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Cultural citizenship or commercial interest? The 1962 Grey Cup Fiasco

Faculty Advisor

Date

2018

Keywords

Canadian football, broadcast policy, state intervention, cultural citizenship

Abstract (summary)

In 1962, the Board of Broadcast Governors (BBG), an arm of the Canadian federal government responsible for broadcasting, made the unprecedented move to force the national public broadcaster to televise the Grey Cup, the championship game of Canadian football, ostensibly because it was in the national interest. However, research reveals that this decision was not necessarily made because it was in the national interest, but more so to assist the new struggling private television network, CTV. The important content, allegedly linked to cultural citizenship, was not the national championship, but the television commercials. This paper explores why the BBG intervened and how the dispute was settled.

Publication Information

Valentine, J. (2018). Cultural citizenship or commercial interest? The 1962 Grey Cup Fiasco. Sport History Review, 49(2), 161–175. https://doi.org/10.1123/shr.2018-0009

Notes

Item Type

Article

Language

English

Rights

All Rights Reserved