Well, it was all black before the O Canada film started, there was no sound for the first ten or so seconds, and the color bars went haywire. That would explain the technical difficulties and transmitter problems.
In Montreal, you can go all day without needing to speak French in some neighbourhoods. I used to work in the west island and downtown of Montreal and 80 % of the offices spoke English. Some can hardly speak French.
@@IanGorton Yep and then some . But dont tell anyone cause that will make francophones want to create more restrictionists laws against english language.
Clearly this sign-off procedure was totally unexpected and the transmitter issue had to have been really bad. I'm assuming that the clicking noise in the background came from the air signal and not the tape itself.
What time did they go off the air, and what kind of transmitter problems did they have to knock The Walton's off the air? Solid God, I could understand, but the Walton's? C'mon!
So, according to this announcement, if I take it literally, every time I wanted to video record a show on CFCF, I need to get management’s consent? I appreciate that’s not what they meant, but I have never heard a sign on/off announcement say that before.
I have been trying to find a version of "O Canada" with the "children's chorus" that was bilingual. With the lack of sound....I can't tell if this is version I have been looking for.
+Gameboy Lynch Depending on which moment of the "O Canada" film you mean they start and return to the children's choir backed by an RCMP orchestra (with a conductor), and apart from scenic footage show a ballet performance, fishing boat, communications satellite, kids playing street hockey, a speed skater, the "charge" during the RCMP's Musical Ride, and fireworks above the Parliament Buildings.