Bio:
I was born in New Brunswick, raised in PEI, and educated in Nova Scotia, Ontario, and France. I worked full-time for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation for 35 years where I spent about 19 years in production, working on all the major shows out of Toronto, including a decade making radio plays. In 2007, I left production to join the CBC management team, where I managed broadcast maintenance teams and, eventually, the eastern real estate portfolio. I spent my final year as both Operations Manager (Acting) for Nova Scotia and Regional Property Manager. I retired from the CBC in 2023 and now focus my attention on my family, my writing, and starting a little indie press, Donovan Street Press. I’ve also taken up karate again after a long hiatus and am trying to get back in shape.
My debut novel, A Time and a Place, was published on October 1st 2017 by Five Rivers Press. My memoir, a behind-the-scenes glimpse of working at CBC Radio, Adventures in the Radio Trade, was published on August 1st 2023 by my own indie press, mentioned above.
I’m a member of SF Canada, Canada’s National Association of Speculative Fiction Professionals, and SFWA, the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers Association.
Title: Adventures
in the Radio Trade
Synopsis: Adventures in the Radio Trade documents a life in radio, largely at Canada's public broadcaster. It's for people who love CBC Radio, those interested in the history of Canadian Broadcasting, and for those who want to hear about close encounters with numerous luminaries such as Margaret Atwood, J. Michael Straczynski, Stuart McLean, Joni Mitchell, Peter Gzowski and more. And it's for people who want to know how to make radio.
Crafted with gentle humour and thoughtfulness, this is more than just a glimpse into the internal workings of CBC Radio. It's also a prose ode to the people and shows that make CBC Radio great.
The Story Behind the Story: I’ve always been in the habit of writing down anything interesting that happens to me, and lots of interesting stuff has happened to me working at CBC Radio. At first it was all just private journaling, but then I started a blog, and a lot of the material wound up there. After many years of this, a friend of mine suggested I write a book about my experiences. I realized I had a good portion of the book already written, and that much of it just might be of interest to fans of CBC Radio. A glimpse behind the curtain, how the sausage gets made, that sort of thing. Although a memoir, it’s much less about me than about CBC Radio during that time period, between 1987 and 2007. By that time I’d had experience self-publishing, and didn’t really want to give the rights to anyone else. Nor did I think a major publisher would be interested in a memoir by me, though to be fair I didn’t really try. So I turned it into a book myself, with the help of an expert editor, Arleane Ralph, and an expert book designer, Avery Olive of Bibliofic Designs.
Website – Please go HERE.
A question for you, Joe:
Scribbler: What is the ideal spot for you when you write your stories? Music in the background or quiet. Coffee or tequila? Messy or neat?
Joe: Having written from about the age of ten, I’m happy to write anywhere. It’s the only way to actually get any writing done. I don’t need to be in anything resembling the perfect spot. That said, if I COULD have the perfect spot, it would be anywhere I can have a little music on in the background, a hot coffee at my side with a fresh cinnamon bun just waiting to be eaten, a friendly pooch at my feet, and an open laptop. Neat, but not fanatically so.
An Excerpt from Adventures in the Radio Trade:
I’ve met many well-known people during my time
with CBC Radio. Sometimes I didn’t know they were “somebodies.”
“Did you know that was Joyce Carol
Oates sitting beside you in the Media Library?”
producer Ann Jansen asked me one day.
I’d had no idea. And that was fine
with me. Most of the time meeting famous people I pretended that I didn’t know
who they were anyway. It was just easier that way. It levelled the playing
field. Even if I did happen to know who they were, I didn’t necessarily know
much about them. We had jazz artist Diana Krall on the show Q one day. I hadn’t set up any microphones
because she wasn’t supposed to perform. As we sat in the studio control room
just before the interview, one of the show’s producers asked if she wanted to
perform during the interview.
“Sure,” she said.
“Can you set her up?” the producer
asked me.
I turned to Diana.
“What instrument do you play?”
Everyone looked at me like I’d
crawled out of a hole in the ground.
“Piano,” Diana said. “I play piano.”
I knew the name Diana Krall but I wasn’t knowledgeable about her career or
music. For all I knew she could have played saxophone (and for all I know she
does).
I already had mics on the piano,
actually, so it was just a matter of adjusting them. The interview was
delightful. Jian asked Diana what type of music she enjoyed in her
downtime: “If you were to sit down, what’s your music?”
“Right now?”
“Yeah.”
Diana played a few nondescript notes on the piano.
Her twin sons had been born the year before. “Millie the Elephant packed her
trunk and sang goodbye to the circus,” she sang, and laughed. “That’s about
where I’m at right now.”
What does meeting famous people
get you? The ability to name drop (like I’m doing right now). Does anybody like
a name dropper? I don’t mind writing about the occasional celebrity encounter,
but I’ve rarely felt comfortable talking about them.
The thing is, whatever these
people have accomplished, at the end of the day they’re human, just like the
rest of us. And unless you work with them for a while (and maybe not even
then), a brief encounter is not going to make you the best of pals.
Still, all that said, I cannot
deny that meeting and occasionally working with celebrities can be interesting
and is often entertaining. Meeting artists takes on a special significance when
you’re a fan of their work. Eric Idle may put his trousers on one leg at a time, but
let’s face it: he’s Eric Idle of Monty Python.
Like Diana Krall and so many others, he also appeared on the
show Q,
where he called us all “freeloading bastards” during the show’s credits and
understood perfectly well just how much we’d all get a kick out of that.
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