Lowell Green
Lowell Green | |
---|---|
Born | Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States |
7 July 1936
Show | The Lowell Green Show (also known as The Island of Sanity) |
Station(s) | CFRA Ottawa |
Time slot | Weekdays 10 am to 12pm |
Style | talk radio |
Country | ![]() |
Website | [1] |
Lowell Green (born 7 July 1936) is a Canadian radio personality.[1] He hosts The Lowell Green Show, a conservative morning talk show on Ottawa radio station CFRA, and has also syndicated programming to several other Canadian radio stations.
Green was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States, to Canadian parents, and immigrated to Canada.
Green graduated from Macdonald Agricultural College of McGill University near Montreal in 1956. He started his radio career in Brantford, Ontario, subsequently moving to stations in Sudbury and Montreal. In Montreal, Green won awards for his coverage of the Springhill mining disaster in Nova Scotia.[2]
Green arrived at CFRA in 1960 as a news and farm reporter. In 1966, he began hosting Greenline, and eventually became the longest-running open line talk show host in North America. He retired briefly from radio in the 1980s, but returned in 1990.
He attempted to win the Liberal party nomination for the Pontiac riding in the 1968 federal election but lost this bid to Thomas Lefebvre.[3]
On 13 December 1984, Green ran for the Ontario Liberal Party in a provincial by-election in Ottawa Centre. The by-election was called after NDP Michael Cassidy resigned his seat. He came third, losing to NDP candidate Evelyn Gigantes. Green blamed this loss on his "sharp" personality and low voter turnout.[4]
In 1993, Green returned to CFRA, and has hosted The Lowell Green Show ever since.
Green has been controversial at times. Several complaints have been made against him to the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council. In a 1994 complaint to the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, listeners alleged that Green had been rude and abusive to a caller who identified herself as a Christian. Although the CBSC determined that Green's conduct had contravened CBSC guidelines around discrimination, they also decided that the station had responded appropriately, and the group did not prescribe any further action. In 2006 and 2008, the council censured Green for his treatment of Muslims man who challenged Green on the way the radio show host portrays Islam.[5][6]
On January 4th, 2016 Lowell Green officially retired as an On-Air Host.[7]
Bibliography
- Death in October. Renfrew, Ontario: General Store, 1996. ISBN 1-894439-19-8
- The Pork Chop and Other Stories: A Memoir. Carp, Ontario: Creative Bound Resources, 2005. ISBN 1-894439-19-8
- How the Granola-crunching, Tree-hugging Thug Huggers are Wrecking Our Country! Carp, Ontario: Creative Bound Resources, 2006. ISBN 1-894439-30-9
- It’s Hard to Say Goodbye. Carp, Ontario: Creative Bound Resources, 2007. ISBN 1-894439-37-6
- Hoodwinked Carp, Ontario: Spruce Ridge, 2009. ISBN 978-0-9813149-0-7
- Mayday. Mayday: curb immigration and stop multiculturalism, or it's the end of the Canada we know. Carp, Ontario: Spruce Ridge, 2010. ISBN 978-0-9813149-1-4
- Here's proof only we conservatives have our heads screwed on straight Carp, Ontario: Spruce Ridge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-9813149-2-1
References
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- ↑ http://www.cbsc.ca/english/decisions/2009/090206a.php
- ↑ http://www.cbsc.ca/english/decisions/2006/061215.php
- ↑ http://www.cfra.com/news/2016/01/04/lowell-green-retires
External links
- Use dmy dates from July 2013
- Use Canadian English from February 2013
- All Wikipedia articles written in Canadian English
- 1936 births
- Canadian non-fiction writers
- Canadian people of Irish descent
- Canadian talk radio hosts
- Living people
- McGill University alumni
- Ontario Liberal Party candidates in Ontario provincial elections
- People from Ann Arbor, Michigan
- People from Brantford
- Writers from Greater Sudbury
- Writers from Montreal
- Writers from Ottawa