Peter Mansbridge is a Canadian icon recognizable instantly by sight and voice; after all, the man was in the public broadcasting (TV and Radio) for FIVE decades. I read his earlier book which he co-authored with a senior executive producer from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and enjoyed it very much. Off the Record is more like a "brag book" in which Mansbridge wrote about the stellar opportunities he was afforded in his long and profitable career trajectory.
Here are a few things I like about the book:
1) It is structured in short chapters showcasing vignettes of events and happenings to which the author had a "front row seat".
2) I like the postscripts, at the end of the short chapters, which provide current updates.
3) I like the honesty and smartly crafted re-telling which demonstrates Mansbridge, similar as in his heyday, as neutral. On TV he wore a poker face; through his words and pages he did not divert.
4) I like the conversational way in which he describes things as if he is sitting face-to-face on an interview with his audience. His wit and humour shine through and make for easy reading.
Peter Mansbridge is to Canadians what Walter Cronkite is to Americans. After all, Walter Cronkite was his hero and someone Mansbridge always looked up to. This non-fiction book is definitely not a memoir nor an autobiography. His personal life is still left out although he did offer snippets which I found most interesting. The book showcases moments in the author's professional life.
With much humility, Mansbridge wrote about how "he never made it to grade thirteen and senior matriculation." He never made it to University and with "no experience. No background in the business..." he went on to incredible heights. He was also honourably discharged from the navy when he was still trying to find out what he might be good at. Often referring to himself as a high school drop-out, Mansbridge seems himself amazed at how far he had risen.
Mansbridge, at the time of his retirement, was a news anchor of the coveted spot titled The National. In 1987, Mansbridge was making 150K at the CBC but he went on to earn in the millions by the time he retired; a salary he described as "roughly the same salary that I had turned down thirty years before at CBS" in the USA. He stayed loyal to CBC remembering that "they had taken me from nowhere and been very good to me."
Many times in his book, Mansbridge comments on the serendipity of his "airport connections" when unforeseen opportunities landed in his lap. For a start he comments very regularly how his "great voice" and a public announcement he made while a baggage handler for Transair in an almost remote airport in chilly Churchill, Manitoba, landed him a job. What should be noted is, not only how lucky one can say Mansbridge was, but the way broadcasting was in those days. In Mansbridge own words, "it took awhile for diversity to come to the CBC". In fact, I would add that it was a "white boys club".
In describing what is the "it" factor or his je ne sais quoi, Mansbridge also humbly acknowledges that his "it" was based on trust and truth but he elaborates thus:
When I think of how I got to those moments I mentioned, the answer is by standing on the shoulders of and being propped up by smart men and women I worked with in my career even when sometimes, they could have left me floundering. I haven't always behaved well. I haven't always deserved the opportunities I've had. But others either covered for me or found ways to smooth over any issues caused by my actions. I'm not talking about gross offences just silly things that I've seen others stumble over while I seemingly got a pass and was able to move onto "greater glory," if you will.
I think that paragraph is very telling as it is. But let me not distract from the fact that Mansbridge is a very talented man. He also knows how to nurture and make the right connections and relationships. He refers to his many steady friends and their annual jaunts to golf courses in Scotland and Florida. Mansbridge came to Canada with his parents as a very young British immigrant; his father had a stellar career both in Britain and abroad as a diplomat and then in Canada where he became Chief Deputy Minister of Health in Alberta. Mansbridge acknowledges his privilege background and summarily alluded to this in his commentary on his Peter Jennings connection:
...We both came from successful families, we both grew up in Ottawa, we both dropped out of high school, neither of us graduated from university or college, and we both began our journalism careers in local broadcasting. And, obviously, we had similar taste in women...
which brings me to the Mansbridge charm factor. He was married three times but this did not appear in the book except for a few sparse bits of his current wife, Cynthia Dale, and their current house in beautiful Stratford which in addition to its fine theatre, produced Justin Bieber and Lloyd Robertson (another successful TV personality) among others. I am a frequent visitor to Stratford myself enjoying many performances including musicals starring Cynthia Dale. I love that it has a town called Shakespeare and river called Avon.
As journalists, Mansbridge explains "anchoring has its privileges ...we got to travel to some of the most spectacular places in the world...I've been around the world a few times... with millions of miles in the air". All of this on the corporation's dime. Bethlehem, Baghdad, Moscow, Germany, the breath-taking and beautifully spectacular Canadian North are just a scant few of the many exciting places mentioned in this book.
Mansbridge covered a multitude of world events such as the fall of the Berlin Wall, royal weddings and funerals, the elections of a vast majority of Canada's prime ministers, state funerals, royal and papal visits, heads of states and U.S. presidential visits, space travel, natural disasters of a vast scale like the tsunami affecting Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka and others, wars and ongoing neighbourly conflicts such as Palestine and Israel, and countless others (too many to mention). No wonder this book has 70 chapters and countless name droppings.
One is hard pressed not to like the man. I enjoyed the insights he offered on systemic racism, Indigenous rights, the state of affairs on news and broadcasting today - "bullshit baffles brains" and "the blurring of the lines between traditional news and opinion." He is quick to point out and caution us not to drink from "a polluted news well" which is how he describes social media. Mostly I can detect how truly Canadian, Mansbridge is and how proud he is of the ways in which the world see us. I was touched by a story he highlighted from Sri Lanka:
They were volunteers, just three Canadians who cared and whose caring affected a little girl's view of the outside world and, in particular, Canada. For the rest of her life, she'll always remember Canada. Whenever she sees our flag or hear our country's name, she'll think of those nurses and how they came across the ocean just to help her and her friends. It's selfless actions like that, that make Canada admired by many and the envy of the world.
Mansbridge went on to rub shoulders with the who's who, became Chancellor emeritus at Mount Allison University, received numerous awards including the distinguished Officer of the Order of Canada, was bestowed numerous honorary doctoral degrees, and as he likes to say - Not bad for a baggage handler from Churchill, Manitoba. He is also proud of his "Peter Moosebridge" moniker in Disney's Zootopia.
This book which I found some parts (and here I am borrowing one of Peter's own phrases) to be "a bit plodding, even boring at times" is for me, a rounded up five stars book. I read it as an eBook but would have loved to see the hard copy for the many pictures included. Yes - his lots of hair era to his current distinguished baldpate.
With podcasts, documentaries, speaking engagements (which was very controversial when he was at CBC), and books, Peter Mansbridge is expected to enjoy a wonderful and monetary filled retirement. Thank you, Peter for sharing the wonderful highlights of your incredible career and providing your own perspective in retirement and "off the record" which by the way is a very smart title for the book.