Charles Adler (broadcaster)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nominated byJustin Trudeau
Appointed byMary Simon
Born (1954-08-25) August 25, 1954 (age 71)
Budapest, Hungary
Charles Adler
Adler in 2008
Canadian Senator
from Manitoba
Assumed office
17 August 2024
Nominated byJustin Trudeau
Appointed byMary Simon
Personal details
Born (1954-08-25) August 25, 1954 (age 71)
Budapest, Hungary
PartyCanadian Senators Group
Alma materMcGill University
Occupation
  • Broadcaster
  • columnist
Websitehttps://charlesadler.com/

Charles Adler (born 25 August 1954) is a Canadian politician and broadcaster, and columnist. On the recommendation of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Adler was appointed to the Senate of Canada by Governor General Mary Simon on August 17, 2024.[1]

Adler was born in Budapest, Hungary, to Jewish parents who were survivors of the Holocaust. After the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, his family fled the country – carrying infant Charles in a backpack across the border to Austria – and were accepted as refugees in Canada in 1957. They settled in Montreal, Quebec, where Adler grew up and learned English. He attended McGill University and began his broadcasting career as a student at the campus radio station in the early 1970s.

Career

Adler's professional radio career started in Montreal and Calgary. In 1973, he joined Montreal station CKGM as a producer, and the next year he landed his first on-air job hosting a weeknight rock music show on CKXL in Calgary. Over the subsequent years, he worked at several Canadian stations – including CJAD in Montreal and stations in Hamilton, London, and Toronto – developing a reputation as a talk radio personality. In 1989, Adler returned to Calgary to launch a new talk-radio program called Hot Talk.

In the 1990s, Adler spent several years working in the United States. He hosted a nationally syndicated radio show based in Tampa, Florida, that aired on over 120 stations. In 1994, he debuted a nightly television talk show, Adler on Line, on a Boston station; the next year, he won a regional Emmy Award for Best TV Host in New England for that program. Adler returned to Canada in 1996 to host The Charles Adler Show on CFRB in Toronto. Two years later, in 1998, he moved to Winnipeg, Manitoba, where he began hosting a daily talk show, Adler On Line, on CJOB 680 AM. Adler became a fixture on CJOB and would remain associated with that station for many years. In 2001, he also became the inaugural host of Global Sunday, a national Sunday-morning current affairs television program on the Global Television Network. Throughout this period, Adler made frequent guest appearances as a pundit on Canadian TV programs, including on CTV and occasionally guest-hosting on the U.S. show Hannity & Colmes.

In 2004, Corus Radio launched Adler as a nationally syndicated host. His show, variously known as Adler Online or The Charles Adler Show, aired across the Corus talk network. In April 2011, Adler began hosting a nightly TV show on Sun News Network. The program ran until the channel's closure in 2013, after which Adler returned to CJOB.

In October 2015, Adler launched a new talk show on SiriusXM Canada radio. That program ended after one year, and in late 2016, Adler joined Global News Radio as host of a new nightly show, Charles Adler Tonight, based at CKNW Vancouver. That program aired until September 2021, when Adler announced his retirement from daily broadcasting.

In 2023, Adler began writing a weekly opinion column for the Winnipeg Free Press and launched an independent podcast, also titled The Charles Adler Show.[2]

Honours and recognition

In 1998, Adler was presented with the Key to the City of Toronto. He received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2012. In May 2017, he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Radio Television Digital News Association of Canada.

Senate of Canada

Political views

References

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