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Marketplace (Canadian TV program)

Canadian investigative television program


Canadian investigative television program

FieldValue
imageCBC Marketplace Logo (2025).webp
captionThe most recent version of the show's logo
alt_nameCBC News: Marketplace
genre{{plainlist
presenter{{plainlist
countryCanada
languageEnglish
num_seasons50
num_episodes500
executive_producerNelisha Vellani
producerGreg Sadler
Jeremy Macdonald
Katie Pedersen
Jenny Cowley
editorSimon Parubchak
Aaron Taylor
runtime22 minutes
companyCanadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
networkCBC Television
first_aired
last_airedpresent
  • News magazine
  • Investigative journalism
  • Consumer affairs
  • Asha Tomlinson
  • Charlsie Agro Jeremy Macdonald Katie Pedersen Jenny Cowley

Aaron Taylor

Marketplace (officially CBC News: Marketplace) is a Canadian investigative consumer program which has been broadcast on CBC Television since 1972. The program investigates consumer reports on issues such as product testing, health and safety, fraudulent business practices, and also tests government and industry promises.

Despite airing on Friday nights, which typically have low viewership, the show has had high ratings and achieved over 1 million viewers for some episodes. In 2012, it was the fifth-highest rated show on CBC.

History

The program was influential in the banning of urea formaldehyde foam insulation and lawn darts in Canada, the legislation of warnings on exploding pop bottles, successful prosecution of retailers for false advertising, new standards for bottled water and drinking fountains, new regulations to make children's sleepwear less flammable, and the implementation of safer designs for infant beds.

The program's reporting has exposed the illegal dumping and burning of Canadian plastic recycling in Malaysia, the sale of fake university degrees to Canadian professors and social workers, and its hidden camera investigations documented hygiene issues in hospitals, misleading sales practices, and violence and neglect in long-term care homes.

Investigations have led to corporate and government changes: Google Maps launched a review of the country's locksmith listings after the identification of dozens of fake listings and reviews. Ontario's real estate board launched an investigation and review of its agents after the program documented agents breaking rules around "double-ending".

When the program's original lab testing found dangerous levels of cadmium in jewelry sold by Ardene and Aldo, journalists travelled to China to expose how these chemicals end up in products found on Canadian store shelves. The episode prompted an investigation by Health Canada and changes in the companies' suppliers.

One of its most popular programs involved an international investigation tracking the people behind the Canada Revenue Agency scams and technical support scams. The reporting triggered "Project Octavia", a criminal investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). In February 2020, journalists were granted exclusive access to document the arrest of Canadian "super money mules" alleged to have been working with criminals in India to defraud Canadian victims.

Marketplace was originally hosted by Joan Watson and George Finstad. Watson eventually married one of the first producers of the show, Murray Creed. Other hosts have included Bill Paul, Harry Brown, Norma Kent, Jacquie Perrin, Christine Johnson, Erica Johnson, Jim Nunn, Tom Harrington and Wendy Mesley. The program's current hosts are David Common, Charlsie Agro and Asha Tomlinson.

Early seasons of the program had a theme song, "The Consumer", which was written and performed by Stompin' Tom Connors. For several years, every episode would begin with Connors singing the song, which became a hit.

Every Thursday, The National airs a weekly segment that is based on the week's episode with Adrienne Arsenault introducing the segment.

In 2023, an audio podcast version of the show was produced and with the episodes scheduled for release on July 4, 2023. In addition, the podcast was broadcast as a summer replacement series on CBC Radio One.

Erica Johnson has stated that the network does not interfere in the development of episodes, even when it negatively reports about the network's advertisers.

References

References

  1. "Marketplace".
  2. Brioux, Bill. (5 January 2012). "CBC’s Marketplace: 39 years of going where few dare". [[Toronto Star]].
  3. Smith, Charlie. (15 May 2012). "CBC Marketplace expands to a full season after drawing large audiences in the spring". The Georgia Straight.
  4. Smith, Charlie. (5 December 2013). "CBC Marketplace investigator Erica Johnson hasn't lost her zeal for exposing scams". [[The Georgia Straight]].
  5. "Marketplace".
  6. "CBC Marketplace". CBC.
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