- Thomas Ide
Thomas Ranald "Ran" Ide (
February 20 ,1919 –October 23 ,1996 ) was a Canadian educator and the founding Chairman ofTVOntario .Born in
Ottawa , he received a degree ineconomics and served in theRoyal Canadian Air Force duringWorld War II .Ide first got involved in broadcasting while he was a teenager in Saint John,
New Brunswick and had an after school job doingmovie review s at a radio station.David Lancashire, "The Godfather who made a network tick", "Globe and Mail", June 21, 1979]After the war, he became a high school teacher in
Port Arthur, Ontario and eventually became principal of Port Arthur Collegiate Institute and then, in 1965, superintendent of schools in the area.cite news|title=Lives Lived: Thomas Ranald Ide|work=The Globe and Mail |date=October 24, 1996|author=Doug Saunders]In 1966, he was appointed director of educational television at the Ontario Ministry of Education by then Minister of Education
Bill Davis . His unit bought air time from theCanadian Broadcasting Corporation and produced 150 programs in the first year. He helped create theOntario Educational Communications Authority serving as its first chairman from 1970 to 1979. OECA launched its own television station in 1970,CICA , broadcasting from Toronto; by 1979 what had become TVOntario employed a staff of 400 and had transmitters across the province reaching 85% of Ontario's population and 88% of its schols.Ide faced controversy in 1978 when he backed the production of "The Jesus Trial", a series in which historical scholars staged a mock trial of Jews for the murder of Christ. The series was acclaimed by theologians and academics but was criticized by the
Roman Catholic archdiocese in Toronto which pressured the provincial government to cancel the series. It aired but, the next year, the government ofBill Davis cut TVO's budget for the first time.After retiring from TVO in 1979 Ide chaired the federal Department of Communications Research Advisory Board, the Science Council of Canada's Communications board and served as acting vice-president of planning at the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation . [Allan Barnes, "Ran Ide, 77, helped found TVOntario in '70", "Toronto Star", October 24, 1996]In 1995, he was made an Officer of the
Order of Canada . He died ofleukemia in 1996. Former Premier Davis delivered a eulogy at Ide's memorial service. [William G. Davis, "Nurture TVOntario in founder's memory", "Toronto Star", November 20, 1996]References
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