Lloyd Robertson
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Lloyd Robertson, O.C. (born January 19, 1934 in Stratford, Ontario) is the anchor of CTV National News.
Robertson started his broadcasting career in 1952 at CJCS radio in Stratford and later CJOY in Guelph, Ontario in 1953. Robertson went to television in 1954 when he joined CBC, spending four years in Winnipeg, Manitoba and two years in Ottawa, Ontario, before hosting CBC Weekend in the late 1960s and later anchor of The National from 1970 to 1976 before joining CTV in October that year. One of the reasons he left CBC was his frustration at union regulations which confined news anchors to the role of announcer, prohibiting them from writing their own scripts or participating in editorial decisions concerning the news broadcast.
From 1976 to 1984, Robertson co-anchored the CTV National News with the late Harvey Kirck. When Kirck left CTV in 1984, Robertson became the senior news anchor for CTV. Robertson has covered many major events throughout his career, including several Olympic Games, Terry Fox, the repatriation of the Canadian Constitution, both the 1980 Quebec referendum and the 1995 Quebec referendum on separation from Canada, many federal elections, the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the power outage crisis on both sides of the border. On the scene, he has covered the fall of the Berlin Wall, state funerals, and royal, papal, and U.S. presidential visits.
Robertson's signature ending of each news broadcast is, "...and that's the kind of day it's been." or "...and that's the Canada it has been for (the date), your local news is coming up next."
Joe Flaherty parodied him as the newscaster Floyd Robertson on the comedy program SCTV.
Honours
- TV Times Reader's Choice Awards, Canada's Favourite News Anchor – 1998 and 1999
- Order of Canada, 1998
- Gemini Award, "Best Host, Anchor, or Interviewer" – 1992, 1994, 1997
- 1994 Winner of the Toronto Star Reader's Voice Award for Favourite TV Anchor
- Honorary Chairperson, 1992 Terry Fox Run