Steve Murphy (news anchor)


Steve Murphy
Born (1960-06-18) June 18, 1960[1]
Saint John, New Brunswick
Occupation Television Personality
Known for CTV News

Steve Murphy (born June 18, 1960) is a Canadian television personality. He is the current anchor of weekday editions of CTV News at 6:00 p.m. on the stations of CTV Atlantic.

Broadcasting career

Murphy started his career in the spring of 1977 at CFBC Saint John.[2] Murphy then moved to CJCH-AM Halifax in May 1980.[3] While at CJCH-AM, Murphy moved from reporter and newsreader to being the host of The Hotline, a mid-morning call-in show.

Murphy replaced Dave Wright, who moved into television full-time at CTV Atlantic as the host of Live At 5. Murphy also started doing commentaries on Live At 5 on CTV Atlantic in 1982 and was featured on the very first episode.[4] Murphy would eventually stop doing his commentaries on Live At 5 and become a co-host of that program in 1986, replacing Wright who moved to Boston to anchor at WHDH-TV. He continued to host The Hotline in the morning and Live At 5 at night until 1988, when Murphy decided to focus his energies on hosting and producing Live At 5.

Murphy would continue hosting Live At 5 until 1993. Wright, then anchor of the ATV Evening News, went into retirement and Murphy was tapped as his replacement in 1993. Murphy continues to anchor CTV News at 6:00 p.m. today and the newscast is the Maritimes number one rated supper-time newscast. Murphy is also the longest serving anchor of CTV News at 6:00 p.m., having anchored the newscast for 24 years. Murphy is also one of the few CTV local anchors to have filled in for the anchor on CTV National News; he filled in for then-anchor Lloyd Robertson for two newscasts in 2003.

In September 2011, CTV Atlantic celebrated Murphy's 25 years of being an anchor and host on CTV Atlantic with a special tribute and interview on Live at 5.

Stéphane Dion controversy

Murphy was at the centre of controversy when on October 9, 2008, during the Federal election campaign, CTV News at 6:00 p.m. chose to air an unedited version of an interview Murphy conducted with Stéphane Dion in which he had trouble understanding some the questions Murphy was asking him in English even though Dion had an interpreter with him and they had to restart the interview several times.[5] Many viewers thought it was Murphy himself who chose to air the interview uncut. Management at CTV Atlantic and CTV News made it clear after the interview aired that Murphy had no role in this decision. After an arbiter of ethics[6] ruled that CTV violated industry code,[7] the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council found the interview was “discourteous and inconsiderate”. It also found that Steve Murphy didn’t have the authority to offer restarts, but that once it was agreed CTV as the broadcaster should have honoured the agreement. CTV had to provide a statement saying it violated the RTNDA Code of Ethics, and air it during the super hour broadcast.[8]

Other/personal life

Murphy has written two books: Live At 5: The Story Of Its Success (Nimbus, 2002) and Before The Camera: A Memoir (Nimbus, 2006). Murphy donated his profits from both books to Christmas Daddies and the IWK Health Centre. Murphy is also very involved in the community and serves as chair of Christmas Daddies, a charity that holds a telethon every year to raise money for underprivileged Maritime children. The charity is administered by The Salvation Army. Murphy also hosts the Christmas Daddies Telethon and The IWK Telethon for Children. Murphy currently lives in Halifax. Murphy also has two children, Nora, from his first marriage, and Brendan, from his second.

References

  1. Murphy, Steve. Behind The Camera: A Memoir. Halifax: Nimbus, 2006. p.5.
  2. Murphy, Steve. Behind The Camera: A Memoir. Halifax: Nimbus, 2006. p.29.
  3. Murphy, Steve. Behind The Camera: A Memoir. Halifax: Nimbus, 2006. pp. 64-66.
  4. Murphy, Steve. Live At 5: The Story of its Success. Halifax: Nimbus, 2002.
  5. http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2008/10/11/text_of_the_dion_interview_you_be_the_judge.html
  6. http://www.cbsc.ca/english/documents/prs/2009/090527.php
  7. http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/273432
  8. http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/ctv-broke-ethics-code-in-dion-interview-standards-council-1.811860
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.