent.

    John

  674. Ian MacDonell said:

    You are right, North American news shows celebrate the trite and parochial.That’s why I watch BBC World and Al-Jazeera. Regarding the politicians in Ottawa; if they embarass and shame me any more I am going to take the Canadian flags off my backpacks.

  675. JR said:

    1. I find it fascinating that someone who never really watched TV was so involved in creating it.
    2. The reality is that many people of Kai’s generation (and older) are not watching TV anymore because of this exact problem — it is biased tripe that doesn’t say anything of importance, and merely tickles the eyes and ears of those unintelligent enough to enjoy it.
    3. I totally disagree with Kai’s political views and interpretation of the Harper government’s actions.
    a) I personally think we need a decent military cold-war or none, and that a lot of funding for “scientific research” was being totally wasted on stuff we don’t need to know (like the sex-life of squirrels, for instance).
    b) I don’t think politicians position on the theory of evolution even comes into the equation. (And I wouldn’t equate someone who doesn’t believe in a historico-scientific theory puts someone on the same level as a flat-earther).
    c) Social issues are also ethical issues, and if the government keeps its mouth shut on ethics, then who is going to debate the really important issues Kai thinks the news media should be covering but isn’t?
    d) I believe Kai means “Evangelicals” rather than “Evangelists,” and I would see no reason the gov’t would hold back on humanitarian projects to please them, since Evangelicals are at the forefront of most NGO humanitarian projects (ie. World Vision, Compassion Canada, anyone?)
    e) The long-form census was killed because it was collecting far more information than was ever intended when census laws were created, and a conservative government believes the privacy of its citizens trumps a statisticians need for data for planning, and so the long-form should be voluntary.

    4. I agree on climate change – but I don’t think any government, including the NDP would have made serious changes. We all know asbestos is a tremendously dangerous substance, but we’re still mining it and sending it to other countries like China–and that doesn’t even make the news. The almighty dollar rules the day, and the tar-sands of Alberta are Canada’s cash-cow right now, so who’s going to shut them down?

    • bcgirl said:

      I will respond to comment 3 c), because of what it means to me to be a citizen in a society with a government that stays out of my/our religious, political and sexual choices, and how this is integral to western ideals of freedom and choice…….. and I will end with a response to comment 3 e), again, wondering how on earth JR could have arrived at the exact opposite conclusion reason and logic would, in my opinion, lead a person to arrive to?

      My response to point 3 c) made by JR is as follows-

      1. We- me, you and every other Canadian- are the ones who should be deciding and debating what is socially acceptable, in our bedrooms, doctors offices and ballot boxes…… and we are doing so for the most part. We collectively decide that Sharia Law is not gonna happen in Canada, for instance. It is called democracy, you know, participating in local and federal issues the are a concern to us all for different reasons with unique causes to champion not a one greater than the next. The fact that you ask the question, makes me wonder what your age is, not to be presumptive but, really- leave it all up to the government to debate the important ethical issues for us? I suggest that has led us to the predicament we are currently in, our lack of democratic involvement and a majority govt with a wildly unpopular standing in it’s citizens eyes. What you suggest is that we should all sit back and trust a government who has in a short period of time managed to alienate all but 32% of the 64% of Canadians who voted in the last election, a government who discount their own statistics- for instance crime rates have steadily declined in ALL major cities across Canada in the last 10 years- yet still wants to spend billions on American style “put ‘em in jail and ask questions later” method of crime prevention. And no, we don’t sit back and say, “let the government debate the issues”, we are involved and we do something about it or suffer the consequences. Do you comprehend that Canada was a world leader in restorative justice for years? If we don’t get of our asses and do something to show the current govt what we want, like form effective lobby groups with money-the only way to get things done some say- to change the current direction this govt is heading in, then we have no one to blame for the police state we are headed toward. We, the people of Canada, are the ones who decide what direction our social and ethical values will go in, not the Harper government. Not in my Canada.

      2. The reason why no government interference of personal choices is integral to western ideals of freedom, choice and acceptance of others choices as long as they do no harm to you or others(yes, a crude description of western tenants but accurate enough) in Canada, is because of many years of fighting for those rights. Look it up.

      My response to point 3 e) made by JR is as follows-

      Do you recall that the head of Stats Canada resigned due to the the Harper govt’s removal of the Long Form Census? Does that mean anything to you? The concept or idea that Harper has made many enemies of the very people that, some say, run the government-the civil servants- has probably not crossed your mind, has it? Harper has ruined the relationship with the parliamentary press-which are comprised of some of the finest journalist’s in the country- and the PM’s Office. Again, look it up. Aside from this, how is it that you propose we gain information in order to perform a complete census reading of Canadians? In your version of Canada’s future we should let the blind lead us. The idea that the Harper govt cares enough about our privacy to “allow the census to be voluntary” is like- and as effective as- the neglectful parent. One who sends their child to their room for punishment “to learn your lesson” rather then educate the child, explain why and include a lesson. The Harper govt is neglectful in it’s governance and duty in serving the people of Canada. It is simple mismanagement on almost every level, it is truly shocking. http://shitharperdid.ca/

      Mr. Nagata has performed a service of the highest democratic order, sacrificing his job in order to share his political opinion’s, and participate in the solution rather than be part of the problems in this world. And bully for him. He tells it like it is. Now we just have to convince the rest of his colleagues in the TV news network industry to do the same.

      In the meantime we can watch democracynow.org and hear from real people with real relevant world news of the day.

    • insomnaic said:

      those who are not asleep make the best motel clerks.

  676. Skookum1 said:

    Well, huh, do you think people only learn to write so they can be the mouthpiece for a publisher who DOES want THEIR opinions to be heard??….actually “opinions” isn’t quite the right word – it’s “skewed reality” and “pleasing the advertisers”…….

    “Though shalt not speak. Though shalt not think. Though shalt not tell the truth. Thou shalt only write what I tell you. Or else thou shalt be fired.”

    I’m not sure if you’re a propagandist, mlsled, or just stupid.

    “only what a rich man wants put in print shall be considered news. All else is rumour or opinion of the unqualified-to-comment”.

    Out shopping for a camel and a needle to test a certain maxim.

    Enjoy your ignorance. Must be nice to tug the forelock and think yourself happy because you’ve learned to accept what you’re told without question.

    • I think you better go live in the real world. There is an awful lot that goes on that is more than newsworthy that doesn’t get reported because of deliberate “reality skewing” by the MSM to the benefit of political and corporate interests. Take the Iraq war, the CIA stroked Saddam into invading Kuwait and then sold them the weapons through the US State Department to launch the invasion. Did that make the news, NO. Did I see all the waybills,YES. Or look at how the Helderberg crash in 1987 was spun through the “Cargo Conspiracy” episode (Forum 5/Cineflix-a CDN company). Did they go into what was actually on the plane, NO. Did they want to, NO. Would it have hurt governments, the IMF and the UN, YES. Don’t even get me started on Pan Am 103 and the Pan Am 101 switch-up with Magnus Malan, Brent Carlssen and deBeers/Oppenheimer. I was involved with the military, CI and special weapons programs for years, none of the real reasons get reported on who killed who, how and why. You might want to buy a clue and get a reality check.

      • Dan Perillo said:

        So basically you are saying stay complacent and just let this stuff happen?

        I am confused here Dave. If you are furious about these things wouldn’t you want them changed too? Or do you want the same pattern of lying to continue.

        I agree, all of those points should have been newsworthy and should have been reported.

        Yet you think that we should all turn our eye and get a “reality check”?

        I think the reality check is when we realize that the media that is supposed to be reporting these things is not. That’s the reality check. Then people like you knock down others who want to change it instead of hoisting them up and helping them.

        Very confusing Dave, very confusing indeed.

        • I was replying to @Skookum1. I’ve been fighting with the governments here and abroad for the last 21 years, ever since I left the killing fields. I don’t need a reality check, I’ve seen life and death first hand, I’ve seen the terrorists work as well, witnessed necklacings and I know things about governments from my time with CI/military that would make your skin crawl like liver towards a glass of milk. But the worst thing is the people who pull the triggers at the top, the hidden hands, the ones who are held harmless even though they get the ball rolling to destroy the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. They hide behind two tools, the twisted law and of course their puppet media.

  677. sofia said:

    props. when can we start the revolution?

  678. Rob said:

    For all his idealism, and for Kai doing something many of us wish we were unencumbered enough to do, I can’t say I admire him walking away from a steady, well-paying job when there are far too many of us who would come close to killing to have his opportunities.

  679. Ken said:

    Thanks everyone for the positive comments regarding Kai. He is probably in a tough spot mentally and could use the support. The positive comments FAR outweigh the negative babble.

  680. Kris said:

    You obviously made the right decision by leaving your job, but you have to remember that not everyone shares the same political views as you, so the media isn’t necessarily “failing” by not reflecting your own personal perspective. Every editorial team, whether in print or broadcast, has to deal with limited space/time and make decisions on what to cover and what to leave out. Inevitably, not everyone will be pleased with those choices, but most media outlets are for-profit companies and have to focus on what their paying customers want. If those customers (ie. the public) want more Will and Kate, we can’t refuse them or force-feed them political analysis.

    • coolwater said:

      The thing is, no one I know is particularly happy with the current television news programming available. I work in healthcare with many people from many walks of life, and overall, people are not pleased with media coverage of the important news stories of the day. Television news stations, for the most part, severely lack in depth stories, follow-up of those stories, local interest stories, and, the most important thing-pursuit of truth in a story. I think television news is fodder at it’s best and frankly, I watch it only often enough to see what drivel and propaganda the carpet baggers-our current govt- are attempting to pull on the Canadian public this time, ya gotta keep an eye on their shenanigans:))
      John Ralston Saul- son of Colonel William John Saul, married to the former Governor General of Canada Adrienne Clarkson, in my opinion, is a great Canadian writer and thinker. A book he wrote in the mid-90′s-that grew out of his 1995 Massey Lectures-called The Unconscious Civilization, “deals with themes such as the dictatorship of reason unbalanced by other human qualities, how it can be used for any ends especially in a directionless state that rewards the pursuit of power for power’s sake. He argues that this leads to deformations of thought such as ideology promoted as truth; the rational but anti-democratic structures of corporatism, by which he means the worship of small groups; and the use of language and expertise to mask a practical understanding of the harm this causes, and what else our society might do”, in my opinion, is worth reading.

  681. Kai…you are so brave. Do follow your heart and your head. We need more young people like you in the media who aren’t afraid to ‘cut through the pap’. Blessings on your journey.

  682. gerald mccreery said:


    this video explains the difficulty we all face. we don’t trust ourselves. it is not just ourselves but life itself we don’t trust, and so we are always looking for a second opinion to reassure us. it is all smoke and mirrors designed to help us to forget that for better or worse we are in charge of our own life. there does need to be a radical shift in how we see the world and ourselves. this is not an attitude shift but a realization of the truth of who we really are.

    • Ken in NVan said:

      That guy must smoke a lot of ganja! Use the force Kai!

  683. Hey Kai, sorry to hear you left CTV, but I respect your decision. You’re avery good reporter. I hope and pray that you will find a job, that satisfies you and gives you more freedom. I also wish you a safe journey out West and that you find Jesus and accept him as your Savior. He really can make a difference.
    All the best,
    David Maye..Pointe Claire

  684. I commend you Kai. It is good to see young people move toward action instead of just talking about it. In the future it will be the young peoples actions that make life change on the Earth. To me the time of talking is over. Action will be more prevalent. You seen the young woman in Parliament with her sign to oppose the order of the day. Kai is another one who will change how we see the world and what we are doing to it. People cannot deny that the revolutions that swept through Egypt and currently Libya, were led by the young people. They did it through the internet. It was even stated in my political science class that the youth may actually pose a national security threat if the conditions on the Earth don’t improve. Meaning that, right now we have all the food and water we need. The generation that does not exist yet will see that we did nothing to help them. We knew about the problem and did nothing about it. How do you think the youth are going to react when they can’t regrow the genetically modified seeds anymore and they have nothing to eat.
    I am 38 and a native male who lives in Alberta. I live on a reserve. I became a media writer for the native band and have found my profession rather by accident. My career found me. I have a BA from one of the universities in the province. I worked as an intern with the provincial government and i eventually i quit too. i was the only native person who worked there where the town’s population had a 30-50% native population. I met a native woman who worked in Edmonton as an intern, we met at a intern conference that they had for us. She told me, and almost started crying, that her coworkers were bullying her so she would quit. Her supervisor wouldn’t do anything about it. My supervisor, who had no degree said to me one day, Why can’t you guys just forget about the Residential Schools? She also said that now she had to solve the problems of the reserve when they had all that money. Eventually, i had seen and heard enough and i quit. Do you think the human rights department would hear my complaint? Think again. When i was growing up, we used to call people who went mainstream sell outs. You sell out all your friends. Your not welcome on the rez anymore. Nobody wants you around. Is it worth it for the money? See you later big fat Alberta pension fund, time shares wherever, mortgage, family prospects, big truck, house….

    You don’t have to go anywhere to find spiritual direction. Like that one lady said, she went to Tibet or something. What is wrong with asking the First Nation People first for direction instead of going to India? What’s the matter we are not good enough to ask for help?

    • Ken said:

      Thanks. I really wish we had more first nation representation in this country!!! I would actually love one to be prime minister if he had all of the right stuff. Things are changing in Canada regarding first nations people for the better or at least I hope so!! This is going to sound kinda racist in a way, but i think first nations people are some of the funniest, hardest working, most sincere people i have ever met.

      • Ken in NVan said:

        Just my opinion.. but I suspect that will never happen until they start paying taxes. The majority of people will never vote for someone who can raise their taxes while paying none himself.

  685. Chad said:

    The timing is too bad for your unemployment, otherwise I would totally recommend you run for politics. Your statements, outlook, balanced view are exactly they type of characteristics I seek in a representative. Evidence based governance would be such a treat.

    You even described the partisan political ideologies as tribalism, exactly as I describe the problem. Politics is no longer about good policy, it is about “us” versus “them”, and now that has leaked into how the news is reported.

    We need a well-organized response to this. Not a partisan response, but one of objective interest. But how do we do it? How can we force responsibility? Perhaps we need someone who knows the inside to help direct it. I’d vote for you, at least.

    • Ken said:

      I agree with you so much chad…….the politicians have created an us versus them problem…..it should be “how can we resolve this as a nation?”

  686. Mike N said:

    upset in the truth or happy in the lies
    you chose your way knowing better not to be awfully surprised

    awakened by knowledge or a higher power
    standing high now like a tower

    many see the same view
    and say thank you

    for your words do inspire
    when the battle for truth seems dire

    as the dark continue to conspire
    we will build the flames of light in our internal fires

    we must leave this place better than what was found
    for this is our duty as long as we are around

  687. Magazine writer said:

    I am a magazine writer. I no longer watch tv or read much news.
    I agree with this blog. There are writers that have important information that is impossible for the average person to get there hands on. Instead we fill everything with celebrities and Oligarchy (government that places extreme power in the hands of an exclusive class) and Ochlocracy (also known as mob rule) ideologies.
    The people determine what is in the news and media by the news, media and entertainment they watch, buy and borrow from libraries. If prices are high and going higher, if jobs are more stressful, if life isn’t what you hoped or thought it would be perhaps the general population have abandoned a portion of moral self-control, expectations, personal and family values. If these things were still a piority it would be reflected in every aspect of daily lives including the content of media. More interesting, how many different cultural versions can one country accomodate?
    I want to have pride in my work. I want to write truths. I want my job to be easier to share information that would make every readers lives better by giving them the opportunity to make unbiased informed choices and have sound reasonable voices in there surroundings, business dealings and environments that reflect Canada and where we are at.
    Unfortunately it’s not up to the writer, editor or staff, with some exceptions. The population generally gets what they want.
    I wish Kai Nagata all the best.

