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Les Archives de Radio-Canada

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Home · Programs · 7 O’Clock Show

7 O’Clock Show

This Vancouver current affairs show was far out. In 1959, it was the first to film an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting in Canada (participants were shown in shadow). Running from 1958-1972, 7 O'Clock Show was decidedly leftist. The 1967 Christmas special was a montage of Vancouver's happy Christmas shoppers spliced with footage from Vietnam and other conflicts, edited to Simon and Garfunkel's Silent Night. Host Bob Quintrell worked with reporters Doug Collins and various producers including Tom Connochie, Andy Snider, Ain Soodor, Don Cumming, George Robertson and Brian Guns.

City politicians averse to hippies

Broadcast Date: March 18, 1968

Just as the hippies in Yorkville want a place to call their own, so do the hippies of Vancouver. First, they try sitting outside the Hudson's Bay building, but they're forced off the sidewalk by police who claim they're obstructing commercial business. Next, they try the public square in front of the Vancouver courthouse. This time they're arrested. In this CBC Television clip, Vancouver Mayor Tom Campbell defends the move.

The hippies are upset. They've been arrested for assembling in a public space. As far as they're concerned, their civil liberties are being restricted. Their arrests have been arranged under a special city rule which was originally aimed at ridding the city of vagrants. Now it's being used to rid the city of hippies. They feel they're being discriminated against because of their appearance. Mayor Tom Campbell is unrepentant, saying hippies will destroy Canada.

City politicians averse to hippies

• The final shot of this CBC program prompted 200 angry protest calls to the local CBC station and led to one of the producers being taken off the show and "assigned to other programs."
• One of the hippies arrested was Stan Persky, who came to Vancouver in 1966 after serving in the U.S. Navy. He co-founded the "Georgia Straight Writing Supplement," wrote several leftist political books and in 2003 was working as a literary critic and philosophy teacher at Capilano College in Vancouver.

• Vancouver was not the only city to have problems with the hippies. In the early summer of 1968, shaken by reports that 50,000 hippies would be descending on the city, Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau declared war on the hippies. Hippies accused the mayor of illegally harassing and jailing non-conformists. Hippie haunts were raided. Soup kitchen permits were rejected. And obscenity charges were laid against the hippies' underground newspaper, Logos.

City politicians averse to hippies

Medium: Television

Program: 7 O'Clock Show

Broadcast Date: March 18, 1968

Guest(s): Tom Campbell


Host: Bob Quintrell
Reporter: Doug Collins

Duration: 6:48

Last updated:
Aug. 14, 2003


End of list




All clips from this program

5 results available  

MediaTitle and dateDescription
Television
6:48
March 18, 1968
City politicians averse to hippies
Vancouver's mayor defends the recent arrest of several youths caught loitering, calling the hippies "parasites" and "scum."
Television
7:46
Oct. 16, 1967
McLuhan reacts to his critics
Literati horrified by McLuhan's theories.
Television
14:45
May 30, 1967
Festivals and happenings: Vancouver's Human Be-in
Hippies get all decked out and pumped up for the party in Vancouver's Stanley Park. A whole lot of flowers, music, drumming, dancing and love, love, love.
Television
26:37
Nov. 11, 1964
'The most dangerous spot in the world'
In the Belgian town of Ypres, the Last Post is played daily in memory of hundreds of thousands who died here – 56,000 without graves.
Television
22:23
May 20, 1959
Alcoholics Anonymous opens up
A 1959 meeting of recovering alcoholics is broadcast live on television.
5 results available