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'''Antonia Zerbisias''' (born in [[Montreal]]<ref name=rrj>[http://www.rrj.ca/issue/2006/spring/615/ "In Your Face"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070817011326/http://www.rrj.ca/issue/2006/spring/615/ |date=17 August 2007 }}, The Ryerson Review of Journalism (Spring 2006)</ref>) is a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[journalist]] associated with the ''[[Toronto Star]]'' from 1989 until she took early retirement from the paper on October 31, 2014. She has been a reporter and TV host for the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]], as well as the Montreal correspondent for the trade paper, ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]''. She was nominated for [[ACTRA]] awards for her documentary writing in 1980 and 1981, and won the 1996 [[National Newspaper Award]] for critical writing for her columns about magazines. Currently a freelancer, she regularly writes opinion columns<ref>http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/profile/antonia-zerbisias-.html</ref> for [[Al Jazeera English]] and the Toronto alternative weekly, [[Now (newspaper)|Now]].<ref>https://nowtoronto.com/topics/antonia-%C2%ADzerbisias/</ref>
'''Antonia Zerbisias''' (born in [[Montreal]]<ref name=rrj>[http://www.rrj.ca/issue/2006/spring/615/ "In Your Face"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070817011326/http://www.rrj.ca/issue/2006/spring/615/ |date=17 August 2007 }}, The Ryerson Review of Journalism (Spring 2006)</ref>) is a [[Canada|Canadian]] [[journalist]] associated with the ''[[Toronto Star]]'' from 1989 until she took early retirement from the paper on October 31, 2014. She has been a reporter and TV host for the [[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]], as well as the Montreal correspondent for the trade paper, ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]''. She was nominated for [[ACTRA]] awards for her documentary writing in 1980 and 1981, and won the 1996 [[National Newspaper Award]] for critical writing for her columns about magazines. Currently a freelancer, she regularly writes opinion columns<ref>http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/profile/antonia-zerbisias-.html</ref> for [[Al Jazeera English]] and the Toronto alternative weekly, [[Now (newspaper)|Now]].<ref>https://nowtoronto.com/topics/antonia-%C2%ADzerbisias/</ref>



Revision as of 01:03, 20 November 2016

Antonia Zerbisias (born in Montreal[1]) is a Canadian journalist associated with the Toronto Star from 1989 until she took early retirement from the paper on October 31, 2014. She has been a reporter and TV host for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, as well as the Montreal correspondent for the trade paper, Variety. She was nominated for ACTRA awards for her documentary writing in 1980 and 1981, and won the 1996 National Newspaper Award for critical writing for her columns about magazines. Currently a freelancer, she regularly writes opinion columns[2] for Al Jazeera English and the Toronto alternative weekly, Now.[3]

Early life

Petros Zerbisias immigrated from Greece to Canada arriving in Halifax in 1928. He settled in Montreal where he met his wife, Loula, where they owned and operated the Deli-Q restaurant.[1] Zerbisias attended Wagar High School in the suburb of Cote-St-Luc.[1] She was married to the late Mark Blandford, a prominent Quebec television producer, director and screenwriter.[4]

Career

Zerbisias has a BA in applied social sciences from Concordia University (then called Sir George Williams University).[1] Her first job as a reporter, in the early 1970s, was with the now-defunct Montreal weekly newspaper the Sunday Express.[1] She moved to Toronto and worked as a researcher on the Larry Solway Show for a year before returning to Montreal in 1975.[1] In 1975, she joined CBC-TV, first as a researcher and eventually becoming a reporter for The City at Six which later was renamed Newswatch.[1]

In 1980 she returned to Concordia to earn her MBA (Marketing Research, Honours, 1985), while still working as a journalist for CBC-TV and Variety.[1] In 1986, she became a reporter/producer for the CBC-TV business show Venture. In 2002-2003, she co-hosted the CBC Newsworld program Inside Media with Matthew Fraser.[5]

Toronto Star

Zerbisias joined the Toronto Star as a TV columnist in 1989.[1] She was assigned to the Montreal bureau in 1991. In 1993, she returned to Toronto and became a media critic. She won the 1996 National Newspaper Award for critical writing for her columns about magazines; the award noting that Zerbisias "is not one to mince with words as she focuses on the subject matter at hand. She proceeds to give us her insights, analysis and critique not only with rhetorical, stylistic and intellectual rigor, but with gusto and passion, a rare commodity in today's bland politically correct journalism."[1] In 1997, she became TV critic and then, in 2003, was appointed media columnist.

