Douglas Leiterman of CBC's This Hour Has Seven Days has died

Leiterman a journalist in B.C. and parliamentary correspondent before joining CBC

Image | li-leiterman-obit

Caption: Canadian television producer and journalist Douglas Leiterman, shown here in 1966, has died. Leiterman, co-created the CBC public affairs show This Hour Has Seven Days. (Handout/Canadian Press)

Canadian television producer and journalist Douglas Leiterman, who co-created the popular and controversial CBC public affairs show This Hour Has Seven Days has died.
He died at his winter home in Vero Beach, Fla., on Dec. 19, according to a death notice. He was 85.
The native of South Porcupine, Ont., got his start in journalism in British Columbia before going on to become a correspondent on Parliament Hill in Ottawa for the Southam News Service.
He then joined the CBC and worked on a number of documentary series, including Document, which he produced with Patrick Watson.
He and Watson would go on to launch This Hour Has Seven Days(external link) in 1964, a mix of hard-hitting news and interviews alongside comedy and satire. During celebrations of its 75th anniversary, the CBC called it "the most defiant and controversial program in Canadian broadcasting history."
Despite drawing millions of viewers, the edgy, unpredictable show was cancelled after just two seasons, which caused a public uproar that reverberated all the way up to the office of then-prime minister Lester B. Pearson.
Leiterman left the CBC after the show's cancellation and continued to work on documentaries through his company Hobel-Leiterman Productions.
He is survived by his wife of 50 years, Beryl Fox, his daughters Lachlan, Catherine, Julia and Barbara, and sister Phyllis King.
No funeral service is planned, but a celebration of his life is to be held in May.