  688. Ballantynedj said:

    Thanks for being so real and for sharing your opinions. I think there are many more Canadians who would reflect your views. It is especially interesting to hear this from a person working within the media.
    All the best as you move forward into the next stage of your career.

  689. As a Journalist, I am so disgusted with mainstream media’s selling its soul to “the market” that I regret taking up the profession as a career. I, too, have moved into social cause. Join me, man. We should work to see newspapers, TV, radio and the Internet provide free content unhinged from market forces to the people. A free flow of information is vital to the lifeblood of a democratic society.

  690. Everyone is free but no one acts that way. Human being human isn’t happening, human being sheep and human being machine is all that is done. Great read thank you and all the best. Vi An Diep (Recording artist/busker – Calgary, AB).

  691. You could have more accurately entitled your entry “Why I Represent the Epitome of Narcissism, Self-Aggrandizement, and Sense of Entitlement of Generation Y”.

    • Chad said:

      What the F are you talking about? Entitlement to what? He quit his job because his company and industry were headed in opposite direction to his life’s interests.

      Are you actually arguing that “I was just following orders” is the right thing to do. If you don’t like the values of your company or industry, just lie down and take it? Give up? Become a mindless zombie? Forget about being proud of your work and your life?

      Really? What age range does your Generation Give Up and Shut Up come from? It’s neither Gen Y nor my Gen X.

      • I see that your one of the numerous sycophants blindly supporting him!

        I’ll try to make this as easy for you as possible, since you’re one of those people.

        1. Narcissism: As a journalist, he knows how to attract attention, and knew that his blog entry would garner a fair amount. It’s all about him. By being one of his sycophants, you’re feeding into his narcissism significantly. I am to a lesser extent, but I find Nagata and others like him (i.e., Brigitte DePape, the disgraced former Senate Page) amusing in their ignorantly arrogant belief that anyone cares about their little creative protests.

        2. Self-Aggrandizement: He thinks that everyone should care about his misinformed opinions on a range of issues like climate change and crime because he used to appear on TV. And what is more, he thinks that his creative protest and subsequent publicity stunt will actually make a difference.

        3. Sense of Entitlement: This overlaps a fair amount with the previous two, but essentially, he thinks that a 24-Year-Old can obtain a better job with better benefits than what he so cavalierly threw away in an adolescent-like show of blind idealism that doesn’t really target anything substantive.

        • Drew Brania said:

          James Bowden and those who “think” like him (or more accurately ‘feel’ like him, given that both his initial post and his subsequent response are deeply cynical and emotion driven – the guy is an unreflective, illogical nihilist), have missed the point COMPLETELY with Kai’s post. Even if they read and re-read both of our posts (and the majority of the other posts), they still won’t get it. They are recalcitrant, conditioned drones. They can’t see the forest for the trees.

          They are lost causes when it comes to debates like these, seeing as how they can’t do much but focus on the wrongheaded understanding of superficial details when the bigger picture and significance of this post looms vastly wider. Don’t let them stoke your rage. Bowden and his rusty kind are to be pitied.

          They have nothing left to offer but cynicism and a masquerading type of intelligence, which in reality is nothing more than instinctive, emotion-derived, drivel. If they actually had the intellectual apparatus to cast their minds into bigger places, they would see the idiocy of their shallow positions and be able to enter into discussion of what really matters. So don’t let them stoke your rage or elicit your regret for their narrowness. Just pity them, because that’s all they deserve.

          • Ken said:

            exactly, all of the opponents statements are “get a job”……”suck it up”……”ask jesus to save your soul”……blah blah blah. Unfortunately people like James Bowden exist and there is nothing we can do about it. Well actually, there is: We can ignore them and not respond to any hate that they cast upon this thread. ANYWAY…….look what is happening to the british media right now!!! Facination with celebrities has to stop. It is pathetic. We want and need real news that is going to help us solve one of the most important problems ever facing our planet……….the extreme population, polution and climate problem. People seem to think that we just need to live without focusing on reality (in pure ignorance) and just let the planet implode……I (we) am/are not going to let that happen. Social media is the new media. Now if we could only filter our all of the naysayers that seem to think that we are all paranoid…….lol. If caring about the environment and the people is paranoid, then label me too! Anyone read the celestine prophecy?

  692. Cindy Finlan said:

    Turn off the TV and read Marshall McLuhan “The Medium is The Message”.

  693. LP said:

    This is what Integrity looks like.

  694. Jim said:

    While I appreciate Mr. Nagata having served in the Reserves, his opinion that “blue beret” peacekeeping is in line with Canadian ideals is naive at best and dangerous at worst. It is an opinion based on mythical legends preached by a government trying to legitimize defence cuts in the 70′s and willingly picked up by the media machine. Talk with anyone who has actually served on a peacekeeping mission in the past 20-years and they’ll tell you horror stories of an inept organization that is struggling to deal with a changing world. The cold war made for a polarized world where you were more or less on one side or the other. That world died with the Berlin Wall. The fact is that the most effective peacekeeping is that where trained soldiers are provided with heave weaponry and willing and able to use deadly force to push waring factions apart. I’ve served extensively overseas with the CF and consider my personal leanings more liberal than conservative, and I am extremely proud of Canada’s overseas efforts in war, peacekeeping, peace-support, war on terror (what ever you want to call it), but I am a realist – I’ve been to many countries where their soldiers had no idea what the Canadian flag looked like or what it stood for (and contrary to some’s image of peace-keeping the job is not to make them feel good about Canada – its to keep them from killing each other (particularly the civilians – and this is BEST done with trained professional soldiers who intimidate them, more than their ‘enemy’ does. It works. Romeo Dallaire’s mission failed in Rwanda because he couldn’t get that kind of support, Lew Mackenzie’s mission in Sarajevo succeeded because he bucked the UN HQ and brought the heavy-weapons they told him not to. Yugoslavia peace-keeping was an embarrassment until NATO took over. Canadian officers and NCOs are world-class professionals at all kind of warfare and they dread being put back into a situation like the early days of Bosnia where they witnessed war crimes and were undermanned and out gunned – not to mention under orders not to intervene unless they were personally fired upon. Srebrenica is a sad testament to the failure of conventional peace-keeping. Such a sad story. Sorry for the diatribe, and I really wish this gentleman well. I’m sure he’s going to gain some valuable life experience and come back stronger than ever – and this is just one point I’ll have to disagree with him on. Bonne Chance.

  695. Jim said:

    Hmmm, should always proof-read before posting. Sorry that my above post on peace-keeping comes across as purely negative. There are currently Canadians serving in Africa (i.e. Sudan) and they are doing a valuable important job – so I feel the need to point out that they are doing the job of United Nations Military Observers (UNMOs). That is different from what I rant about – what happens when the UN/world realizes that observing isn’t enough and a ‘peacekeeping’ force must be deployed. I think Canada should remain engaged in peacekeeping – but I believe Canadians should be aware that a smile and a blue beret mean nothing to someone who thinks they are trying to avenge his/her ancestors for a wrong incurred against them over generations. That kind of anger needs calm, professional soldiers who can negotiate, but at the same time display the force to back up a worse case situation. First lesson in crowd control is NEVER make a claim you can’t back up, or the mob will quickly learn that you are a paper tiger. That’s what happened in Rwanda and the former-Yugoslavia. Outstanding blog, thanks for sparking so many people up, regardless of where they sit on the issues, and best of luck in the future. Cheers….

  696. Good riddance to you Sir. Now grow up and start being an adult. What a douchebag!

  697. Dawn Trueman said:

    I respond to the crisis of consience you’ve reached, to do something that abrades the soul’s need to make a mark you would like to look upon with contentment and pride is too great a toll. To report to a media system that editorializes based on choice of content, unleashes a journalistic team without adequate resources and employing a very powerful media tool that has far reaching consequences in terms of the indellible mark it etches on the minds of Canadians can be too difficult to take without feeling like you are being chipped away bit by bit. You have my support.

  698. Gin said:

    It took only two light journalism sessions with Annett Wolf Sr. to make me consciously aware that what I was finding disturbing about the networks ‘news’ for a while now was a real issue and of concern to others. I now turn the TV to BBC and the difference in the quality of ‘real’ news is very noticeable. Local news is still valuable in my area of the world; but most national news is scripted, it seems to me. Many years ago, many smaller newspapers revealed they no longer had the staff dedicated to ‘investigative’ journalism. How many journalists are hired to do this anymore? At any level? What is the purpose/vision of the media at this point in time other than corporate economic success? Where are the hard hitters, nationally?

    Personally, I am so tired of the entertainment industry using news times to inform me about events, celebrities, and products. I’m not interested. I am so angered by the ‘news’ items that say ‘could be,’ ‘might be,’ and present it as news. If it happens, it’s news, but a study that says things ‘might ‘ happen, doesn’t seem like news to me. Then there’s rarely any follow-up to let us know if this thing actually does happen.

    Opinion pieces abound but there’s often not a lot of hard news in those. Enlightenment, yes, revealing thoughts, yes. There are some great journalists who are trying to take it as far as they can but I think they are losing the fight.

    Kai, good luck, and thanks for revealing your struggle to us.

  699. Hilary Earl said:

    Chris Hedges, a former journalist with the New York Times, wrote about the exact same experience in his latest book, The Death of the Liberal Class. It is a scathing critique of media (and other pillars of the liberal class). Well worth the read, illuminating, as it posits some of the same points as you point out in your blog, but it goes even further.

  700. Helen McMenamin said:

    Congratulations Kai, for calling the emperors on their lack of clothes.There is no such thing as an ubiased report or an unbiassed news medium.
    I hope and believe you will find a great place as an intelligent reprter and analyst.

  701. Jane said:

    so well written.
    I am hopeful for your very bright future!

  702. Well Bravo to you Kai!

    I don’t agree with everything you had to say but judging from the variety of responses, if your objective was to make people think of their own moral culpability , you succeeded!! You are young without the responsibility of children and mortgages It is your job , your Duty to stand for what you believe in! We live in a world where we are spoon fed what to say, believe and think by the media and politicians,those of us with children and mortgages and family to protect don’t always have the luxury of being able to do what you did. Stand up for what you believe now, while you are young, and can. For the same reason wars are fought by the young, change is also brought about by the young who believe they can make a difference! When you have the responsibilities of family, you may not be able to make that sacrifice for others. Even for those who don’t believe in what you are doing!

  703. Thank you for an eloquent, rational and absolutely first-class analysis. I wish you well, and may your influence grow.

  704. eddie said:

    A relevent joke/antidote … you know how you can tell if someone’s over or under 30, under 30 they think CNN is news, over 30 they think its entertainment.
    Read “Brave New World”, ouch ouch.

  705. Victor said:

    I can totally relate to your story. I went through something very similar and I am now very happy making a lot less money but enjoying my freedom in so many ways. My life changed for the better. Thank you for sharing your story in such an elocuent way.

  706. Tyler said:

    After reading his blog I felt good, then I read a lot of the comments and it’s truly amazing how many people can read his blog and miss the point completely. They think that he quit because he couldn’t get HIS opinion out…that’s not the point at all. To be clear, and this coming from a journalist who quit for similar reasons…you are not allowed to actively cover stories that might actually attempt to make a positive difference in a non financial pure way. The blog represents a deeper routed problem that exists throughout the entire world. The existence of humans to race to consume and gain more money and spend it to the fullest with disregard for any society outside of their own back yard. It is this same race that some have posted here for Kai to get involved in and some post in a way that says they actually enjoy it being this way. I think deep down he, and many others on here wish more ppl lived to help not only each other- but the world.
    I thought I could get into journalism and not give my opinion but report factual information that the public could then base their own opinions on and perhaps the majority might think to do something positive as a response…but that is not the goal of media and it’s sad is all.
    The world seems to be in a cold spot right now, overall the goal of mankind right now is not to help everyone to live longer, to pollute less, to have more free time, to create to grow to think and cherish what it means to be human. We as a whole planet seem to be more driven to own more and more, to stagger ourselves above each other any way we can…it’s depressing in a non chemical way.
    I wish life were different at its core, to simply work and bank cash is not only boring but it makes us all grow apart and dims our spirit.
    Kai if you ever read this comment I tip my hat to you and smiled one real good smile as a result of this page..go where the wind takes you man.
    When you find what you’re looking for, if you want some help, I would hop on board any day.

    • Drew Brania said:

      Tyler – bang on. Thanks for writing that from a journalist’s perspective. James Bowden and those who “think” like him (or more accurately ‘feel’ like him, given that both his initial post and his subsequent response are deeply cynical and emotion driven – the guy is an unreflective, illogical nihilist), have missed the point COMPLETELY with Kai’s post. Even if they read and re-read both of our posts (and the majority of the other posts), they still won’t get it. They are recalcitrant, conditioned drones. They can’t see the forest for the trees.

      They are lost causes when it comes to debates like these, seeing as how they can’t do much but focus on the wrongheaded understanding of superficial details when the bigger picture and significance of this post looms vastly wider. Don’t let them stoke your rage. Bowden and his rusty kind are to be pitied.

      They have nothing left to offer but cynicism and a masquerading type of intelligence, which in reality is nothing more than instinctive, emotion-derived, drivel. If they actually had the intellectual apparatus to cast their minds into bigger places, they would see the idiocy of their shallow positions and be able to enter into discussion of what really matters. So don’t let them stoke your rage or elicit your regret for their narrowness. Just pity them, because that’s all they deserve.

  707. Drew Brania said:

    Bowden and others: You’re too myopic to perceive the principled depth that this person is operating from. Does stating truth and acting on integrity make this guy entitled, self-aggrandizing and narcissistic? On the contrary, he’s done a service to us all by sharing an informed perspective on a crucial societal function. Journalism and the media are foundational to a healthy democracy and an informed citizenry, and we’re all better off knowing about the serious problems it’s facing. Give your narrow heads a shake.

    Kai, I sincerely appreciate you posting this. It’s just further confirmation that our media and journalists are treading upon a precipitous slippery slope, due in part to what you’ve stated.

    You said: “There is an underlying tension between “what the people want to see” and “the important stories we should be bringing to people”.

    It’s so refreshing to hear an (ex) media figure state that unequivocally. If we keep getting fed white sugar, our addiction to it will only deepen. When our news is increasingly infiltrated and compromised by the Murdochian directive of “less truth equals making more money”, we the people need to be alarmed to it, which you’ve thankfully done in a powerfully public way. Your post is not just about the follies of accurate news making, but about what people are being exposed to by the media (e.g. the Will and Kate show). Our heads are continually being stuffed full of junk information from our media and our journalists, or as you call it, “low-nutrition TV”. We can only imagine where this is leading to. Again, another slippery slope.

    If we’re to successfully navigate the challenges that we face as a country (let alone as a species), we can’t continue to be distracted, deceived, and spoon-fed pablum. We need to be given the unfettered truth, whether that means better understanding the science and ramifications of climate change, or becoming a more informed and empowered populous when it comes to analyzing the decisions of our elected officials. When Harper and company ‘get away with it’, we only have ourselves to blame if the machinery of our relied upon democratic checks and balances system (read: our media) is malfunctioning. We should be better aware of when, how and why Harper et al lead us astray, but as you state, we are not. Far, far from it. And that’s frightening.

