Tuesday, 2 February 2016

Recalling my time as The Sentinel-Review sports editor

From 1992 to 1998 my life was about writing, editing, composing pages and taking photos

Picture posted on Facebook by former publisher brings back memories from a different era 


By Mark Schadenberg
Facebook is great – a social media way to maintain connections with friends and colleagues from different times in your life.
Live everyone else reciting post-party pictures or prose, I enjoy seeing what is happening in your world.
I have Facebook friends I have rarely seen since high school.
Last week, a former publisher of the Woodstock Sentinel-Review named George Czerny posted a paper clipping of myself as sports editor, along with then city editor Alison Downie and reporter Susan DeRyk.


I have many terrific memories of my seven or so years at the Sentinel, arriving in early 1991 to be a sports reporter and departing in October of 1998 to begin my now 17 years in real estate with Royal LePage.
George Czerny hired me as he knew I was a dedicated media person, but my background until that time had been radio broadcasting – both on-air and advertising sales.

I had graduated from Fanshawe’s radio broadcasting program in 1987 and immediately fled to Muskoka to work for Joe Duchesne in both Huntsville and Bracebridge. I was at CFBK in Huntsville when the station transformed itself from AM to FM, but the programming remained the same with adult contemporary music through most time spans, but country on Saturday morning, and lots of CBC programming with an affiliation that included airing World News At Six, As It Happens, Air Farce, Quirks & Quarks and other programs. I arrived in Muskoka as a full-time announcer and returned south to Woodstock four years later in advertising sales.
My return to Woodstock, therefore, was to join K-102 in sales and not as an announcer.
HIGH SCHOOL DAZE
If you turn the radio dial back to 1984 and CKDK 1340 AM, I would debut as an all-night show announcer while still in high school. I remember all the names of the personalities then -- Dave Taylor, Ken Curtis, Robert Palmer, Tim Westra, Greg Kelly and Mark ‘In The Dark’ Taylor. The news director was Ian Crichton.
The 1340 AM switched to K-102 in the summer of 1986. I know because I was the last announcer to do a full on-air shift on CKDK AM. The station was in a transition under the ownership of Gord Marratto or simulcasting or testing the FM signal for a few weeks, and I was on the air the final night before the official change to FM. The control room was jammed with people, jam on bagels and orange juice in champagne glasses.

That summer was interesting as I would work the day-light hours dichotomy -- production studio and paint brushes (Summer student busy with renovations and recording music to carts) in the daytime, and then go back to 290 Dundas Street at about 11 p.m. for the all-night gig.
More On The S-R
Back to 1991 and my arrival at The Sentinel-Review.
Even in my short seven years, lots of evolution took place, including composing all pages on computer instead of on large easel-like tables. In 1991, reporters were required to spend significant amount of time in the dark room, both rolling film into the cartridges and often also developing film.
Even today, I chat with Walter Manning when I see him about the old days of newspapers and cropping photos, and even cutting and pasting stories together with the headlines. Walter was one of three people in the composing department in those times along with Rick and Lorraine.
Sadly as news happened from a newspaper as the Guelph Mercury announced it would no longer be printing an actual paper, I reminisce about The Sentinel-Review and its terrific news crew from Bill Scriven to Alison Downie to my first city editor Keith Pierson. The small daily newspapers were the stepping stone to larger publications and many from the Woodstock office certainly climbed the ladder. Here’s more names for long-time Woodstock people to recall – Geoff Dale, Eric Schmeidl, Kathleen Harris, Phyllis Coulter, Sue DeRyk, Hilary Machan, Annemarie MacQueen, Randy Cantera, and two accomplished photo-journalists in Mike Campbell and Jason Ransom. More name remembering – five sports reporters in my tenure – Chris Abbott, Jeff Tribe, Dave Jull, John Gelman, and the very talented Scott Utting.





Whether it be open-wheel auto racing updates from Aaron Povoledo, track and field results from Catherine Bond-Mills, or Gators fastball and national team accomplishments of Brian Paton, it was always an opportunity to tell the stories of others. The tedium was also rewarding, such as high school sports, minor sports, and Slo-Pitch Central. Yes, there was an era when The Sentinel had coverage of slo-pitch, women’s fastball and Piranhas swimming results on a regular basis and daily for the local hockey and ball leagues.
I’ll be honest, among my recollections, the most significant quote contributing person I interviewed for local content would have been Navy Vets hockey coach Dave Bogart. The local Junior C team was a dynasty at the time and the team sadly also provided my most difficult writings – stories surrounding the death of player Dean Sorensen in a single-vehicle car accident.
There’s never enough space to fully describe life as a sports writer in Woodstock in a time span when local coverage was paramount (The news team covered township councils and school boards much much more than today’s quantity), but it is easy to pass along the idea that I was rewarded by my dedication and work ethic at The Sentinel-Review, and today continue my media ways as a hobby on Rogers TV with the Knights broadcasts.


  
LINKS:






Mark Schadenberg, Sales Representative
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES designation)
Royal LePage Triland Realty Brokerage
757 Dundas St, Woodstock
(519) 537-1553, cell or text
Email: mschadenberg@rogers.com
Twitter: markroyallepage
Facebook: Mark Schadenberg, Royal LePage Triland

Discussion . . . Direction . . . Determination . . . Destination

1 comment:

  1. Hi Mark, You arrived at the Sentinel-Review on Sept. 28, 1992, not late 1991. I know this for a fact because I started working there May, 6, 1992; a few months before you. I was doing sports until the day you arrived. I was then briefly placed at the Ingersoll borough, before coming back to the Woodstock office to do the court beat. The next summer I was reassigned to the sports department, before going back to court reporting a few weeks later.

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