Excerpts
from "Tampa Tribune", March 30, 2001 By Steve Hill
Prior
Smith's popular radio program keeps visiting Canadians informed.
If
you had been reading the Toronto Telegram
47 years ago, you might have noticed a story about a Canadian broadcaster
who was beginning a program aimed at Canadians visiting Florida.
The
content would be about what was going on in Canada.
The
broadcaster, Dave Price, had come to the conclusion that Canadian news was
largely ignored by the U.S. media, and that there was a perfect opening for
someone broadcasting news from back home to all those Canadians wintering in the
Sunshine State.
The
show caught on and it hasn't gone off the air since.
Price
was the host for about the first 23 years.
Smith,
in Tampa to broadcast from this year's Florida State Fair - as he has done for
the last 16 years - talked with Mature Times about the show's history,
its appeal and its success.
He
said that Price had come to Fort Lauderdale in 1948 to cover Maple Leaf baseball
spring training.
He searched in vain for hockey scores from back home and complained about
the lack of Canadian sports and news available.
Some
of his cohorts, reminding him that he was, after all, a broadcaster, suggested
that he do it himself.
The idea grew, and, in 1954, Price began Canada Calling with two
stations: one
in Miami and one in Tampa (WFLA-AM).
"Back then, that was the Canadian tourist market - the Gold Coast
and the Bay Area," Smith said.
The
show was an instant hit with visiting Canadians.
"Dave
and his wife, Kate, ran the show for about 23 years," Smith said, "and
it was unbelievably successful."
As
for Smith, he was a well-known newsman with dominant Toronto radio station CFRB,
where he had been since 1969.
He was sent to Florida to cover a couple of stories in the mid-70's, and
tuned in to Canada Calling while he was in the state.
By
that time, he said, Price was "in ill health", and the show had lost
some of its luster.
"The radio business had passed him by," Smith said.
"I decided to give him some competition."
About
the same time, Price decided to sell the program, and "another fellow
bought it," Smith said.
He
went head-to-head against that other fellow, and his network grew to "twice
the size of the original," Smith said.
Price's original network soon faded away, and Smith found himself with no
competition.
He
began identifying his show by saying, "This is the Canadian News with Prior
Smith," since his name was well-known among Canadians.
But,
listeners soon began calling him "Mr. Canada Calling," and they
continued to do so the first 12 years his show was on the air.
"I gradually re-introduced the Canada Calling name.
I've carried on the tradition," he said.
The
show has "never missed a day in 47 years," he said.
Smith
never met the man in whose footsteps he followed.
However, in his first season on the air, 1977-78, he was in Pompano
Beach, when he received a message that Dave Price had called him.
"I called him up," Smith said, "and we had a lengthy chat.
He was dead two weeks later."
Smith
began with four stations in 1977.
He now has a 27 station network and 30 corporate clients.
Following the expanding Canadian tourist trek, some of those stations are
in south Texas, some are in central Arizona.
For
the first 10 years, he kept his news job at CFRB, but "eventually,
something had to give," he said, noting that he finally left the radio
station in 1988. "This thing was more than I could handle."
His
potential market is the more than 2 million Canadians who visit Florida every
year, "bringing with them some $1.5 billion in tourist dollars annually).
In addition, a number of non-Canadian Floridians tune in, just to hear
what's happening with their Northern neighbor.
Canada
Calling
airs even days a week, from the first Monday in November until Easter weekend.
During that time, Smith leaves his home in Canada to do 36 remotes.
When he's not on location, he broadcasts from a state-of-the-art studio
built in his log home on Clear Lake in Peterborough, Ontario.
It's
truly a family affair.
Smith said that his wife, Allana, handles "the business side of the
business," from 2,000 miles away when Smith is in Florida, and son Tim
handles the Canada Calling website (www.canadacalling.com).
When
his broadcast season ends, Smith takes a quick breather, but he said that
"within two weeks, I'm back putting the next season together again.
It takes the whole summer to do it.
Smith,
56, takes a highly personal approach to the show.
He personally visits all the sponsors and potential sponsors each season,
assuring them that the quality of the broadcast is being maintained.
For
some sponsors, he said, renewals are relatively simple matters: "Publix has
been a sponsor for over 40 years," he said.
"It's easy dealing with people like that - one phone call."
"Ninety-nine
percent of the business comes to me," he said.
"I never have to hard-sell."
As
for the website, Smith talks proudly about his son's investment of time and
energy in the project.
"About
six years ago my son, who was 14 at the time, was taking computer classes at
school."
Dinner
table conversation turned to websites, just coming into vogue for businesses.
Smith admitted that he was clueless about setting one up.