    Again (and for everyone who still does not appreciate/understand the significance of this post), our ability to become aware and engaged as an informed society is directly commensurate with the information that our journalists and media expose us to, and if we aren’t getting access to the truth, than our ability to become informed, engaged citizens is hampered greatly.

    In short, when the integrity of the journalistic process and wider media structure become compromised or start to disintegrate, we are all negatively impacted. Fact is, they already have been, and that’s the point that Kai has made for us in this post.

    Journalism and the media at large exist to serve the public good. It’s unfortunately become evident that these bedrocks of democracy as they are carried out in Canada (and elsewhere) have become dangerously loosened from their moorings. Kai, I commend you for making us see that more clearly.

    I’ve never seen someone expose the vulnerable and increasingly eroded underbelly of this industry with such clear-sighted conviction. I, for one, am grateful.

    With a mind and spirit like yours, the way forward will become clear, no matter where you’re led.

    Cheers brother.
    Open roads…
    Drew

    • That’s so profound. You’ve changed my life completely. All this time I was staring at the shadows on the wall, but you’ve pulled me from the cave and revealed my ignorance…

      • Drew Brania said:

        Glad to hear that you’ve emerged from the cave James. Hey make sure you acclimatize slowly to the light, lest you turn your gaze back to the shadows in confusion of the newly revealed realities. Wouldn’t want that to happen now that you’ve suddenly shed your ignorance.

        No doubt you’re a bright guy with solid insights to offer, you’ve just misappropriated some very basic things here. Appreciate you weighing in though – truth and understanding are always more easily forged when contrasted by errors in judgement and erroneous logic.

        By the way, default, blustery cynicism lost the last vestiges of it’s pseudo authority long ago. Anyone with a half-decent brain sees right through that form of intellectual arrogance and cowardice.

        You’re not brighter than everyone else. You’re not seeing something that everyone else just can’t see. Quite the opposite. Re-read the post a couple of times and try to grasp the larger significance of what a public statement like this means for such a crucial industry and central component of democracy. If you still get tripped up over invented, nefarious details of the author’s intentions, you’re a lost cause.

        You’re a cave dweller, and likely always have been. That really is pitiable to me (and Plato).

  708. At the end of the day Kai Nagata quit his job because he wanted his voice back, he wanted the freedom to express his opinions – and I stress the word opinion – without contractual, professional or, as he makes clear, factual restraints. Fair enough. Have fun. The adults will make do without your input. No doubt there’s a blog in his future.

    Nagata may be articulate but it’s clear he doesn’t have the courage of his convictions, giving up after only a year on the job. If Canadian journalism is worth saving – if indeed it’s possible to save it – we will need more people like Nagata but ones willing to stay the course for more than a few months.

    Unfortunately, this essay is little more than a rant about the state of Canadian journalism, something that could easily be deduced by picking up a newspaper or watching the evening news, where Ken and Barbie dolls abound. Ironically, Nagata’s lament is simply a longer, less concise version of Howard Beale’s “I’m mad as hell and I”m not going to take it any more!” rant.

    The truth is that news has always been a business first and a public good second and this fact belies Nagata’s assertion that he took the job with his eyes wide open.

    Newspapers, magazines, and broadcast television are in the business of information collection and distribution and the current, albeit dying, business models they operate under require a constant stream of new readers and viewers. The battle for readers and viewer is a source of great pressure on all newsrooms and this has always been true where there is competition for those same readers and viewers. In short, the race to the bottom in journalism has been going on for a long time.

    To quote Thomas Jefferson, “To quote Jefferson, “the man who reads nothing at all is better educated than the man who reads nothing, but newspapers.” Or if you prefer, consider the term “yellow journalism”, which was coined to describe the antics of newspapers in New York during the great circulation wars in the late 19th Century. It is a term long-associated with Joesph Pulitzer and I’m sure you know who he is and what he stands for. Rupert Murdoch and murdochism isn’t new, it’s just a variant on existing trends practiced with ruthless efficiency and determination.

    The alternatives, however, to private news or news-as-a-business are worse, news by government or news by blogosphere, which really isn’t news.
    ———————-
    Once a newspaper touches a story the facts are lost forever, even to the protagonists. Norman Mailer

  709. Hello Kai,

    I have been through a similar journey and I know how difficult it is but I assure you that there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

    I assure you that you are luckier than millions of people who would have stayed in a position like the one you left but they end up losing themselves and their souls.

    I would like to send you a copy of my book, “Mental Wellness: A spiritual Journey.” by Dr. Hamdy El-Rayes. Although the book discusses depression and anxiety, it is a profound spiritual guide for a better way of life and for building a better world. It will offer you some guidance on your wonderful new life path.

    All the best.

  710. unanonymous said:

    bravo—truly you are free, lance & tuned to a higher channel indeed.
    you have a knack for helping others crack their share of concrete.

  711. CRYBABY !
    SUCK IT UP ITS A JOB, YOU WERE LUCKY ENOUGH TO HAVE ONE. WHO OWES YOU ANYTHING.

    • The guy is a total dirtbag douche. Liberals are so full of it. Why do they think they are morally superior to others? I didnt even know this idiot until today. I would say stop crying and grow a pair. Moron!

      • Max LeBlanc said:

        You guys are both of the envious pathetic type. I gave you a little bit of attention, hope it helps.

      • PAM said:

        I like the approach:
        when someone says a lie… you find someone to support him.

        So you need to have a lier doing Ad Hominem attack (to explain for you: attack the messenger).
        Then an accomplice, hired by the same company, goes on and reinforce the lie…

        So you need two liers:
        the first one;
        the support one.

        Obviously you are the support one.

        Anyone disagree… Go back and read the whole thread.
        It is so obvious that even a child could see your moves…
        Just need 5 or 10 minutes to look at the posts…

        CBC is trying to discredit Kai by using hired gun to go after him on his own internet site…
        CBC is trying to discredit Kai by using hired gun to go after him on his own internet site…
        CBC is trying to discredit Kai by using hired gun to go after him on his own internet site…
        CBC is trying to discredit Kai by using hired gun to go after him on his own internet site…

        You don’t believe me: just take 10 minutes and look at the post…

        On this thread there are two kinds of posts:
        legitimate ones;
        Public relation firm posts…

        It is time to create a new identity… Change your name again..
        What will be your next name: IDoBelieveInGod?
        How low can you go to discredit a person with values?
        Do you have children?
        When you go home, what do you tell them?
        Today, daddy worked to destroy a good human being and felt good about it?
        I know: you don’t have child and won’t have any… So why not destroy!

    • PAM said:

      Either you are an ignorant or you are spinning…
      I will not insult your intelligence…

      So obviously you are one of the person hired to repeat the same message:
      You should have done it from within;
      You were lucky…

      There ,must be tens (if not hundreds) of post repeating this lie over and over.

      So either you are clueless or just a robot repeating the same thing over and over again.

      Publicity does not work with us!

      Repeating lies does not make them truth.

      I remember a friend saying: if you repeat a lie enough time, people will believe it.

      Thanks for not saying a lie:
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.

      Can I repeat:
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.

      Your post was short so I will put more emphasis:
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.
      CBC is trying to save their asses by telling lies.

  712. Eugene said:

    Thank you Kai. That’s a beautifully complete way of putting into words what our government and media is doing right now, and why those actions are likely to destroy our civilization.

    • PAM said:

      So what we can understand:
      CBC is no longer meaningfull…
      CBC is no longer meaningfull…
      CBC is no longer meaningfull…

  713. The recorded word has had ulterior motives since inception thousands of years ago, each generation discovers this truth for themselves, but is that grounds enough to express such vitriol, such ageism, such hatred. Many of these comments are more indicative of the problems identified than any overt actions by a Prime Minister or mega media. They must be constantly suspect. Why are the most sacred texts used in education above the fray? They shouldn’t be. The very fodder for enlightenment through text-based education is from the same sources, the same people and the old goats who are portrayed as nefarious ne’er-do-wells incapable of understanding the contents. Canada doesn’t need a Jon Steward any more than a Paris Hilton. It needs people who rise above celebrity. Celebrity is a powerful enemy of truth. It needs contributors who have saved the grace and independence of anonymity. We need people who can remind us hate is what happens when thought stops.

    • PAM said:

      Your post is full of wisdom.
      Problem here: this thread is being hijacked by a public relation firm.

      I see their goal because it is obvious in their posts…

      So my goal is to make sure they back off.

      So every post from those hired guns will be met with attacks on the people who are paying them.

      Goal here: may them pay a price that is higher than the solution.
      Goal here: For every post by a hired gun (their name are quite easy… and probably false), making sure the price si too high.
      So basically, if CBC hired National to spin this… For every post, attack their customer.

      Eventually, they will give up: hitting the payer is the way to stop this.

      In this perpective, I am going back to every posts and showing the intent behind the post.

      Eventually, they will give up…
      Just a few hours every day… it is so easy to see them!

      I wish to make more damage to CBC than their public relation firm is doing…
      To hurt them more and more.
      Eventually they will understand: this is a battle they can not win.
      Because liers are liers…
      Fundamental is fundamental…

      What I find pretentious of them is to come here.

      So I think we should not focus here and we should go bring war to CBC…
      Here I am just training with their behaviour… So obvious…
      Then I think a few of us shoudl go back to CBC site…

      I will post pertinent URLs later…
      For now, we shoudl just getting warmed up….

      Bring war to your ennemy!

  714. Kai – thank you for posting this. I love it.

    I run a Montessori daycare in Montreal. I think the government would benefit from Montessori training and awareness. It would make a great deal of difference in their decision-making. To understand psychology, not only of children but of adults, would go a long way to improving many of the things you bring up in your essay. Don’t you think?

    I’m not an activist. I just do what I can in my life to make the changes I’d like to see. Montessori has affected me deeply. See what you think about it.

    Kelly

  715. Steve said:

    Kai – if you’ve not already, read Neil Postman’s work (‘Amusing Ourselves to Death’, ‘How to Watch TV News’, etc.)

    Hell, read Thoreau, if you’ve not yet done so.

    Good luck – Freedom is a rare and valuable element.

  716. Glenn said:

    If Kai is reading this, I figured out how a journalist can keep his integrity…

    NEVER, under any circumstance, EVER let your political views show. Once you show your opinion, if it’s left, the right will hate you and accuse. If it’s right, the left will act the same way.

    The simple mention of political position is what turned this article from, “a fight for truth’ into politics.

    So a journalist must hide in the closet if he wants to be heard. If you’re gay, hide it. Your country of origin? Hide it. Anything that may identify where you lean to. Nothing divides people like politics and religion.

  717. G. Marratto said:

    What a pompous ass. Does you really think anyone cares enough to read this diatribe. If you have a problem with your employer, or you feel as though you’re compromising your ideals, QUIT!……..and leave us out of it. There are unprincipled people in every field of endeavour from auto mechanics to newsgathering, so don’t waste our time on one story of supposed heroism. Get on with life.

    • He has every right to say whatever the hell he wants. If you don’t like it change the channel and gorge yourself on the MSM trough of tripe and BS. Btw, you might want to check and see if the Fukashima meltdown of three reactors is in the MSM news. Big story there, funny how we get the radiation through rain and wind (I have a radiation detector) but for some reason the dangers are not be exposed by the MSM. Could there be a political or corporate agenda? Could this kind of non-reporting, these lies of omission be one of the reason there is dissatisfaction with the MSM and everyone else, except maybe the sheep and ostriches?

    • sometimesoon said:

      Well, Kai seems like the kinda guy who cares about people and their stories, stories that make up the daily news. Being that he seems to care about the telling of the truth and is on that principle, sharing his story with us, I wonder why are you questioning this rather than listening to him? Funny, we live in a world where “expert opinions” rule the day in their chosen realms, and yet when a person who was seen as enough of a media expert to be given the position of bureau chief quits his job and gives, essentially “expert opinion” as to why he did so……… well, we all see what happens.

    • john said:

      beat it

    • Vahan said:

      G. Marratto you don’t see the irony in what you wrote do you? Do you think 1300 plus comments means no one read this? You read it and commented almost a week after the blog was posted, so you went out of your way to read this as you call it “diatribe” after a week of posting, you went out of your way to comment, which most readers in reality don’t bother doing, so I suppose you answered your question, people will really read this and the majority are complimentary while trollers such as yourself like to use derogatory words. He did leave you alone, he did not come to your house and yell at your bedroom window at night that he was leaving CTV, you went out of your way to find the blog and comment on it. You angry people are hilarious to the point of being sad and pathetic. Do you need to talk to someone about this? Enjoy all the junk coming out about Murdoch and hopefully soon the Peladeau “empire” will crumble too. That is how weak minded people work by paying out weaker minded people to lie for them.

  718. Robert Pierre said:

    G. Marratto, why are you so angry? Is it perhaps that you would never have the balls to quit YOUR job on principle?

  719. Hugh d'Entremont said:

    One of the scariest trends in Canada is the absolute control wielded by the PMO surrounding the information they will share and the questions they will answer.

    During the election campaign there was no debate over huge structural deficit created by the corporate tax cuts and reductions to the GST. Debate over the value of subsidies to the foriegn oil companies that take our resources and most of the profit out of the country is non-existent.

    I am sure many thinking people would like a discussion that was based on facts and not what we need to know.

    Science, statistics and history do not always have to support political decisions, there should at least be disclosure of why actions are taken that seem to ignore the best evidence.

  720. Isabelle said:

    Amazing.

    I am starting to believe that this is a collective feeling. My partner just moved out of the film industry in Montreal to start a small sustainable farm with me in Northern Ontario for similar reasons.

    I wish that you take the time to find your own path and discover many things, including happiness, along the way. Oh, and if it helps, read The Prophet by Gibran and make sure you take the road less traveled, it’s always full of surprises.

    • Glenn said:

      Good on ya, Isabelle. Later this year, I’m moving to Brazil to live with my wife, and it was an easy choice for the same reasons.

      Life in a developed country is getting so hectic that it’s becoming a bad thing to want happiness. If we choose to be happy, others label it as narcissistic.

      We’re getting colder towards our fellow Canadians, more reliant on cell phones and other technologies, becoming slaves to our jobs, and easily manipulated by biased news stories.

      Easy solution for me; get out of Canada. I don’t want to live in a giant ant farm.

  721. You are incredibly insightful for someone still so young. It’s like you have the wisdom and experience of a Walter Cronkite or Tom Brokaw without all the years.

    Your time in front of the camera was definitely not wasted, Kai. You definitely gained a great deal of wisdom. Good luck.

  722. JamesO said:

    I am inspired. Thank you.

  723. Hi Kai. U r incredibly insightful for your age – I am truly struck by your glorious mind which I feel is quite parallel to my own. I’m coming up to 43 so it is so refreshing to hear your thoughts as so many my age just don’t have the consciousness this world needs. Too bad u didn’t run for an NDP seat in Quebec…you would have won and Canada needs a voice & mind like yours in Ottawa. Wishing you safe travels back to the West. I’m in Vancouver so be in touch – hopefully with all your viral fame, you will resist the need for an agent! LOL! To help you on your journey sign up for the daily quote at http://www.abraham-hicks.com. You will understand why when you get there. Keep on bloggin, don’t go changin’. Best, Tanya @olivat

  724. Just a guy said:

    If you can stomach it – consider politics. I’d vote for you rather than spoiling my ballot. ;)

  725. Beth Gray said:

    Bravo. Thank you for sharing. I wish you well on your journey and suspect it will be remarkable and blissful path. Enjoy your freedom.

