Speaker’s Corner Still Remembered Fondly 30 Years Later

Speaker’s Corner Still Remembered Fondly 30 Years Later

Long before Youtube, TikTok, Twitter, Vimeo and all those user generated services that came years later, Speaker’s Corner was the place where people of all stripes came to have their voices heard. 30 years ago today, this innovation in communications made it’s debut on CityTV for the very first time

Speaker’s Corner Promo (Retrontario)

The Concept was simple for $1.00 you could speak your mind in a video cubicle for 2 minutes

Speak & Be Seen: The Video Booth at 299 Queen Street West (Long Since Gone)

Toronto’s coolest channel CityTV already had an amazing streak since they began transmitting in 1972.

From the very beginning creator Moses Znaimer wanted a station with an emphasis on hip, local programming with a schedule that was uniquely toronto-based

One of Citytv’s earliest series – Free For All (1972) – featured a live studio audience off the street who in turn spoke their minds about anything they desired.

Free For All (Retrontario)

By the mid-1980s, Citytv was planning to move from their humble studios on Queen Street East into the mighty building “that shoots itself” at 299 Queen Street West.

299 Queen Street West in It’s Heyday

Znaimer wanted to remind everyone that CityTV did not simply have viewers, it had participants.

CityTV’s new building would include a video camera kiosk expressly for people to speak their minds. It was titled Speakers Corner in homage to Hyde Park’s famous open-air speaking corner in London, England.

Original Speaker’s Corner Opening (Retrontario)

Initially, Speakers Corner served as a video “Letter To The Editor” which would air on CityPulse news (and later, the brand new Breakfast Television series in 1989).

The $1 usage fee was donated to the CHUM Charitable Foundation and in its prime generated over $50,000 a year.

These segments proved to be extremely popular with viewers, and soon started to pop up as music video requests on MuchMusic (also housed at 299 Queen Street West).

Almost overnight, the video booth became an iconic Toronto destination as people flocked to endlessly speak about any and everything from kudos, rants, political diatribes, jokes, songs, marriage proposals, etc.

Speaker’s Corner From Season 1 (1990)

By September 1990, the booth was producing so much content that a dedicated weekly series was commissioned.

Local hipster anthem “Spadina Bus” by the Shuffle Demons was even used as the theme song.

You can be my YouTube proto: Barenaked Ladies invade Speakers Corner in 1991.

A Media Sensation

As the 90’s began, Speakers Corner was a true media sensation, capturing the zeitgeist by giving voice to anyone with a thought and loose change in their pocket.

Many found fame on Speakers Corner, including The Barenaked Ladies who performed an early version of “Be My Yoko Ono” in the booth in 1991.

Comedy duo The Devil’s Advocates also amassed a cult following thanks to their trademark snark, were eventually given an entire episode devoted to their clips, and later their own series.

Devils due: the Advocates’ contrarian messages lead to lots of internecine sass. (Courtesy of The Devils Advocates)

Celebrities loved Speakers Corner, too – Mike Myers, Madonna, Weird Al, Harrison Ford, Irving Layton, Timothy Leary, Kim Campbell, Pinball Clemens, Nelly Furtado, Sam Roberts, Choclair and Michael Buble all stopped by to get in on the action.

Even then-Prime Minster Jean Chrétien stopped by to record a pre-election message.

Politico Time: Prime Minster Jean Chrétien rallies his base on Speakers Corner. (Courtesy of the Toronto Star)

Other than “the Voice” (CityTV’s truly legendary Mark Dailey), the only other reoccurring star of Speakers Corner was Jennifer the Prize Queen aka Jennifer Valentyne (later co-host of Breakfast Television).

Jennifer The Prize Queen (Retrontario)

A Worldwide Phenomenon

By the late 1990s, Speakers Corner was a full-blown cultural phenomenon, and a fixture of all outlets where CHUMCity was expanding including CHRO in Ottawa, CFPL in London, Vancouver, Victoria, and Windsor.

Mobile Speaker’s Corner booths were also sent to community, cultural, and newsworthy events.

Internationally, CityTV Bogota in Columbia (which licensed the brand from CHUM) created its own version called Citycapsula in 1996.

A French version of Speakers’ Corner, called VoxPop, operated at MusiquePlus in Montreal from the early 1990s until the early 2000s.

Jyrki in Helsinki and MuchArgentina/MuchaMusica in Argentina also created their own versions, illustrating the global potential for this simple but powerful format.

Local Legends: Mike Myers shared many hilarious bits on Speakers Corner.

The Passage Of Time

Speakers Corner original mission statement read “Any subject, any time. Open 24 hours a day. Every day of the year. Forever.”

In 2008, after acquiring CityTV from CHUM Limited, Rogers cancelled Speakers Corner, crediting YouTube for killing the program’s modern relevance.

But it wasn’t an entire loss, Rogers Media has created an entire playlist dedicated to Classic Speaker’s Corner on CityTV’s youtube channel:

It should be noted that at that time CityTV departed 299 Queen Street West to a new home at 33 Dundas Street East at Yonge Dundas Square, where a video booth would have had potentially even more foot traffic.

Over the years the name “Speakers Corner” has been used for different gimmicks – such as sending videos to the CityNews desk – but nothing will ever compare to the sanctity of the video booth.

Original Speaker’s Corner Booth (Moses Znaimer Museum)

The original Speakers Corner unit is on display at Moses Znaimer’s Television Museum in Liberty Village. You can take a virtual tour here.

And Now To Take you out, here is one of my favorite Speaker’s Corner bits starring the master of Parody himself “Weird Al” Yankovic, kindly sent to me by a friend who archives VHS tapes.

“Weird Al Yankovic” on Speaker’s Corner