Zerbisias' first blog for the Star, Azerbic [1] effectively went on hiatus in August 2006 and ceased publishing the following December. She continued as media critic until June 2007, when she became the social issues and cultural affairs columnist at the Toronto Star. In January 2008, she launched a new Star blog, with a focus on feminist issues, called Broadsides [2].

In April 2010, she ended her regular column to become a feature writer at the Toronto Star.[6] She took early retirement from the Star on October 31, 2014.[7]

Social Media

On the day before retiring from The Star, during the controversy over allegations that CBC Radio personality Jian Ghomeshi had assaulted half a dozen women, Zerbisias, along with then-Montreal Gazette reporter Sue Montgomery, created the hashtag #BeenRapedNeverReported[8] [9]which went viral internationally and was translated into other languages.

Disputes

While focusing on entertainment, media and cultural issues for the bulk of her career[10] Zerbisias has also taken positions in regards to the Middle East including the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and the Iraq War.[1] In 2009, on Twitter, she took issue with former Justice Minister Irwin Cotler who, as a keynote speaker at a Stand With Us event at Israel's Bar-Ilan University, boasted about his children enlisting in the Israeli military and asked "Which country are you loyal to, sir?"[11] In the same year, she mocked Bernie Farber, then CEO of the Canadian Jewish Congress, in her blog for wearing a "Nobody knows I'm gay" t-shirt while marching in Toronto's Pride parade in a protest against the inclusion of Queers Against Israeli Apartheid in the march after he had said that political groups do not belong in the Pride parade.[12][13] Zerbisias commented on Farber's decision to march as itself being a political act by sardonically writing in the comments thread of her blog, "Imagine my surprise when I saw Bernie Farber identifying himself as queer by joining a pro-Israel gay rights group in the parade."[14] The Canadian Jewish Congress responded by filing a complaint with the Toronto Star against Zerbisias for allegedly "outing" Farber.[15] The Star's public editor, Kathy English, ruled that Zerbisias’ comments "fell short of the Star’s standards of fairness, accuracy and civility," and promised to rein in journalists who "put the Star in a negative light."[14] Readers lamented the Toronto Star's sudden lack of humour and appreciation for one of its own columnists. "Imagine if top-notch cartoonist Theo Moudakis had penned a cartoon expressing the same thing. Would the Star have griped? I think not," suggested a Star reader.[14]

English acknowledged that her ruling had elicited widespread criticism[16] and subsequently modified her assessment and criticized Farber and the Canadian Jewish Congress since in their complaint they did not "think to tell me that [Farber], along with dozens of others who marched with the Kulanu group, had worn a T-shirt that made its own ironic quip. That's context I sure wish I had known" and conceded that Zerbisias' comment "was intended as sarcastic irony, stock in trade for this columnist and blogger. But I think her attempt at irony failed here; the quip – as published without that context – was ambiguous and could be misunderstood",[16] adding "To be fair to Zerbisias, it should be made clear, though, that she did not 'make things up,' as Farber interpreted it."[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "In Your Face" Archived 17 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The Ryerson Review of Journalism (Spring 2006)
  2. ^ http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/profile/antonia-zerbisias-.html
  3. ^ https://nowtoronto.com/topics/antonia-%C2%ADzerbisias/
  4. ^ "CBC producer Mark Blandford was a pioneer in Canadian television". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 14 January 2016.
  5. ^ Insidemedia 2002—2003 Season. CBC.
  6. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 2013-09-10. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ https://twitter.com/AntoniaZ/status/528237367594082304
  8. ^ http://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2014/10/31/twitter_conversation_about_unreported_rape_goes_global.html
  9. ^ http://www.ellecanada.com/relationships/feminism-s-online-renaissance/a/98516#.Vkjwxsq6ii6
  10. ^ "Authors – Antonia Zerbisias". Toronto Star.
  11. ^ Israel on the brain[permanent dead link], by Jonathan Kay, National Post, 22 September 2009.
  12. ^ "T-shirts and sexual orientation". The Star. Toronto. 18 July 2009.
  13. ^ "Bernie Farber is not gay" by Corvin Russell, Canadian Dimension, 12 July 2009
  14. ^ a b c English, Kathy (11 July 2009). "'Gay' blog post was just not fair". Toronto Star. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  15. ^ "I’d like to reply to that Editor’s Note", Mark Steyn, Macleans Magazine, 6 May 2010
  16. ^ a b c "Old principles and new media". Toronto Star. 18 July 2009. Retrieved 10 September 2013.