  726. Marthe Lépîne said:

    Actually, nay-sayers are entitled to their opinions too, and they tell us very important things: Some people are still under the impression that a job is everything there is to life. However hundreds of thousands do not have jobs: they are self-employed, or farmers, or those unfortunate that have lost the job they had and cannot find another one for many reasons. To be too focussed on a job is a problem that also needs to be addressed. Other nay-sayers have become old and disillusioned and set in their ways: this means a loss of hope in life. But even by communicating their disapproval, they show that they have been touched by Kai’s blog,enough to react, and that might be a step in the right direction.

  727. Leen said:

    “Human beings don’t always like good nourishment. We seem to love white sugar, and unless we understand why we feel nauseated and disoriented after binging on sweets, we’ll just keep going. People like low-nutrition TV, too. And that shapes the internal, self-regulated editorial culture of news.”

    Until consumers start making changes, the commercial world will pander to them. Anyone in any job has to filter their opinions. That’s just the way the world works. I’m glad that you’re making changes for yourself and I hope you find your path.

    You haven’t discovered anything new, and change never happens quickly. There are many people out there that feel the same way about the situation with a few alterations. You know, there’ll always be a group with another set of do’s and don’ts, who are bent on controlling the masses.

    The best to you.

  728. Peter Stockdale said:

    Well said Kai and more importantly well done! Too few of us have the courage to speak or act re our national government. Recently I had the opportunity to speak with a retired General in the British Army. During the course of our conversation he said he thought that the outstanding characteristic of Canadians was and is their “decency” How then can a nation composed of such folk elect a neo-fascist government? Perhaps another, older, nation can tell us; after all Adolf Hitler was elected democratically, at least initially, before he subverted that nation. We, who read between the lines the news we get from Ottawa, are witnesses to the dismantling of Canada by the Harper Government, it certainly isn’t the Government of Canada. What are the signs? First is the dismantling of our once famed Public Service and the hounding of objective public servants. Second,the silence on the incredibly bad economic performance of Harper as shown by the simple facts that he inherited $15 billion from the previous government and had produced a deficit of $55 billion by this last election. A stellar performance indeed – total $ 70 billion blown by our master economist! Thirdly his incredibly deft touch for doing the mean spirited thing whenever he feels threatened no matter how mildly. Fourth his contempt for Canada’s international reputation, what an incredible comparison with Pearson and Trudeau. Your comments are yet another wake up call, we need a Canadian Spring!
    Peter Stockdale

    • sometimesoon said:

      I’ve heard that about Canadians too. Often from an older generation, and yes, usually from war time survivors. I’m thinking what the retired General meant was that, when push came to shove(when shit hits the fan) Canadians are ready to break our backs to help others, and being from the British Army means he was on the receiving end of a lot of that help. I must address the Hilter comments, and re-enforce them. The Nazi’s built their party through propaganda, no doubt, but there were allies helping Hitler,and not just Italy, Russia, or Spain. One must include American corporations on the list of complicity, for instance the funding of the London Blitz and Prescott Bush connection, and I quote- “The Guardian has obtained confirmation from newly discovered files in the US National Archives that a firm of which Prescott Bush was a director was involved with the financial architects of Nazism.
      His business dealings, which continued until his company’s assets were seized in 1942 under the Trading with the Enemy Act, has led more than 60 years later to a civil action for damages being brought in Germany against the Bush family by two former slave labourers at Auschwitz and to a hum of pre-election controversy.”
      Prescott Bush was on the board of directors of CBS all the way back in the early days of 1932. He also served as a U.S. senator from 1952 -63. We forget trespasses against us, are even encouraged to do so, and the average person is too busy with the trials and tribulations of life to deal with politics until it touches their lives somehow. Plus the cult of individuality breeds fear of ones neighbour, thereby decimating chances of community in some circles. All of our human frailties, desires, and fears are easily manipulated by the powers that be, and yes, we do like our “sugar”……… but I do believe that this time the sugar is burnt beyond repair, the batch is ruined and it’s time to start all over again with a whole new lot.
      As for your query regarding how we ended up with the current government, I don’t know the answer to that either. Any number of things- apathy, propaganda, too much of the same, no “perfect party reflecting my choices”, a total lack of trust toward any government, an address or any combination of these things. It looks like the powers that be are not able to do their job adequately, we all know it. I think the question is, what are we gonna do about it?

      • Lynn said:

        Well put. I am in agreement with all that you so eloquently said.

  729. Stay strong in mind, body and convictions, the world is a nasty place, I know this from experience, but setting the record straight and taking a new path is always the solution. Write an expose! The “news” is now at least no more than propaganda, people are famous for the sake of being famous and useless eaters like the royal family (the most expensive welfare recipients on the planets) shouldn’t even be seen in public. But once you realize everything on TV and the funny pages is a form of sociological engineering, you can either laugh at it for its blatant idiocy or simply turn it off, there ain’t no real information that comes from the mainstream media.

    There are plenty of people in the world and plenty of career paths, hobbies or ventures and as they all exist, one should be able to do what they love and love what they do. I don’t know (and I certainly wouldn’t make a judgment call) if reporting “tripe” and mis/dis-information is worse than what I was involved in, but there are generally advantages to laying your cards on the table and coming clean, at least when dealing with those of like mind and attitude. The status quo will revile what you have done or are doing (depending on impact) and try to make you pay for it or maybe just try to discredit you. They may be in “power” now, but there are many more of us than them. If and when everything collapses, I want to make sure I have surrounded myself with people of integrity, not a useless deceitful bunch like politicians, bankers, accountants and lawyers so it’s a good idea to distance yourself from the parasites as soon as possible. Don’t be surprised if (like me) you end up on the CSIS watch list, people with opinions and/or the truth are apparently “bad.” Wait a couple of months and perform an FOIA request on yourself, you may be surprised by what doesn’t come back and why they won’t give you your own information. Actually, I suggest everyone perform and FOIA request on themselves, you might be shocked by the BS CSIS and their “flies” keep on you and yours.

  730. Oh BARF! Poor Kai . … Boo Hoo!
    You’re to pussy to be a real journalist.
    Practice offering ‘fries with that’.

  731. When I worked at the CBC, I recognized that all media is indeed a construction … and often corporate wish fulfillment. I also learned from a wise senior editor that whereas it is NOT possible for journalists to be objective (we are sentient beings) they can be neutral. It is neutrality (the ability to remain detached from the flash and trash of so-called news) that makes a true journalist.

  732. Vahan said:

    I am constantly amused by the trolling haters. They mention that the blog was too long to read, it was shameful self promotion, Kai is childish, should learn how to flip burgers, this was wasteful and all that and worse. So why do you come to this blog? Why do you read what he has to write? Is anyone holding your eyelids open and holding a gun to your head to read this blog? Move on. You are simply showing how narrow minded wingnuts you could be. I have read books by Bill O’Reilly and Ezra Levant and have agreed with some things they have said in the books and have written to tell them so. I have agreed with our P.M Stephen Harper on some things and have written to tell him so also. But when I write to disagree with them I do not call them names. I hate, hate, hate, with every inch of my being the Partie Quebecois hear in Quebec. They snuff out innovation and have have killed a generation of innovation here in Quebec by not allowing their own natural born citizens get the education that they want, so I have called them out on that many times as the old and fat white men that they are, but you know what I did agree with some things that Rene Levesque brought into the debate when he was around. So we have to see both sides. NO ONE IS FORCING YOU TO READ THIS BLOG.

  733. John said:

    Dear Kai,

    I very much enjoyed your Jerry McGuire moment. As someone who in recent years has become a hardened cynic I thank you for this lovely moment of clarity. I have come to dislike opinions, they seem to have become a cheap and useless commodity. Everyone has one, they all partly right but mostly wrong. Everyone thinks they know the ‘truth’ and write off those that don’t agree with them. In our world the truth itself is a commodity. Who knows what it really is.

    But of course this cynicism is bred by the dominant institutions of the society. In fact I know there are deeper truths out there, and people sense them. Overall frameworks of right and wrong, of dreams and outlooks, that people understand regardless of the dribble machine served by media, government, corporations and other such things.

    And I feel that’s what you tapped into to. And I see it as part of a larger phenomenon. As exemplified in Bradley Manning, who in his own Jerry McGuire moment could no longer be a willing participant in war crimes, and in act of great courage (allegedly) leaked a ton of US government secrets to all of us (through Wikileaks). So that we may all understand better how governments, and other powerful institutions operate. He paid a biter price for his moment of clarity. But there are thousands like him. Like you, young people in positions of influence in powerful institutions, who are seeing the light. And it terrifies those institutions. And it signals a light at the end of the tunnel. It signals that an end to their ideological dictatorships is possible, and perhaps inevitable. Something to celebrate for sure, even in the heart of this hardened cynic!

    I suggest you look into a career in independent media. At a time when corporate media, and the people in it, are in sharp decline – in relevance, viewership, and also in morals, ethics, and courage – a ‘spring’ is in the air (I smell it all the way from Cairo), a renaissance, for independent media, recording the history of the people, where courage in confronting power will again bring public trust, confidence, and relevance. The independent media is set again to become an ally of the people as democratic revolutions transform and sweep away the ideological dinosaurs that our powerful institutions have become.

  734. Ross said:

    I agree with everything expect the immigration issues. Our immigration laws are exploited all the time and the fact is, there are too many immigrants in Canada already. Don’t believe it? Travel to Vancouver BC to get a look at your country that is now more Asian than multi-cultural. Are they adapting? No. They have in fact demanded that Christmas tress at Christmas not be displayed in public places like malls because it is offensive to them. Really? In MY country you dare do this?

    Immigration doesn’t need to be slowed down, it needs to be stopped entirely except for refugees from violent countries. Not allowing family members is just the beginning of a law that will do nothing but save our country. If you disagree, you are no doubt an immigrant or your family was born outside of Canada. If you do not like the new Canadian immigration laws, I suggest moving out of this country to one that is more to your thinking. .

    • sometimesoon said:

      I am of European decent, as I suspect you are too Ross, and while I agree that banning Christmas trees from public places is a bit much, you seem to forget that you have that right too. If you find it unbearable that co-workers wish you a “Happy Diwali” and political correctness dictates that you cannot say “Merry Xmas” back to them, do something about it. Complain to HR that you are sick of the double standard. I could personally care less about Christmas trees in malls and am not offended by “Happy Diwalli”.
      Even so, on the immigration issue, I disagree with you completely and totally. We are in Canada Ross. Unless you are First Nation, you are an immigrant too Ross. We should be grateful for the welcome and help the First Nations gave freely to the immigrants of this nation. We would, no doubt, not be who we are now without their welcoming, their sharing of all this province and country has to offer. I live in Vancouver via Vancouver Island(where I grew up) and I love the Indo-Asian people here who have been an integral part of B.C.’s past and now more than ever, our future. I don’t want to give you a history lesson but it looks like I’m gonna have to because your ignorance will not do. Chinese, Japanese and Indian people built our railroads, managed our early logging industry and were an integral part in building the foundations of this province-got it!!??!! The Chinese settled in B.C. over 200 hundred years ago and built the CPR railroads from the Rockies to the Pacific!! 1500 of them died to do so, all the while enduring mistreatment with the openly racist environment of the day. The Japanese came here around 1877, set up farms, fishing villages and saw and lumber mills, opened up shops and have been great contributors to life in B.C., also while enduring unbearable mistreatment by the very people they helped. Indian Canadians came here over a hundred years ago, set up many businesses and worked in lumber yards, sawmills. On Vancouver Island, near Duncan in a place named Paldi, Sardar Mayo Singh built a thriving sawmill and lumber yard around 1920, which is a national historic site today- a symbol of Canadian diversity and a reminder of our rich cultural heritage.

      I take serious issue with your views Ross. To degrade the very structure of your country shows you know not of what you speak, and to a degree of ignorance that, I, for one, do not want to believe exists in Canada in 2011!!!!!!!!!!! Pick up a book!! Talk to people around you, you’ll surprised with what you find out. Get involved in the ethnic diversity in B.C..
      I do not know what you need to do facilitate a better understanding of what this country is all about but I suggest you start with yourself….. because, like I said earlier, unless you are First Nation Ross, then your footing is not on solid ground in this matter. Take care where you step and whom you step on, you may quash your only hope for a future.

  735. I am amazed how many comments on here are so anti truth, so to say this guy is ABSOLUTELY right, people would rather be dictated to what they should think rather than have food for though. BRAVO KAI!

  736. anonymous said:

    “most of what you see in a newscast is actually defined by an internal code – an editorial tradition handed down from one generation to the next – but the key is, it’s self-enforced.”

    Problem is right there

  737. Rod said:

    It seems to me that most people here are missing the point and are oblivious to the massage.

    The message is not about quitting his job but about “why” he quit his job.

    It is rare to see one so young with such a clear vision of the world and the forces at play, around him.

    I recall, about twenty years ago, a Canadian journalist interviewing a Lebanese “man on the street” during negotiation for a peace agreement at the end of one of those never ending conflicts. The journalist asked the man if he thought these negotiations would finally bring peace to his country. The man replied that if the journalist was talking about a “Canadian Peace”, he was skeptical.

    To this man, Canada was the very essence and embodiment of the word “Peace”.

    Canada and Canadians used to be respected and even loved the world over. We used to be a beacon of hope for the rest of the world. We were living proof that all peoples, regardless of race, religion, colour, creed or “what have you”, could live together in relative peace and harmony for hundreds of years. We were the hope for a world in chaos.

    It was rare for a Canadian Peace Keeper to get wounded. Even rarer for one to be killed and usually only by accident (ie: stepping on a landmine). To be able to stand in the middle of an armed struggle and to remain for all practical intents and purposes, “bullet proof”, that is real power! That is the power of respect!

    In just a handful of years, Harper has destroyed the respect that took brave, hardworking Canadians hundreds of years to create. He wishes to dumb-us-up by eliminating truth in journalism and trying to erode the value of science, while also trying to isolate us from the rest of the world by sending our young men and women to war in far off lands where we have no right to interfere, so we now have enemies instead of friends and by offending foreign governments with irresponsible and inflammatory political rhetoric. Where Canadians used to be able to roam this planet freely and without fear, we are now targets for terrorist both at home and abroad.

    In my opinion Harper is an affront to all that is Canadian and the greatest traitor this county has seen since Mulroney who tried to destroy this country by breaking it apart and accept for the intervention of a brave Indigenous Chief, would have succeeded at Meech Lake.

    Our rights and freedoms are under siege.

    This is the path to oppression and Nazism.

    Heil Harper!

  738. Rod Hill said:

    For some reason, your post reminded me of some lines in Carlos Castaneda’s “The teachings of Don Juan: a Yaqui way of knowledge” (1968), a book I must have read when I was about your age.

    “… a path is only a path; if you feel you should not follow it, you must not stay with it under any conditions. To have such clarity, you must lead a disciplined life. Only then will you know that a path is only a path, and there is no affront, to oneself or to others, in dropping it if that is what your heart tells you to do. But your decision to keep on the path or to leave it must be free of fear or ambition… ask yourself and yourself alone one question… Does this path have a heart? If it does, the path is good; if it doesn’t, it is of no use. Both paths lead nowhere; but one has a heart and the other doesn’t. One makes for a joyful journey; as long as you follow it, you are one with it. One makes you strong; the other weakens you.” (pp.105-106)

    • Drew Brania said:

      Perfection Rod. Thanks for posting it.

