No, what I would say is that if the CBC doesn't adapt to and present new technology, it will become irrelevant. It's a subtle difference, I suspect.
Most anybody now can put together a web page. If we suddenly get this increased processing power and the bandwidth to go with it, we can have Iqaluit broadcasting their own Internet television. That's foreseeable within the next three to five years.
What I'm saying about reporters is that I don't see my life or the life of my friends in the media. You don't see it up here so much, but look at how talk radio has taken over in the south. That's because people are fed up with being fed information, in my opinion, and they want to put something in. Plus, all these people calling in for free means that the radio presenters have free programming. That may be clever, but talk radio didn't have an audience 20 to 30 years ago. Think of how the movie put it: I'm real fed up, and I'm not going to take it any more.
What I'm saying is that what somebody in Wekweti is doing is probably more important to a hunter in Gameti than what Ian Hanomansing has to say about Vancouver.
Do you follow what I'm saying?