"My son said,
"I'll do it for you," Smith said.
"About an hour later, he said, "Do you want to see your
website?"
Smith
said it has remained virtually the same ever since that first evening.
"I haven't got a clue how he does it," he said.
"...I don't know much about it.
But, like the Yellow Pages, I figure I've got to be there,"
The
format for the broadcasts "hasn't changed in 24 years," Smith said.
Six days a week, the reports are 5 minutes long.
On Sundays, there's a 15-minute weekly wrap-up.
Smith
said he rises about 5:15 in the morning, updating material from the night
before. He
records about 6 and is usually done by 7 a.m., he said.
"It's uplinked three times starting at 8:15," he said,
distributed in this state by Florida Radio Networks, based in Orlando.
He
finishes breakfast, takes the dog for a walk.
(My English setter keeps me in shape"), and from about 9 to 3:30 he
deals with "other aspects of the business."
In the evenings, he begins prep work for the next morning's broadcasts.
The
program is done in a conversational style that has reminded more than one
listener of famed American newsman and commentator Paul Harvey. Smith, who said
he has never met Harvey, is honored by the comparison.
"I love it," he said.
He
said he thinks Harvey's broadcasts are so immensely popular because he
"talks to the listeners," not at them, and he said he hopes his show
comes across the same way.
He
said he doesn't know how many people actually listen to the program, but he
thinks he has a pretty good fix on what sort of folks they are.
The
so-called "senior seniors," coming down from Ontario long-term, now
are "only about 7 percent of the total market) of Canadian visitors, he
said, "but they are the core audience of what I do."
Core,
maybe, but not majority, he said.
"The
much larger audience are people in their late 30s, 40s, 50s, who come down with
their kids,"
At 10:30, he said, they're listening to WGUL (860 AM and 106.3 FM).
"Grandmother and Grandfather tune in, a hush falls over the room;
and grandparents, son daughter, spouse, kids, they're all listening."
Smith
said the "changing tourist pattern" of Canadian visitors has been
largely ignored by the U.S. media.
"The demographics...changed dramatically," he said, to
"commuting-
type" visitors as opposed to long-term stays.
The long-term stay has declined dramatically, but the frequency of trips
has dramatically increased over the last eight or nine years, he said.
-----------------------
That
all translates into a huge audience for Canada Calling.
But
as time-consuming as the show is, Smith has a couple of other irons in the fire
as well.
Twelve
years ago, he began a newspaper travel column that appears weekly in papers all
across Canada, including the Toronto Star, the Montreal Gazette,
the Ottawa Citizen and the Halifax Chronicle Herald, among others.
"In
24 years,...I've traveled every inch of the state," Smith said.
"I
know every back road there is.
I know the state better than 99 percent of the people who've been here
all their lives."
And
so he writes about the state for the Canadians who will visit Florida and those
who are just armchair travelers.
He
writes about major and not-so-major tourist attractions, recommends golf courses
and restaurants, talks about big cities and quaint villages.
"My
favorite spot in Florida," he wrote earlier this year, is "Mount Dora,
a 30-minute drive north and west of downtown Orlando.
The town is wall-to-wall antique shops and trendy restaurants.
The jewel of Mount Dora is the century-old Lakeside Inn.
The Inn's Beauclaire dining room is one of the best dining spots in
Florida. Nestle
into one of the old rocking chairs on the front veranda and watch the sun set
over Lake Dora.
This is what vacation memories are made of."
Another
recent column asks readers,"...want to walk the best beach in Florida?
Spend a day or two in the Florida Panhandle and visit Grayton Beach State
Park, between Destin and Panama City.
This is what all Florida beaches used to look like before many of them
were lined with condos."
And
in his March 3 column, he wrote,
"in Tampa the hottest spot in town these days is the restored
historic Latin district known as Ybor City.
Over the past few years,
millions of dollars have been spent to bring the old cigar-making
district and its many social clubs back to life..."
-----------------------
Steve
Schurdell is managing partner of WGUL, which has carried Canada Calling
in the Bay area for most of the last two decades.
He
said that Smith's commitment and the shows longevity just can't be beat.
"I've
seen the power of the Canada news program," he said.
"It's a very popular show."
Schurdell
said that his station sponsors a number of community events - health fairs and
similar activities.
WGUL is often broadcast over the PA system in the background at those
events.
"We've
been in a room with lots of
people bustling
around, a big crowd milling about," when Canada Calling comes on the
air, he said.
"It's
just like the old Merrill Lynch TV commercials," he said.
"Within 30 seconds, you could hear a pin drop.
Everyone stops to listen to the show.
It's really amazing."