      “One makes you strong; the other weakens you.” How many of us are being weakened by the paths that we settle upon?

      -Drew
      (Fellow Castaneda Fan)

  739. Bonnie said:

    You “indulged’ a protester by interviewing her. That’s what the caption says. In other words, you don’t give a shit. And you call yourself a reporter? The only story you care about is your own! You were in the wrong business and it’s a good thing you’re out.

    • PAM said:

      Another one using:
      - Immature;
      - Was lucky to have his job…

      This is getting annoying..

      Too late to talk to Bonny…

      But tomorrow, you won’t be over the ocean.

      BTW I do not know his reporting skills: did you see one? But I know what he wrote…

  740. Several brief points:
    a) It’s very telling that he grew up without a TV and refuses to have one.
    b) Investigative journalism died with Woodward & Watergate. Today’s so-called reporters are ‘repeaters’, they simply repeat what the government or special interest groups hand them.
    c) I discarded my TV in 1988 and got a real life
    d) Mark Twain said if you don’t read the paper you are uninformed; if you do read it you are misinformed
    Kai understood these things decades before I did.
    Kudo to Kai

    • PAM said:

      Cool.

      The only way to be informed is to read local, think Global…

      Problems are quite simple: just too many know the wrong answer…

      I guess they did not read the question

  741. Pat G said:

    Quote: “there was a clause in which the corporation (now Bellmedia) literally took ownership of my intellectual property output”
    Comment: You would not know how much deeper that goes. It’s really an ‘ego trip’ where your actual ‘freedom’ is only a choice and not even determine by you (even on a ‘spiritual level’). The right question to ask to all these ‘distraction’ is WHAT FOR ? To keep you entertain or worst making you feel guilty and helpless ? No one takes time to think into the future. As it comes to green energy: what would benefit human kind in very short time is suppressed and choked by the economic system. As long we have don’t have really true thinkers, intelligent, who works in the sense of truth, reality and righteous for true humanity, we will have negative effect in every part of the world. More growing global population = more degeneration. Take Switzerland for example, they have more human common sens. Are we yet still learning at infant stage the natural laws ?

    • PAM said:

      interesting…
      This diserves a real analysis to reply.
      At least you are asking real question..
      The real question is not how we grow but why we grow…

      In China, a male child is the quitescence.
      Can be changed in a minute by saying: for the next 20 years, female will have 53% of the jobs must be female.
      Adding that this will end up having 5 unemployed male for 1 unemployed female…

      In India: they need to have a male child…
      Just say that 2% of the married female will need to take care of their parents…

      BTW, growing od the population means: increase genetic diversity…

  742. I love the direction your going! I feel that when I watch the news I should not know the reporters political leanings EITHER way. I think it should be ACCURATE facts and allow us to make the decision.

    Which after reading this is clear that does not happen (not that most people dont already see that)

    Its great to see someone stand up and make a decision based on principle and goals verses money and want!

    One thing I would argue tooth and nail up and down loud and quite all while over a beer and drinks. Global warming has been proven to have been inflated and all data used during the meet in Copenhagen was manufactured and inflated to produce the desired numbers!

    Do I think we need alternative energy YES do I feel they need to leave my fast gas powered car and 4X4 truck and rig alone HELL YES. Do I believe the farce of me and all of us are the culprit for the (now cooling) warming NO

    ANYWHO, Great read and insight and thank you for sharing!

    • PAM said:

      Care to explain cooling?

      I guess Dr Roy Spencer and John Christy disagree with you…
      They are doing planet wide measures of the globe with satellites…
      I guess you know better because they are both saying planet is warming…
      Their content is about the cause.
      They agree on the Co2 effect but are saying we don’t know.
      Even Lindzen is agreeing on a warmer planet…

      So who are you refering to Monckton?

      I do agree with you… There is a cooling effect caused by aerosols (micro particles send into troposhere that dims the effect of GW). So basically, we are not seeing the real effect of GW because we are increasing the micro particles that dims part of the GW…
      I was in south India in 2009 and I saw the sky with my eyes.

      Any science or fact (just one) to justify your position.

      I have a different view:
      - GW is there and has been proven (unless proven otherwise with a Nobel Prize to the key: irresistible for those tens of thousands of scientist working with facts – maybe you will win this Nobel Prize…);
      - Peak Oil will present the real economic alternative to our problem with Gas and Oil: economics will strike when offer will be much less than demand;
      - We have already 3C or 4C of GW in the system… It is just a matter of waiting till this strikes us (2030-2050);
      - When price of Oil will go to 250-500$ per barrel, the whole economy will turn around in a few years (less than 5);
      - Methane (in the oceans and pergelisol) will kick in making our concerns about the actual level of methane irrelevant: with 8 times more Methane in the atmosphere, given the logarithmic impact of methane we do not need to worry about frackting it.

      To me the answer is simple: just wait… We will see the results soon enough.
      The impact of higher temperatures are the following:
      - more humidity can be in the air, so we should expect more extremes events of lots of rain and lots of drought: opportunity manage the water better;
      - Hurricanes will be stronger as they are moving more towards North: increasing the corriolis effect… Opportunity build more resistant homes;
      - Oil companies will have to deal with the impact of GW in their business model: opportunity plant more trees.

      I have a different perspective: we will change or suffer more until we change.
      The end result is unescapable! We are going to live with the results of what we did…

      Sooner or later, we will change…
      Only question is: when will you change your 4X4 and your fast car for something else?
      It will happen before 2015…

      Why would I fight with you: We do agree… at 400$ per barrel, you car is costing you 400-500$ to fill… What do you do?

      Peak Oil is the answer.

      BTW, increasing coal is great fro global dimming but kills people… When will you understand that Coal is not the answer?
      Already, in China, they are talking about millions of people dying by polution… The only question: when will China adress this: after 10 millions dead, after 100 Millions?

      It will happen: only question is when?
      In this perspective, I really love your post…

    • PAM said:

      Any reply?

      Do you just come here to show your truth and then run away?

      Any fact or should be believe that you own the truth?

      Are you usdt a useless tourist who come shere to reveal how good you are?

      Any argument?

      For now, I see lip service and no real analysis.
      Please do show us your science?

  743. jt said:

    Certainly it is a brave act to quit one’s job when it conflicts with one’s sense of integrity. That said, the political views voiced in the blog are quite immature. It’s almost a caricature of the left-leaning liberal, with the attendant over-simplification and exaggeration. Not to be too harsh, but this seeming lack of curiosity and interest in investigating issues in any depth would seem to make you unfit to be more than a Ken in the field of journalism. Good luck to you.

    • PAM said:

      Immature…
      Part of the spin by the public relation firm…

      Please reply to me.
      I want this…

      I will first explain the Ericksonian prespective (Einstein of communication), then I will extract your words.
      Finally, I will show who you really are…

      so are you another hired gun to shoot down Nagata san?

  744. the problem of writing a post like this one, is that it makes all kinds of idiots bring forward their opinions in long and short replies. ad vitam oeternam. such an inspiring post, a river of insipid douche bags sharing what they think. perhaps that is the fall down of the internet, what we usually hail as its greatest quality– and it’s despicable: sharing your idiotic opinions with the world. it was much better when they were kept at home. fuck your opinions, go take care of your children, friends, cats and dogs. and if you have none, get some.

    • PAM said:

      Actually, they are hired gun by CBC.

      Seems they have backed off… So I will stop showing their game.

      Going back to business..

      What model would support a guy like Kai: PBS, BBC.

      Imagine for a minute that Kai, being bashed by hired gun is hired by someone else…

      What an incisive look at CBC…

      With proper mean and motivation…

      Please CBC, keep hitting him, the more you hit him, the more he has motivation to hit back…

      What does not kill you makes you stronger…

      • john said:

        hats off to your effort pam!

        • PAM said:

          Well I see a great person here.
          I have decide to not let them degrade this thread.

          The more thay are attacking Kai, the more I will strike at them.

          So the question is: given the post, who is behind?
          If I can see an intent behind the post, I am going after it.

          You need to back off a bit and read carefully,
          Behind all the bashing are values.
          So if you expose them, they have two choices:
          - Fight for their values;
          - Back off.

          Tourist are backing off, hired guns are backing off.

          Only remains people who fight for their values.
          These are the easy ones: they have values so we can talk.
          Anyone with values and ethics are welcome here even if we disagree…
          At the end of the day, we will agree because they have values and diserve my respect.

          The other ones: just tourist to me.
          Spinners and liers are so easy to fight…
          Once you look at real values, they are so much in trouble…
          Because they are just lip service and here… We are all equals.

          I love the internet… Here you need to argue with facts, not spin.

          I do understand Marshall McLuhan when he says: The medium is the message.
          Does not mean I agree…

          The medium shapes the message and allows lazy people to express their values…
          Once we bring intelligence to the medium: The message shapes the medium!
          So please allow me to disagree with McLuhan and we will be just fine…

          Going back to real values: the message shapes the medium… Just need to accept the medium and live with it!
          A medium is just a channel, a filter, a form… The message must remain the true mean of communicating…

          Those spinners are just blindly applying McLuhan’s principles without understanding the true meaning of his message…
          Tourists… Visitors… and they have so much vanity to think they are better than us!

          If they only knew: truth is something that is shared, not forced on other people… Going back to Mitlon Ercickson here!
          He is the true Einstein of communication.

          How could these guys miss that… He told us the way to handle this in the 80′s…
          Now they think they are communication gurus and they don’t even apply the best of the breed…

          Spinners: tourists to me!

          BTW, did you zee them backing off… They must be regrouping…
          How much vanity you need to think you can come on Kai’s own site and bash him with lies?
          Are these people crazy?

    • No, not shock waves, just another opportunity to write/talk about themselves, an activity that all forms of journalism in Canada, perhaps even further afield, seems to revel in. Kai is 24 therefore he grew up in the information age yet he professes to have believed that journalists actually did more than toe the political or corporate line and sold product (the CBC-view of the world, or the StunNews Media-view of the world, information and commentary prepackaged and sold…product, nothing more). I worked in print journalism for ten years in Toronto and I was given ample opportunity to express my opinion on issues provided I was able to convince my editors that my product (my written opinion) was worthy to offer up to their customers (readers). I knew this going in, and played the game happily for a decade. Why did not Kai know what he was getting into, he had every opportunity to test the waters before diving in? What we have here is yet another disillusioned young man and tis sad when someone so young experiences disillusionment with something he wanted but it happens regularly, in all activities and fields. In a way Kai has adopted a stereotype, that of the disillusioned, but he would have seen his demons coming if he had kept his eyes open; perhaps an older journalist would have, I don’t know. In case anyone is wondering why I left journalism, twas simply to spend the rest of my life telling my own stories (they will be fictions) rather than tell those of others.

  745. James barrie said:

    Wow Kai.. I remember being 24. Young.. naive, full of myself.. the whole world before me. If I had a blog back then I probably would have done the same as you… but thank god I didn’t. Crash and burn my friend.. good luck with your new job at Starbucks. What a waste of talent gone down the drain. The very least you could have done was just take some time off and not have said anything to anyone ( or written a blog about it duh ). Early in life someone usually tells you ” Don’t burn bridges ” well my friend you didn’t just burn your bridges you pretty much took a flame thrower to them and threw the ashes in the face of all those who took the time to help you out in your short career. You are so typical of your generation. You want everything and you want it now… you think that you are years beyond your immediate experience and you think that society owes you something. I don’t get it. BTW when you talk about Ken and Barbie’s on TV I don’t think you meant Peter Mansbridge, Brian Stewart, Mike Duffy or Lloyd Robertson? They are hardly sex symbols. So misguided you are… yes i agree with some of your points but honestly did you not realize this before you got into the industry? Did you parents raise you in a cave without television?

    • john said:

      cynical a-hole

  746. Been there myself said:

    “What I need is to better myself spiritually, physically, and intellectually, so I can effect meaningful change in the world around me.”

    This self-absorbed navel-gazing sounds like something I would engaged in about age 25. Now that I’m 55, it would feel embarrassingly jejeune.

    His complaints sound, to be blunt, trivial (e.g., television seeks out good-looking people with lesser qualifications and is susceptible to consumer culture) and not entirely accurate (e.g., the CBC’s Peter Mansbridge is bald and not a hunk and he leads the CBC’s flagship news program).

    I just hope he isn’t later sorry that he gave up a good job with a defined-benefit pension plan. Live and learn.

    • PAM said:

      So now that you have said it: you have 55…
      Please go ahead and give us your wisom.

      Self-absorved: care to prove with citations?
      Navel-gazing: any citation to prove your words?

      Your editorial comment may look good but do you have any analysis beyond the words you write?

      Can you prove anything you wrote?

      Guess not: Lip service…

      As far as I can see: he is not sorry…
      At 55, where have you worked?
      What country did you visit?

      Stop giving us Editorial and start to prove your arguments…

  747. Kai;
    You’ve said what a lot of us feel, but apparently don’t do anything about. News reporting, particularly television, is more about entertainment and less about analytical discussion. Once I felt that the Canadian media, indeed the CBC, was a voice of reason. For all sorts of reasons, I believe that the media has bought into the idea that news is about making money and less about critical debate, without casting aspersions.

    While I feel that media in Canada is somewhat better than, let’s say, Fox News, CBS, or others south of the border, it’s only marginally so.

    Yes, there are certainly good critical thinkers here and elsewhere. But for the most part, my feeling is that we are so self absorbed that we miss the discussions, the larger discussions of critical issues that should be of concern to all…whether we live in Vancouver, Toronto, Winnipeg or Alabama! How often do we hear of the important issues of import in Africa? Only when there is a disaster. Ditto India. Ditto Europe.

    I find that I rarely listen or read Canadian or American news reports of anything but prefer to read the Guardian, the Economist — both of which have rather a more european focus. BUT, that said, at least I feel that I get a more balanced view, debate.

    But that’s all an aside…kudos to you for deciding early that what you’ve been doing isn’t what makes you happy, satisfies you. Kudos for throwing caution to the wind, leaping off the cliff without the safety of a net or at least a parachute. Your critics have some v. good comments, to which you have responded well even if they didn’t “answer” to their satisfaction. You answered, with temperance and amazingly today…both rationally and with incredibly good comments. Touche.

    While I doubt that your brave decision, your frank discussion and rationale argument will change the world — I, for one, welcome your comments and instigation of a thorough discussion of what is important.

    I’ll be watching what you to next, wherever your leap takes you….both Canada and the rest of the thinking world needs more of the frank discussion you’ve started! Hoorah!

    Kate

  748. Anthony said:

    “It takes great courage to back truth unacceptable to our times. There’s a punishment for it and it’s usually crucifixion.”
    — John Steinbeck (East of Eden)

    Kai,

    Thanks. Your honesty and courage have released me from a growing pessimism.

    For quite some time, I along with many others, have been watching the decline of Canadian broadcast journalism. It is currently at a shameful low. Trite items such as the daily activities of a pampered prince and his princess, and raving hockey fans have led the top of broadcasts – while the world is unravelling. Political lies and deceit are spoon-fed to the media and in turn regurgitated to the public without insight or questions.

    Rather than engaging the public in intelligent reasoning and conversation, broadcast news has become a most insipient ‘dumbing’ factor in our lives.

