While the middle of the night wake-up can sometimes take its toll, Paul loves
his job. "I feel useful. When people wake up in the morning, the first thing
most want to find out is if their world is safe. I get to answer that question.
I don't take that task lightly. Once we have determined it is, we can bring
people up to speed on everything they need to know to carry on a conversation at
work about current events. Let's face it, many of our listeners have kids and
don't have a second to read the paper before racing out of the house."
While the subject matter of the morning show can be serious, Paul says he and
his morning show colleagues try not to take themselves too seriously. "We poke
fun at each other on the air all of the time and at ourselves. Some listeners
ask if it is planned out before hand, and I can honestly say it isn't. That is
half the fun. We never know what to expect from each other. We pride ourselves
in being real and not having some stuffy on-air image."
Paul has also moonlighted in television. For three years, he was host of the
one hour public affairs show, Agenda, which first aired on MSNBC Canada and
later on Omni and Rogers Cable. He has also filled in as host on the TV call-in
show, Goldhawk.
Before joining the 680News team, Paul worked as a reporter/producer/co-host
for CHFI's daily public affairs show, Chronicle and on the nationally syndicated
news magazine, Sunday Sunday. He has captured awards as a reporter for his
on-scene coverage of the crash of the RAF Nimrod at the International Air Show
in Toronto and for his coverage of the Meech Lake constitutional crisis.
International reporting assignments include the Barcelona Olympics and the
funeral in London, England for Diana, Princess of Wales.
Paul's proudest professional accomplishments are being part of the team that
put 680News over the million-listener mark for the very first time in 2001, and
when the morning show captured the Edward R. Murrow Award from the International
Radio and Television News Director's Association for best radio newscast in the
world.
His proudest personal accomplishments are his eight marathons, including New
York City twice.
Paul has his Bachelor of Applied Arts from Ryerson University's
radio-television arts program. He was born in Hamilton, but spent his formative
years growing up in Huntsville and in North Bay.
Paul and his wife live in North Toronto with their four school-aged children
and their pet German Shepherd. The kids keep them very busy racing off to
baseball diamonds, hockey arenas and dance studios. "Good thing the city has a
radio station with traffic reports every 10 minutes, 24-7, to help us get there
in time!"