August 8, 2003
CBC's chronicler of
ordinary people hits the road
Wayne Rostad's On the
Road Again comes to Iqaluit
TINA
ROSE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Kerry
McCluskey and Wayne Rostad share a laugh on the land. (PHOTO BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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On his first trip to Nunavut,
Wayne Rostad surrendered all his reservations and let a man knock something
out of his mouth with the end of a whip from 40 feet away.
"So immediately, you
see, I gave my trust to the North," Rostad says.
That was back in 1987.
Since then, Rostad has been visiting Nunavut as often as he can to tell the
stories of the people.
Having to juggle the cost
of travelling to three territories means that the host of On the Road Again
only makes it to Nunavut every other year.
"Every time I come
to the North it's always too short. But if I had no timetable, and I came here,
I'd be around, hanging around town for awhile just because I enjoy it a lot,"
Rostad says.
Rostad has a passion for
the Arctic that is immediately apparent when he begins speaking of his various
adventures.
"For every emotion
that I have, and every heartstring that you can pluck, I have a favorite story.
I remember going out on the [Meta] Incognito Peninsula with caribou all around
me. I walked amongst a herd of caribou that looked at me like I didn't exist;
they didn't care what I was or who I was. They just carried on, just snorted
and moved around and did their thing," Rostad says.
"If I want to feel
silence that is absolutely deafening, I would go to the high north in the dead
of winter. And I'll go right up there to Victoria Island and absolutely love
it. Go out with the muskox, and feel like I'm in a place called heaven."
This summer brought him
North to profile three women, Suzanne Evaloardjuk, a jewelry maker who scours
the tundra near Iqaluit for gems; Kanuyuak Bell, a radio host in Cape Dorset;
and Kerry McCluskey, a resident of Iqaluit who brings a whole new sense of appreciation
to the raven.
Evalordjuk, Bell and McCluskey
were selected because of their enthusiasm for what they do.
"If you have an individual
who can come through the lens, as we call it, who can really come through the
lens and reach the people watching, then that person is a very prime candidate
for appearing on our program. Our guests, when you watch them on television,
they're wearing their hearts on their sleeve, their soul dances in their eyes.
And it is people who are passionate, who have a genuine love for what they do
that we're interested in."
At the end of every episode,
On The Road Again contact information is listed. The program receives
submissions from all over the country by mail, telephone, and even people approaching
the staff in person. Along with that, the show has two researchers delving into
all the newspaper periodicals that are sent in.
"When we started out,
we had to dig for our stories because we were given the mandate to go all over
the country and seek out extraordinary Canadians, every day Canadians doing
extraordinary things in every nook and cranny from sea to sea to sea. And then,
a wonderful thing happened when we went to air, the stories started coming in."
Starting its 17th season
in the fall, with well over 1,000 Canadians profiled, On The Road Again
won't be running out of stories any time soon.
"We're not surprised
in that we've always believed in the power of the people that appeared on our
program. CBC's mandate is to bring the people to the people, well; On The
Road Again delivers that mandate. The program is a cultural mosaic of who
this country is made up of."
"We always stop and
we listen because it's the people's network, On The Road Again is one
of the people's shows, and if anyone out there wants to stop and talk to me
or any one of our team, we oblige them without question. We essentially believe
that everyone has a story to tell."
After almost two decades
with On The Road Again, Rostad's love for what he does is evident by
the warmth in his eyes and the enthusiasm in his voice as he speaks of the show's
history. He has no plans of slowing down, yet.
"I'm fully aware that
one can't go on forever but, the truth is, I'm still healthy and I'm still interested
and I'm still having fun. At some point, you know, the knees are going to creak
and maybe I'll get a little too tired to carry it, but it's certainly not on
the immediate horizon."
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