    Shame, on those at the top of the heap that have little respect for their viewers and shame on them for being so lacking in backbone. I applaud the reporters, their camera people and news staff who are conscientious and have chosen a profession so necessary in our world. However, more often than not, what can be reported for the good of all and what actually is broadcast seems of two worlds.

    And I applaud you Kai, for your wonderful essay. You have given hope that others of your generation will stand up and bring new honesty and spiritual energy into our society. By that I mean a wholesome attitude for the truth and a nurturing of individual freedom, and courage to face what the times are about to unfold. It will not be pretty.

    People need to be awakened and there are others of your generation that are courageous enough to step forward. An example is the young page that held up a sign at the last opening of Parliament. The sign simply read “Stop Harper”.

    This is not to be understood as simply a party-based political example, but as one where no matter the party, the public consciousness needs to be awakened from a lulled sleep, created in most part by false corporate spin and a failing broadcast media. Pretty faces in runway costumes should not be the criteria for the intelligent dissimination of news about our world’s current dilemma. Preference should be for the guts of what’s truly going on in the world as opposed to creating a stage where falling in lust with an anchorperson is the selling point.

    Canada is a very special place in the world, with a very special task for the future. It needs people like you!

    At 24, I left a major international corporation in Toronto, for reasons not unlike yours. I headed to Vancouver with a suitcase and lived a meagre life. I then made my way to the Yukon, became a silver miner, and took over at the helm of the local union. For me, it was a good introduction to life’s realities.

    Following studies at an art institute I entered the film profession. Money did not pile high in my bank account, as it would have perhaps had I stayed in Toronto. Rather, wealth appeared in other ways. I have had freedom in my life. I am now almost 65, with hopefully many years left to be creative. Retirement is not a word that I need in my vocabulary.

    Kai, keep the faith. You will always be helped along. You are a courageous soul. No matter what – keep the faith.

    Thanks for your good deed.

    You have my heartfelt wishes for a tremendous and fulfilled future…
    A.

  749. Alex said:

    I hate to see all the comments here essentially bashing Kai for having a moral compass. “Look at this guy, quitting his job because he’s morally opposed to what he’s doing, asshole!”
    Seriously, is there a single more backwards thing to say?
    I’m a graphic designer and I’ve turned down jobs because I morally opposed my clients ideas and beliefs. I don’t think I should be providing my expertise to a LOT of people who don’t deserve it.
    Does that mean I’m not successful? Actually no, I’m MORE successful because of it. Not only do I have a great job, I have a job that I love and that I can throw myself at 100% without feeling like I’ve turned my back on everything I believe in.
    Putting morality before money is one of the bravest things you can do, and ultimately when you do earn you can feel like you deserve it.

    • PAM said:

      All it is is bashing…

      No logic, no argument, just plain hatrid from people who hate themselves…

      If only they could bring one intelligent argument to the table…

      They do own the truth and will use any stupid comment to prove they are wrong…

      Still waiting for one intelligent argument from these bashers…

  750. Kat said:

    Well said Alex, and my thoughts too.

    A lot of people feel burdened with the life they have chosen, yes, chosen, and look down at others that seek the moral route. They are envious and bitter, and want to suffocate those that put their values before anything else.

    It’s great that Kai discovered his moral responsibility at 24, what takes many of us to discover at 34, or 44, or unfortunately, never.

    People need to stop holding society back, including their clients, colleagues, and management, and get a job in which they find fulfillment and can make a difference, rather than doing the rat-race routine for that pay-cheque.

    If you don’t want to discover your life’s purpose and passion, and that job in which you thrive, then don’t hold the rest of us back! Yet you are still doing so with your lethargy.

  751. Lynn said:

    Hey Kiddo,
    I get it. Make no mistake about it, a lot of us news viewers know what is going on. This is reaffirmed by the popularity of online news. A viewer with an just a tad’s ability to critical think knows when a mainstream news outlet is attempting to sell us fluff, or ignore a story about public “officials” selling off the country to corporations.
    How fortunate that you are awake enough to listen to what your heart is telling you, and at such a tender age no less.

  752. Brian Spencer said:

    I don’t respect your wish to bear your soul in public. This smacks of vanity, the kind that blogging promotes. The world isn’t waiting on you to develop your convictions. At the age of 24, you’re still an angry campus journalist, taking a shot at everything you see, without the maturity to know one’s own place.
    You can identify as many faults as you can find, but that doesn’t make you a hero. Others know that these things exist, but they don’t need to speak out about them, a least not so dramatically. It’s not apathy of age, just recognition and respect for other’s relative development and preparedness to go along.
    Regardless, good luck with your future endeavors and I hope you can still inject some non-white bread image to TV news.

    • The way I read it Kai is addressing his concerns and using his actions in the process, not addressing himself and using his concerns as talking points. Kai may not yet know his place as he is still in the midst of creating it. It is, of course, much quicker to be the person others make of you.

      Few people of any age are willing to identify faults publicly and I see a fairly even age distribution of those people.

      The underlying premise of many posts here is that all journalists are reporters and to be otherwise is irresponsible. Each person must decide for themselves if they are more responsible to their pay cheque or to their community. Imagine if P.J. O’Rourke and David Brooks subscribed to such a record-keeping function.

  753. [...At the age of 24, you’re still an angry campus journalist, taking a shot at everything you see, without the maturity to know one’s own place.]

    With all due respect Brian, may I suggest that you mount a campaign to introduce a law that requires one to know ‘one’s own place’ before one is able to vote in this country, or go off to war for that matter, since it appears to you that an ‘angry campus journalist’ cannot possibly be of right mind. And at what age would one have the maturity you speak of, may I ask?

    [...Others know that these things exist, but they don't need to speak out about them, at least not so dramatically.]

    It appears that you’re implying that if others speak out it’s all right, as long as the drama is removed. I suppose that you never experienced passion in your 20’s? It was what shaped all our decisions for our future direction. Give passion its due, there’s not enough of the right kind in the world today. Those that simply accept that problems exist in our society and don’t speak out I have coined the HITS Syndrome people (Head In The Sand Syndrome). It’s what has given rise to all devious and evil leaders in the world.

    Brian, in your youth you must have read the ‘The Road Not Taken’ by Robert Frost?
    […Two roads diverged in a wood, and I--
    I took the one less traveled by,
    And that has made all the difference.]

    You can listen to Robert himself read it here: http://www.poets.org/viewmedia.php/prmMID/15717

    It’s unfortunate that your sensitivity overrides Kai’s intent to let others know of his decision, and how he arrived at it. After all, he was a ‘public’ figure in front of the news camera and had a public following. Would you not consider that he wrote his essay out of a sense of responsible ‘informing’ rather than ’vanity’?

    And by the way, are you yourself not ’bearing your soul in public’ when you respond to someone’s blog entry?
    Let us all bear our souls in public, overcome the shackles of fear that corporate-politicians have concocted for us, and let’s bring freedom and peace (that forgotten word!) back into our lives and into the world. Let’s applaud Kai for his choice to speak out and let’s not cower under the weight of our sensitivities.

    Brian, isn’t time that we start to build healthy soul communities for the sake of future generations?

    • You have a good handle on the trade language of English. Which is exactly what it should be and remain, A trade language. I like your point of view. Keep your eyes open, and don’t shut up either. The world needs voices to ring for those without.

      Rock On!

  754. Great read, today you showed me that not all journalists are the same and that there is hope still for real journalism in Canada.

    • PAM said:

      There are plenty of journalists that want to do better.

      Kai showed us that it is not the people but the system.

      We already knew that.

      Nothing Kai has written has changed my mind.
      He is just expressing values that I adhere to.

      Again, Kai is showing that this is not about people but about the system.

      The system will change: no escape.
      Real matter is: When?

      Leaders will ask the good question and will make this happen.
      Others will be left behind: I do expect Fox to go down in the next two years… Murdoch is already showing the values that allowed him to build his empire.
      He will fall so fast that he will be remembered as the one who did fall because of his values.
      We are seeing it happening right now: a true event in history.
      An empire that will collapse so fast because of the values of his leader.

      For now, let’s see the rats leaving the ship as this is collapsing.
      Murdoch empire will collapse faster than Enron!
      Just enjoy the show…
      So who will be the first big rat to leave the boat?
      It will happen in August,,, In November, the last ones will leave and be left with nothing.
      Real question: who will leave the boat first and get another job elsewhere?
      These will be the best ones: the real blood suckers who sees more but still have accepted to live in lies…
      How much time did it took for Hearst empire to collapse? Murdoch is going to do it faster!

      At least, we have a castle to remember Hearst… What will Murdoch give to us?

  755. PAM said:

    Break time…
    I will follow this thread and meet anyone who bashes Kai without true values…
    Hijackers, spinners and bashers will be met with more details.

    The thing is: every word they write is so stupid…

    Bashers: look at their words – they are talking about themselves.
    Spinners: they repeat the same message as ordered by their customers… As they do not believe in their own words… They are in trouble from the get-go.
    Hijackers: are either bashers or spinners with more persistence.

    I could be qualified as a highjacker… Difference is: I truly and totally agree with what Kai wrote!
    So basically, I am a fan, a supporter, a believer!

  756. Doug T-M said:

    Global warming isn’t caused by humans. This is the fourth time the planet has come out of an ice age. The previous three times we didn’t exist. This time the warming started 14,000 years ago, long before we could have any impact. There is no scientific proof we are contributing to the warming. The actual climatology scientists aren’t at all confident in their science yet and they have said so repeatedly. The ‘global scientific consensus’ you refer to is likely the UN IPCC, whose reports claim to represent more than 1500 scientists but which in fact are the work of about 15 people. These reports have been repeatedly criticized for conclusions unsupported by research, most famously the so called ‘hockey stick’ graph which purported to show the human impact on global warming, and was cited by the IPCC long after it was proven to be statistical flim flam. In short, on this subject, you’ve succumbed to propaganda.

    • PAM said:

      I really like your comment because you seem to have good argument.

      So lets use your own words and ask a few questions:
      - 14000 thousands years: so what happnened in the last 100 years? 50 years? 20 years?
      - Scientific proof: is Co2 increase having a warming impact? How about Ch4? why Co2 is provoking relection of IR? Can you tell us the exact frequency that causes the Co2 molecules to vibrate and reemit energy?
      - If a scientist could prove GW to be wrong… Would this guy have a Nobel prize?
      - Who are those 15 people you are talking about? Please name them? Please name the ones who disagree?
      - Who pretent they proved that the hockey stick is a statisticall flaw (I read M and M)? Who is M and M? Who is paying them?
      - Who has interest to do propaganda? Oil companies or scientists? Who can win money by denying GW?
      - What was the trigger to change the planet from an Ice ball state to a warmer temperature?
      - What are the most recent estimates on the artic ice?
      - What does science tells us about CH4 emissions?
      - What is causing Ch4 in the atmosphere?
      - What is increasing the Co2?
      - What are the impact of aerosols on the global dimming?
      - How much micro particles are emmited by coal based power plants?
      - Is there sucha thing like Global dimming? iF TRUE… How much of the GW is hiden by aerosols?
      - What is the rate of decline of Goenland?
      - What is the rate of decline of Glaciers?
      - What percentage of the glaciers are going down?
      - Name me the Glaciers that are going up?
      - When is the expected time where glaciers in the Himmalyas will be gone?
      - how about the andes?
      - Why Groenland, Artic and Antartic decline was not included in the 2007 IPPC report?
      - When is the next IPCC report?
      - Considering Larsen B, what is the rate of decline of the Antartic?
      - What is Larsen B?
      - What do you know besides you global comments?
      - Why scientist are trying to measure the impact of doubling of CO2?
      - When they say that Co2 is having a logarithmic impact, what do they mean?
      - How much Ch4 in pergelisol?
      - How much Ch4 in artic oceans?
      - In those imperfect models you seem to deny: what part of sea level rise is ralted to increase water temperature? What part is cause by glaciers? What part is caused by Groenland (none, it could not be assesed at that time)? What part is cause by Antartic melting (none in the IPCC report)?
      - Who are the experts on satellite measuring of the temperature?
      - Why did they deny GW until 2007?
      - What are they saying now?
      - Who is Robert Lindzen?
      - Who is Roy Spencer and John Christy?
      - Who is Hansen, Gavin Smith?
      - Who is McMann?
      - What was the conclusion of the inquiry on the supposed email gate?
      - What is FOX pretending?
      - Who is Robert Murdoch?
      - What is the true meaning of “Hide the decline and use the trick”?
      - Why tree rings are no longer showing the increase temperature?
      - When did the tree rings stopped to show us the temperature variation and Why?
      - What is a proxy in GW?
      - What proxies are use to measure temperature?
      - At what frequency the CH4 is starting to vibrate?

      Obviously, you seem to know the answers… Please stop giving us lip service and prove your comments…

      Can you just answer one of my questions?
      I will enjoy this…

      You may know one answer (but not really)… Who is Lord Monckton?

    • PAM said:

      Let’s resume this in one question…

      Who are you to pretend you own the truth in Global Warming?

  757. Blue House :) said:

    Hi Kai, it`s your neighbour from long ago :D
    I don`t know if you`ll really read this, but I just wanted to say I thought you wrote this piece very well and expressed some of my views clearly and concisely.
    I hope your journey takes you to a place where you`ll be happy.

  758. Kat said:

    breathingexistence: I like it.

  759. What about starting up our own TV news station where real issues are explored? I see you have a lot of responses to get through, but if this is something you’re interested in let me know. It’s something that I have been thinking about since studying at journalism school a few years ago. I know that it would be costly, but with all the response that this post has generated we could get some more people on board and have the support for it and maybe if we all put our heads together we could even come up with a funding plan.

    • PAM said:

      Not really costly.

      People who love their job are usually able to adapat more to the business than mercenaries…

  760. Perry White said:

    @Paolo

    What about starting a show like “Democracy Now” but for Canada. Democracy Now has a million viewers

    Democracy Now is just singing to the converted, like it always has, as does The Real News Network (which is just a load of Obama bashing and little else, as if Obama can reverse 30 years of neocon bullshit in four years! [BTW, here's the truth on what Obama has actually accomplished.]) If something like Air America existed, Kai would fit into that, and would do better with that, but he wants to take some time off (he’s doing what Peter Newman did 40 years ago, FYI) and sadly, Air America’s gone, with no chance of a Canadian version ever popping up.

    @Carmelle: do you have the millions it costs to start up and/or buy a TV station? Kai doesn’t, and I don’t think that you would be able to do so either, even with tons of fundraising. Plus, just being on the web isn’t enough

    @Brian Spencer: Spoken like a true right-wing neocon asshole with a big mouth but a small dick. What more do you have to blather on about?

    @PAM: With all due respect, you have no idea who is or isn’t a shill for the CBC or CTV-your insults are just giving people the fuel to bash Kai more. Maybe you should let Kai moderate for himself instead of you doing it. Also, nuclear reactors are not the bogeyman that you and everybody else has been led to believe-please try and read more about them instead of just being an unwitting (and unwilling) useful idiot for the coal and gas industry.

    @Been there myself: When you know what Kai has gone through, let us know. Until then, it seems as if you are just looking for somebody to bash to satiate your neocon wants-and it’s making you childish and stupid, not knowledgeable and smart.

    @G. Marratto: As above, so below.

    @Kai: I wish you the best in this endeavor, and hope that you find what you’re looking for.

  761. David said:

    Well done Kai – altruism is hard to find these days. Good luck to you.

