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Richard Stursberg

    The tower of babble
    Sephardi Voices
    • Sephardi Voices

      The Untold Expulsion of Jews from Arab Lands

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,9(9)Évaluer

      The book delves into the experiences of nearly a million Jews who became refugees after the establishment of Israel, highlighting their struggles against state-sanctioned discrimination and violence in the Middle East and North Africa. Through powerful personal testimonies and evocative photography, it recounts harrowing events like the Farhud in Iraq and community exoduses. The authors provide essential historical context and follow the journeys of some survivors who have rebuilt their lives in cities like London and New York, creating a poignant narrative of resilience amidst loss.

      Sephardi Voices
    • The tower of babble

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      A Globe and Mail top 100 book of 2012 The ultimate CBC insider exposes the controversies, successes and dead ends of his time at the top. In 2004, CBC television had sunk to its lowest audience share in its history. That same year, Richard Stursberg, an avowed popularizer with a reputation for radical action, was hired to run English services. With incisive wit, Stursberg tells the story of the struggle that resulted -- a struggle that lasted for six turbulent and controversial years. Shortly after Stursberg arrived, the corporation locked out its employees for two months. Four years later, he signed the most harmonious labour contract to date. He lost the television rights for the 2010 and 2012 Olympic Games. He won the biggest NHL contract in history. He had unprecedented ratings successes. He had terrible flops. He enjoyed the best radio, television and online ratings in CBC's history. He fought endless wars with the CBC president and board about the direction of the corporation and ultimately was dismissed. This is the story of our most loved and reviled cultural institution during its most convulsive and far-reaching period of change. It is for those who think the CBC has lost its way, those who love where it is, and those who think it should not exist in the first place.

      The tower of babble