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Home · Monday, October 17, 1977

Topic spans: 1977 - 1977

Monday, October 17, 1977

On Oct. 17, 1977, the CBC welcomed a new show to the TV schedule — a tale of political intrigue popularly known as The House on the Hill. Live broadcasting from inside Parliament began that day, and it was the talk of the network.

All the programs in the TV grid below were listed in TV Guide, Toronto-Lake Ontario edition for Oct. 17, 1977. The sole exception is 24 Hours, which was the supper-hour newscast in Regina. The radio grid was reconstructed using the CBC Radio Guide for October 1978; no radio program schedule for 1977 exists in the CBC libraries.

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3 television clips
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3 radio clips

Rex Murphy on Parliament, Danny Finkleman on stage

Broadcast Date: Oct. 17, 1977

Rex Murphy wasn't much impressed by the "cut and thrust" of parliamentary debate as it made its television debut. "It had about as much cut and thrust as attacking butter in July with a baseball bat," he tells Peter Gzowski on the CBC late-night program 90 Minutes Live. Murphy, a writer, commentator and CBC reporter, thinks the broadcast is simply irrelevant, adding nothing to Parliament and appearing too much like a high school debate.

In a second segment Gzowski introduces Danny Finkleman, a 90 Minutes Live regular who's recently tried his hand at stand-up comedy. Finkleman introduces a film in which he meets Mark Breslin, owner of a Toronto comedy club, and gets some tips on how to engage a crowd. But all the tips in the world can't help Finkleman's floundering debut comedy act, and he quickly gets the hook.

Rex Murphy on Parliament, Danny Finkleman on stage

• Both Rex Murphy and Danny Finkleman went on to host their own radio programs on the CBC. As of 2004, Murphy hosts Cross Country Checkup and contributes opinion pieces to CBC Television's The National. Finkleman spins retro tunes and carps about the frustrations of modern life on Finkleman's 45s.
• Finkleman's efforts in this clip might best be summarized by the deathbed quote usually attributed to Sir Donald Wolfit, a British actor: "Dying is easy. Comedy is hard."

• Launched in the fall of 1976, 90 Minutes Live was a combination variety and current-affairs program hosted by Peter Gzowski, who had a good track record as host of radio's This Country in the Morning. As the CBC's response to late-night American programs, 90 Minutes Live was deemed a "disaster" in its first season by critics who dubbed it "90 Minutes Dead."

• In its second season the show changed formats to become a nightly TV magazine. TV Guide praised the move, saying, "Perhaps the chief virtue of the new version is that it can indeed surprise us." Regular features such as skits by Ken Finkleman and Rick Moranis were applauded, as were bits by filmmaker John Kastner, comedy by Steve Shuster, and cooking segments with James Barber.

• Interviewees varied from Iggy Pop, George Chuvalo, and Marshall McLuhan to Mordecai and Jacob Richler and Tommy and Shirley Douglas.

• "All in all, 90 Minutes Live is the CBC's flagship show. One senses that the network is putting all its enormous resources of talent and expertise on display. It's about time." — TV Guide, October 1977


• Gzowski left after the second season and 90 Minutes Live was repackaged as Canada After Dark, a standard variety and entertainment show.

Rex Murphy on Parliament, Danny Finkleman on stage

Medium: Television

Program: 90 Minutes Live

Broadcast Date: Oct. 17, 1977

Guest(s): Danny Finkleman


Commentator: Rex Murphy
Host: Peter Gzowski

Duration: 17:06

Last updated:
April 17, 2008


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