  762. Paula said:

    Kai you did the right thing in quitting. LIfe is meant to be lived abundantly and you should not have to compromise your principles on some very important issues that effect milions. We were depending on you as a Reporter to inform us of the true events happening in our Country. You have integrity and you are not alone there are many who understand your perspective. Something was dying inside of you —we should not be editing out our SOULS for a buck or two. You have talent —you just need to work for yourself and with like -minded people. I wish you luck!

  763. PAM said:

    I love this site…

    People are true and great.

    Some are just liers…

    So the answer: bring back the truth!
    Ask them to prove what they say…

    Usually, they are tourists and they back off…

  764. Vahan said:

    So. An interesting development on MSNBC in the U.S. A new, strong young person was brought in at 6:00 PM, he was outspoken and guess what. He is out, even with fantastic ratings. He was offered another, smaller position, but decided to leave. More young voices being squashed.

  765. WOW!!! that blew my mind, your article just confirmed what I had in mind. I am myself a evangelist baptist Christian and yet there is a lot of things on which I disagree with the government right now and the position Canada is slowly taking. Science is as important as spirituality and I find a real connection between those two. I was trying to be a news photographers but had some doubts. Right now, I know it’s not the path I what to take, but still, photography is what I want to do and I know that there is still honesty in documentary photography. Thanks for sharing that Kai, Its incredible to see people stand up for what they think is right even now.

  766. karenv said:

    It’s the 21st and we’re still reading. :) Thanks again. I’m so glad to know there really *is* a real Canada underneath all the crap of the Harper government and that I didn’t make it up or go crazy or something. You’re a beacon for what Canada truly means.

  767. Alex S-R said:

    Booyah. I haven’t read through all the comments here, so maybe someone else has mentioned it, but I’d recommend http://www.therealnews.com for you and anyone else who feels the same way as you do. We’re in desparate need of good journalists, and though jobs may be sparse, independent media provide a home for them. Best of luck.

  768. Alex S-R said:

    Booyah. I haven’t read through all the comments here, so maybe someone else has mentioned it, but I’d recommend http://www.therealnews.com for you and anyone else who feels the same way as you do. We’re in desperate need of good journalists, and though jobs may be sparse, independent media provide a home for them. Best of luck.

  769. I am glad someone said what many of us are thinking. Heading west are you? If you make it to Saskatoon I would love to buy you a beer.

    • In the article mentioned, it also says that a lot of Canadian or Canadien(s) are seen as friendly, this is questionable, and we do claim to be friendly, but those are just claims for the most part. For the most part alot of Canadians are in fact just slightly less noisy U.S.A. want-to-be’s ready to bend over and take it up the rear. We are slaves to money just the same as those yankees, but we are not quite there yet. We do still have a chance to be the leading edge of so many striving to change and rebuild the world.

      I admit, Yes, the Earth, Sun, and Galaxy have there natural cycles, for instance the sun is entering a time of heightened Solar flare activity, where it will reach its zenith around Mid-December of next year, and we are reaching midnight of the galactic day around the same time, which happens to be our(the northern hemi-sphere’s) winter solstice. However it is ignorant to say that we have no effect on our “wee blue marble”. Sure our government corruption is minimal, or is it so complete that it only seems minimal? We as individuals do have power, just the same as few individuals have so much money. We as people have more power than any dollar bill, we just have to be willing to step away from the edge/influence of greed and pride, and take back our free choice instead of giving it to someone else for a price(which is what Kai has done for himself). We may face hunger, and we may face ridicule, but it is something I have had to live with the whole of my life in a country where the BULK of my genetic/family history lies. That means I’m ready are you?

  770. Human said:

    The truth is more important than the dollar.
    People are more important than politics.
    The earth itself is more important than gasoline.
    Greedy people die alone.

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  772. Rollie said:

    TV news for girls by girls

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  774. K. Whitfield said:

    Kai, thank you for your courageous post and for your act of bravery in quitting your job and posting your reasons in public.
    There is a growing segment of the population in Canada that is alienated from corporate media and our corporate government. We have no voice other than the internet because increasingly it is consumers who are catered to and serviced and not citizens. The concept of a citizen, with values, needs, and responsibilities beyond those of a simple consumer, is a lost concept for our current society. And with its loss, has come the loss of real democracy.
    Our politicians do not represent us, the media does not engage in investigative or thoughtful journalism, our houses of government do not engage in meaningful, intelligent debate and our current social structure is based purely on the exchange of goods for money at the cost of our freedom, to line the pocket of the few.
    We have bungled it good. But there are those of us who know it and are looking for alternatives. The answers are not clear. I think we have to rethink our whole way of life and re-evaluate how we are going to assess and assign value in our society and how we are going to engage in co-operative relationships to increase what is important in our lives. Right now that may seem an insurmountable task. But the very fact that people like you are waking up and seeing the writing on the wall and are willing to engage in public discourse on the subject, is proof that we might be able to turn this bus around. Ideas are the most subversive force on the face of the earth. Our nation and society is bankrupt of ideas. Our current keepers would prefer we simply consume and don’t think. Let’s dare to be free-thinkers and re-cast the world in a new image! Plant the seeds and watch them grow.
    Whatever your path Kai, thank you for your courage and best of luck to you.

  775. Wondeful take on the dubious state of head-in-the-sand governace our society seems to wind up with time and time again. Sexual anthropology instincts trumping good ideas and ridicule replacing analysis is the dark blood increasingly permeating the arteries of broadcast media; look what they did to Stephane Dion… A classical “good man” who was “Joe Clarked”
    As they say, God willing, please again find your public voice, where the ideas espoused in your spiel against media dumbing-down, may flourish mongst the “great unwashed”
    For you too are “a good man”.
    J. Doak

    • PAM said:

      Please elaborate.
      Please do explain to them.

      For me, I am in admiration in front of Nagata San.
      He impress me so much that when I see obscure text like yours, I feel your true motives are hidden.

      Using your own words:
      Dubious, Head-in-the-sand, Sexual anthropology (explaining is needed here: are you tallking about the habits of papous tribes, modern society, Charia based society, etc…), dark blood (Blue blood maybe? Like the one who were used when kings became intermixed so much that they were giving), Dion (best green PM in history who was stabbed by Layton…),

      I do understand your words and they have a great value.
      Please take the time to explain more because there is so much information in your message and few can understand your true quality.

      Please, Please, Please: give us more details.

      We both agree on one thing: Kai Nagata San is a true San.

      His golden sculpture should be added to the SanJuSanGendo temple…
      I can blame US for many things but a country who avoid bombing Kyoto should be commanded.
      There are so many things that are good in US…
      But the tea party would find their true leader in SH. He is that low!

      again:
      Please, Please, Please: give us more details.
      Please act like if you were meditating in Kiyomizudera!
      Guide us in the philosopher path.
      I am using Japanese sites to inspire us…

  776. Don’t do that. Don’t take someone’s name and turn it into a turn of phrase. “good man” in quotes could mean anything, and I have no interest in what “Joe Clarked” is meant to convey. But “good man” in quotes like that means that you could be using the term good man out of context, and actually be insulting him. So please elaborate. I wish not to assume, but i will soon get there.

    • PAM said:

      Richard

      His words are full of sense and are truly a poetic homage to Kai.
      Read again please.

      Take some more time and you will see.
      We have the same objective here and I would be truly honered to be considered as a long distance friend by you.

      After all, we did jump the gun too fast: you and me…
      I really think that I have learned to improved my reading skills on a board.

      As a computer specialist I will tell you: the worst bugs are the ones we are making in our mind… There is no bug but we need to calm down and revisit before understanding.
      I did follow this route so many times… But perseverance is my guide.

      BTW Clark, Mulroney and Dion were truly great persons…
      Just need to take the time to read beyond the image and the media spin.
      Trudeau was so great… Really! We are still living in the results of what he did: a debt not paid and a country without Quebec as a true partner…
      Wisdom is to see beyond the spin. About Trudeau: read Burelle! Listen to Dion’s father, look at Rayneault’s and Parizeau’s arguments on economics.
      Was Miron, Levesque, Lesage, Bourassa and even Duplessis so wrong?
      How about Raymond Levesque?
      When a guy writes a song like: “Quand tous les hommes vivront d’amour”, he does diserve my attention…

      The strength of a country is measured by their artists: Poets, musicians, philosophers, painters, sculpturs.
      All in all: I feel Canada and Québec are pretty well equipped…

      • All do respect. I find it hard to understand how Mr. Mulroney was great. I can see about Joe Clark he wanted to balance the budget long ago, but Mulroney just always rubbed me the wrong way. Like I said up the page, and increase in National debt was the trend at the time in most western countries, I’m not saying that he was a fan for conformity, but instead a victim of unfortunate circumstances. When has Quebec ever been a true partner of Canada? Why is it his fault that they are not? He was from Quebec, and still spoke against Meech Lake, find out why.

        • PAM said:

          Let’s not revisit history and go back to facts.
          The truth will set us free.

          Mr. Mulroney did fix the finances of Canada.
          The introduction of the GST, a truly less regressive tax allowed to decrease the black market economy and allowed somme kind of prosperity.
          It was Martin and Chretien who reaped the benefit but the it was established under the era of Mulroney.
          Also, he allowed civil servants to do projects that were good for Canada.
          On the consitutional side, the lake Meech almost passed until Trudeau, Chretien and their front men: Wells and Harper prevented the inclusion of Québec in the constitution.
          Basically, Mulroney era was the one who fixed the finances, allowed his civil servants to use their best skills and almost brought Québec back in the constitution.
          Trudeau on the other hand introduced with Wilson a 50B deficit (equivalent of more than 100B now and higher ratio to GDP than any modern economy – meaning he did worst than any G8 economy with more ressources…) and failed multiple times at Victoria and during the night of the long knives.
          To me, even Harper is better than Trudeau and Chretien but Stephen’s devotion to Petrol industry is ground for eventually breaking Canada apart.
          I agree that Trudeau was perhaps the most brilliant and stilish. Also a great traveler and journalist but his management skills were not based on empowerment but on control. With his great ego, he failed but we most admit that this was another time.

          As for Québec being a true partner of Canada, you have to admit that not only did we send many great minds to serve under all aspect of Canada but we also we great at introducing new mindset. Let me reformulate in reverse: When was Canada a true partner of Québec?
          Let’s not revisit history of the “nègres blancs d’Amérique”…
          Let’s not forget the culture the the french canadians are bringing to the table.
          Still now, even after 40 years of the law about bilinguism, meeting between civil servants are being held in english at least 90% of the time.
          So basically, french canadians are working in English whereas anglo canadians get their raise by taking the french course and then can not forget fast enough…
          So as far as language is concerned, french canadians are true partner in the fact they are adapting to the english culture while I don’t see reciprocity from the anglo canadians.

          Partnership starts with communication. Do you agree?

          Also it goes on with thrust: the night of the long knives shall noit be forgotten… “On va mettre no job en jeu…” said Trudeau in a great evening at the Montréal forum in 1980.
          In 1993, he proved that he would put himself on the line, going down from Westmount to St-Henri, the monach came and made sure nobody will suceed where he failed.
          Jalousy? True concern about the changes to the constitution (a document the was never changed!)?
          He wanted to save Canada and ended up with a 49.5% for the separation of Québec.
          In those two cases, we saw the worst of what Trudeau could do.

          On all aspects of your reply, we will agree to disagree.
          On my side, I still wait for facts to back up your pretention.
          Not excuse for Trudeau, not blaming on Québec.
          I want to see analysis with facts.
          I had this discussions with hard core federalist liberals very involved.
          At the end of the discussions we agreed: Trudeau and Chretien were bad for economy, constitution and civil servants. Granted Trudeau was really a stillish monark and a brilliant mind.

  777. Timothy John said:

    Dear Kai,

    Your honest admission of the so called “real world” is an echo of this generation. Freshly raised from the hatchery of the university, young adults today are finding the adult world complicated by the paradoxes of commerce, profit, and self-interest. The working world is littered with dwindling ethical codes, shady morality, and stress. Should one compromise themselves and their ethical codes of conduct in order to satisfy the demands of a flawed system at the hands of those whose interest only lies in the preservation of power?

    I find it so defeating to suggest you ought to just “suck it up” because you are lucky to have a job. What a negative standard to live by. Of course, we could always play the game of endless comparison, to those that have seemingly less than we do. But this does very little to our actual lives and it rarely inspires the motivation we need to accomplish greatness. Where would Canada be had Tommy Douglas relented, kicked up his feet, and sighed: “Well, at least we aren’t Haiti”?

    Do human beings find meaning and success in their lives by simply sucking it up? You are master and commander of your own fate and as a life goal, you ought to discover those things that keep you fulfilled. You cannot achieve or make an impact by doing something for the sake of sucking it up. Some believe you are here to have a job and move on, but I believe you wish for something far greater, the ability to effect positive change and gain deep meaning and understanding.

    You are brave and courageous to make such a move with your job, at such a young age. You seem to be living to the sound of your own drum, however distant it might be (like Thoreau says). I find your story inspiring and uplifting; you did what others only dream of doing, those who flirt with the idea for years until eventually capitulating to “paying the bills.”

    By heading West, your story echoes the thousands of others, who for hundreds of years saw the West as the land of open roads, freedom, opportunity, life and living. Follow your own path, your own dreams, your own guts. Best of luck in your life journey.

    Tim

    • Slawomir Poplawski said:

      Dear Tim (and also Kai),
      Tim, I liked your comment summarizing very well problems that are facing people who are more sensitive to moral dilemmas when functioning in this present social/political/financial system. I was thinking that only people coming to North America from other places can see it – not those born here and brainwashed by the corporate media servicing the most tricky human manipulators (haha!). Tim, I liked your approach in identifying the source of problems as reflecting my similar contemplations, but your opinions are so nicely/shortly written in English (not my native language). For this reason I would like to quote some of your sentences as mine (haha!), but before I want to get in touch with you (my email is: slavekpop@yahoo.com).

      The point is that Kai’s brave act, reported in this blog, enabled to gather and connect so many people who are not agreeing with the existence (with so big influence on many lives) of “a flawed system at the hands of those whose interest only lies in the preservation of power”. These people should get united to fell stronger in their so far treated as too idealistic attempts of trying to resists this mentally oppressive system and not “eventually capitulating to ‘paying the bills’.”

      Bravo to Kai, but now he should not feel pressured to show the public his next steps. He has already accomplished a lot by resonating or awaking so many other people. To continue this path his next step should be similarly BIG as the first one. It can be very stressful for him and it is not necessary as this work can be continued by the 1400 who responded in this blog. Yes, we can. Let us continue sharing our doubts/proposals etc under his honorable leadership or with his role as only the moderator of our evolving discussion about the best next steps!

      Do we need a revolution or still can fix this decadent system of …. ?
      Slawomir Poplawski

      • Don’t think of it as a revolution, but instead view it as an overhaul. Completely dismantle to truly and completely grease the wheels. Any system gets dirty over time. Even when it is well maintained.

  778. Sounds as though you’re exactly the sort of person who ideally should be covering news for television. Shame to lose you. More folks with your sense of depth and intelligence are precisely what’s needed these days. Any chance you might change your mind? Just a thought.

    • He just finished saying that he quit because his own point of view was getting edited out. So unless he can find a place that won’t edit his own voice, then I guess not so much. Just another thought.

      One who calls them self Bourgeous(ie) who cares only of the property value.

  779. Kai has so professionally and astutely written this story (1400 comments over a one month period for a report that would normally be considered of limited interest) it can only be the beginning of an illustrious career, not the end. The only question remaining is for whom.

  780. Hi Kai and many readers resonating so spontaneously with him,

    I see a certain pattern. Kai is not alone with his reflections shared by so many readers, but I want Kai “to marry” a slightly younger Miss Brigitte DePape (symbolically and literally –haha!). She acted alone in Ottawa two months earlier. Something similar was occurring in Poland before a creation of Solidarity in 81. A growing number of individuals giving up collaboration with inhuman communist structures in 76-80 (similarly to Kai/Brigitte) was difficult to hide and the communist regime was nervous. Their verbal reactions reminds me now someone using name LifeisUnfair – published in a cecond Kai’s blog (http://kainagata.com/2011/07/09/a-lot-can-happen-in-24-hour/) on July 16, 2011 at 11:44. This person manifests so openly his/her anger after Kai and Brigette DePape public exposures; why and how to quit well paid/respected jobs. This person does not understand many young (not only) people bored and unfulfilled living the America/Canadian Dream. Our two heroic young people pointed out that it is not good to linger on a job that is in direct conflict with our personal values of social justice, fairness and good government. On top of that they also openly gave examples who (Harper) or what (corporate media) is bad in our present system. Manifesting it publicly hits the most sensitive point in the system – makes people more aware about often required “selling souls” to get and maintain the most prestigious jobs.

    What we really need are a few gallant people willing to step out of apathy and into action. It is sad to see a society afraid to speak out. We do not have many people like Kai and Brigitte in our community yet, but they are coming and already existed as these hundreds of letters in this blog indicate. We need the passion of individuals, such as 21-year-old former page Miss Brigette DePape; who demonstrated her “Stop Harper” sign at the last Parliament session. She was not sophisticated in her words as she used only two words, but it was the best situational solution when used in front of unprepared TV crews. Such act represents a good beginning. Kai, in the next logical step, smartly used his 3000 words. The point is that they together created the best first two steps; firstly, the spectacular public action and secondly, the best articulated Kai’s manifesto. They already exist in our conscious, but our modern society born and raised in front of TV screens with shortened attention spans needs badly graphic interpretation attached to their action.

    At this moment I want to share with you a very illustrative as symbolic photo presented in this link: http://www.calgaryherald.com/news/Senate+page+Brigette+DePape+thrown+after+anti+Harper+stunt/4893688/story.html.
    After seeing this picture we can be 100% assured about the true innocence/honesty emanating from the face of Brigitte (as from Kim’s manifesto) and nastiness/hostility radiating from a dragging her parliament’s functionary with three medals (awarded after his selling his soul – haha!).

    However, let’s look for a better symbolization of their as our struggles, but in the meantime use this picture.

    At stake of Kai/Brigitte’s “actions’ is shaking our modern society. They said directly about the system and oppressive politicians, but under it is something deeper – a dominating consumerist mentality. People hurt themselves and their families and friends after being indoctrinated with a go-getting mentality. It makes them difficult to be spontaneous and socially active. It makes them more like separately caged animals, afraid of the have-nots and very afraid to risk losing something while fighting for more respect or independence. The ruling circles love societies motivated in this way as people become very predictable in their activities. Their consistent indoctrination and manipulation become an easily achieved objective once the monopolized corporate media and puppet governments lend a hand. Right now, the true rulers do not need strong police and concentration camps to maintain their dominant position; but they will when encountered with even the slightest active resistance to their globalized interests.

    Furthermore, these narrow circles of power that are the main beneficiaries of globalization increasingly want to play a role similar to that of the old feudal aristocracy. They have long been influenced by their worship of the “3M trinity”: Money, Manipulation and the desire to have More of everything. This trinity is now reaching everyone’s minds, rich and poor, so that the latter are easier to control, thereby converting the traditionally antagonistic relations between the rulers and the ruled into the friendlier dynamic of masters and their followers. What the followers do not know fully is that those who already have riches are gaining more as they acquire more power, and the followers are being poisoned with envy, which is treated as a virtue motivating people to work harder. It makes many richer, but erodes traditional religions, which endorse dialectally different values from a very addictive “consumerist life philosophy.” In fact many people from the religious establishment are not immune and can be easily targeted as the enslaved materialistic or pleasure monsters. This erosion allows the corporate media to continue their consistent total attack against all religions, and their defense of the 3Ms.

    Kai and Brigitte increased chances for initializing a “Long March” for manipulated majority toward freeing their enslaved souls in this present sophisticated social system of mental oppressions misleadingly named as the best democracy. Can we really talk about democracy when money and influence with manipulative corporate media prevails?

    Have a nice day during your travel and be very careful.
    Slaw

  781. editor said:

    I too quit, a different job but with similar concerns: for over 25 years I worked in the feature film industry–the celluloid salt mines, we used to call it before the digitalization of “film” production. Dozens of features, tv movies, and stints on tv series as a grip. Of those shows, I was proud of working on one. Just one. And it was a family movie, nothing special, but at least it had some integrity and didn’t offend with the usual Hollywood answer to conflict: guns, death, the cessation of intelligent argument by firearms. Like Kai, I didn’t have a tv, or rather, had one, still do–a 13 inch Sony–but didn’t subscribe to cable and only rarely used it to watch a rented film. Luddite? Hardly: I have a blog, I am shooting and editing a digital video documentary, I’m internet savvy. But TV, and most American feature film, is not just the “vast wasteland” which a former FCC chairman, Newton Minnow, claimed for the then three networks in 1961. It is a soporific and a tool to push products into unresistant minds.

    There is no conspiracy here: but the television’s flickering images (60 interlaced images per second, or now, 60 full-frame progressive images per second) is too subtle to be noticed, but it has the effect of causing a semi-hypnotic state. Think of how you stare at the tv. This state causes you to be more receptive, or at least to turn down your critical filters. Thus, advertising on tv is still one of the most effective means of inculcating the desire to purchase. Combine that with the constant refrain of “you’re not good enough” in terms of looks, possessions, income, position…you see what I mean.

    So I quit, and am working on an interdisciplinary MA, and making a documentary video, and wondering where all this will lead me, at 56. So—good luck, Kai. If you’re in Vancouver give me a call.

    Michael Cox
    Vancouver BC

  782. Hi Kaia,

    cross posted this over on iveye.wordpress.com

    hope you are ok with that and BRAVO mate!

  783. Hello Kai,
    Why did you erase my comment in which was mentioned a similarly brave young woman posting in Ottawa her statement “Stop Harper”? Crediting Ms. DePappe in your blog can generate more interest and more profound conclusions about your generation that can potentially change a lot in our present social system. Kai, be more open and share your stories with us.

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  785. edwin franco said:

    Come to Chicago.

  786. JC said:

    Nicely put. There’s a lot of people formerly on the payroll of the big newsies out here in the weeds figuring it out for ourselves. Keep going. No longer getting a cheque from an outlet doesn’t mean you’re no longer a journalist. It just means you’re no longer a propagandist.

    • I like how you said that. “It just means you’re no longer a propagandist.”

      Right F***ing on! You nailed it right there.

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  788. Hi Kai. I just wanted to say “Bravo!” for your heartfelt words. At least know that you’re not the only one who feels this way and has also walked away from the mainstream. Different generations doesn’t always mean different mindsets. Those of us older than you are just more dented because we’ve been kicked longer, but we still want the same thing: a better world for all. There’s a lot of us out there trying to figure out how to help fix this mess that we’re in. Together, we’re strong (even if we are broke). And yes, it’s even worse here in the US.

  789. Ken said:

    It seems that this young man has finally figured out that he and other people in the profession are mere puppets. Much more experienced reporters understand this innately and have come to accept this role. He wasn’t comfortable being merely a talking head, although his coloring things with opinions that conflict with what those paying him want him to say is pretty funny.

    On the other hand, it’s commendable that he has the courage to walk away, and it’s obvious that self promotion isn’t has high up on his list of priorities as is the case with many of us.

    The bit about our policy toward so called global warming is pretty ironic though. If he indeed is interested in truth he should be more willing to investigate the actual science here rather than just be willing to uncritically swallow the establishment view on this. You actually have to do some digging on the internet to seek out these truths as the media won’t touch . He may even come to better appreciate our government’s unwillingness to disrupt our lives and flush our resources down the toilet based upon pure hogwash.

    If you are reading this and thinking that this is not the case, I invite you to look into this yourself more and look at all sides of the argument, and if you can set your prejudices aside you will see which side actually has the science behind it.

  790. That is a remarkably vague challenge, so much as to mean I challenge you too…….. and then tell me about it. Global warming is a huge issue with many facets and factions. i personally believe that it is more than just the CO2. Its the 60 percent of excess heat that isn’t being used by gasoline engines, mixed with over population that is apparent cause for less forests and more pavement, which do little to harvest the extra light unused but instead absorb and convert directly to heat energy rather than usable stored energy (tree gum/sap). Maybe I’m just daft though. Enlighten me! Please.

  791. joe said:

    Kai,

    Good to see somebody have an opinion and stand up for something.( And this is from somebody who disagreed with half of what you said in your essay) If you are traveling back to BC, stop off at a few places, enjoy life a little and goof off for a few days. Too much thinking 24 7 about politics, etc. can never be a good thing. It turns people into zealots of the Right or Left.

  792. josey jasen said:

    Do you have a facebook fan page? I looked for one on twitter but could

    not discover one, I would really like to become a fan!

    http://theindianstudio.com/

  793. Enormously entertaining thanks, It looks like your current followers would certainly want a lot more reviews similar to this keep up the excellent work.

  794. DynV said:

    I suggest the theme/template be changed to fluid (from fixed) because the fixed have threads look ridiculous (1-3 words per lines).

  795. Rather revealing cheers, I do believe your current audience could quite possibly want a whole lot more blog posts such as this carry on the excellent work.

  796. KWM said:

    Dear Kai,
    I am writing to wish you the very best and to thank you for your candor, honesty, and conscience. It is so heartening to witness acts and words of courage and conviction. Aside from and in addition to your wisdom regarding the issues and the vested interests that sully them, is your self awareness and soulfulness. No amount of power, prestige, or perks were going to mask the distaste and disappointment you seemed to be feeling and that would only grow with time and further advancement. Congratulations on being true to yourself and your higher calling no matter how difficult. Critics and detractors without your sense of conscience or character will never understand a decision made using mind, heart and soul. I don’t say this with malice or as a ‘leftist’ or ‘pinko’ (ugggh–such rhetoric); they simply cannot know what they do not know as your post makes so clear. The disconnect is so deep and pervasive that no one could ever re-write the code. Too smart to live a life of shame or regret and too wise to waste your time swimming upstream, you are forging your own path and ‘being the change you want to see happen.’ I am so proud of you for seeing beyond. You will not regret speaking your truth and trading in the golden handcuffs for something timeless and eternal: integrity, pride, and soul. May your family and friends always see the true ‘success’ you are pursuing, applauding you on your journey. Kudos, man!

    • Kai I didn’t know that you were commercialising for everyone. If you are not then could you do a little mediation and drop some of these adds. Organisations trying to make money off of your success. Money doesn’t have to make the word go round.

  797. Gigs said:

    A very brave move Kai, and a great insight into the media industry for many of us.

    “I’m unemployed and homeless, but I’ve never been more free…”

    Well said and good luck for whatever your future holds for you.

  798. True Canadian said:

    Fantastic post. Took a lot of courage, & integrity. Hope to see you running for office in the future.

    Re: the news media, very revealing has to how the news is managed– not just the unspoken understanding of the editorial stance, but even explicitly, in a contract clause that states you could be fired for acting in ways not in line with the corporation.

    It would be beneficial to hear more stories about how the news is managed — how advertisers affect which stories run; how press releases get turned in to stories; how board members from different corporations cross-over, and therefore get favorable stories printed (and unfavorable ones killed); what ‘think tanks’, ‘academic studies’ or polling groups are actually paid for by vested corporate interests who release ‘facts’ as if they are unbiased; who gets book deals or speaking fees as a pay-off for favorable reporting, etc. etc….

    • It is a funny think this free market. It is supposed to be am employees/workers market, but when the people don’t want to work where the businesses allow them too then they pull/ import people from lesser economic countries in order to meet goals for production vs expenses. We don’t really live in a free market, we live in a revamped slave market. When you live in a world where the big money doesn’t allow for arbitration or negotiation then the free becomes chained, and might as well be considered servitude. Who can live on minimum wage at full time? You have no real time for rest, because most are either working or going to school or taking care of kids, when they are not working, in order to make the ends meet. The RICH(Super Rich) are the big voices complaining about higher taxes, because they don’t want to pay any. When you here that the working class holds our economy up it is, because the working class are the only ones who really pay.

      As an example, on the news recently, the network, that I was watching, pointed out those who live in “rough(er)” neighbour-hoods payed more for insurance, regardless of a clean driving record. And in some cases they payed as much as twice the rates of those in a “better” neighbour-hood. I have no problem telling my boss to F-off and then walk away, because I know that I provide more than I am getting paid for. Do you know what, people? You, too, give more than you get. So don’t be afraid to take a little back, because if that is what an Indian giver is then sign me up, because I’m at least half that description. So comeon astro-turfers bring it if you can.

      Again kudos Kai.

  799. thetravelingreader said:

    I am in a similar predicament although a much different situation. I applaud you for your bravery as it takes gumption to actually change one’s life.

    Good luck, Kai! :)

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  801. Ali said:

    Wow, I commend your courage to do something like this and guess what you’ve already created meaning by doing it. I really enjoyed what you wrote and thank you for being true to yourself as a person and not conituning to be something you weren’t or didn’t believe in. You are one passionate individual with much depth- you should be proud. I’m sure from this experience alone you will continue to gain more inspiration which in turn will present you with new opportunities that will better suit you as an invidual. I really think you are a breathe of fresh air for someone of the young age of 24. There should be more people like you willing to stand up for what they believe in. Passion will do that though :) This speaks volumes about your character too. Goodluck to you and this is so awesome.
    Much strength and continued wisdom. :)

  802. Ian said:

    This is a well written piece of work. It’s inspirational and it’s interesting to see an inside perspective of the news and the choices which are made. Ironically this post reflects your strong ability in the field of work you left. One of the things I found interesting was your view on climate change – most of the information we’re subjected to comes from the political point of view and not the scientific community. Because of this most of us don’t have the all the facts. As a person who is questioning the information we’re given daily, by the media, you might be interested in this post – It points to some simple flaws in the climate change theory.
    http://westcoastword.wordpress.com/2011/06/15/global-warming-is-normal-part-1-a-logical-look-at-climate-change/

  803. Claire said:

    This is the best thing I’ve read in ages! a breath of fresh air. Thanks for posting.

    BTW, all those wondering where all these adamant climate change deniers are coming from, google astroturf wars, astroturf climate change/ trolling etc. It’s a weird, weird world.

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  824. Gamer said:

    I would say if you have enough money, are single, and healthy, then go for it now. There are no guarantees in life. If you wait to long you might not be around tomorrow.

  825. To quote you: “What the Murdoch model demonstrated was that facts and truth could be replaced by ideology, with viewership and revenue going up. Simply put, you can tell less truth and make more money”

    You’re absolutely correct and if you look at the newspaper phone hacking scandal in the UK you’ll see a long-overdue tightening of the industry by making scapegoats of lazy and corrupt editors. The truth will win out in the end.

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