Pierre Mailloux
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Dr. Pierre Mailloux (better known as Doc Mailloux or Docteur Mailloux) (born January 14, 1949) is a psychiatrist hosting a long-running French-language talk show with Janine Ross on CKAC radio in Montreal, with a large audience.
[edit] Background
He was born in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean region of Quebec. He studied medicine at Université Laval in Quebec City and psychiatry at McGill University in Montreal.
In 1975, after serving in the Canadian Forces as a psychiatrist, he started to worked with offenders who've committed assaults and participate at numerous travail as an expert on the psychatric domain.
In 1988, he lost one of his legs because of an accident when he was helping motorists in which their vehicle was stalled beside a highway.
He started to work in 1995 for the radio station CKAC Over the years, the title of his radio show on the Radiomédia network has changed from Un psy à l'écoute to Deux psy à l'écoute to Doc Mailloux. However, CKAC became in 2007 a sports channel and it is not clear if he will pursue his talk show at other radios of the network.
Mailloux has also written several books.
[edit] Controversies
He is notorious for controversial on-air comments and in 2002 was officially reprimanded for them by the Collège des médecins. The topics he has spoken about include voluntary castration of pedophiles and criticism of feminists. He served as a sort of on-air psychiatrist for the Quebec version of the reality show Loft Story, where he made controversial remarks that upset the parents of some of the participants. On February 10, 2005, the Quebec Regional Panel of the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, responding to a listener complaint, determined that Mailloux had made "specifically-focussed abusive and unduly discriminatory remarks" towards national or ethnic groups in a broadcast discussing immigration, such as when he referred to Sikhs as a "gang of bozos" (translated). They ruled that, in doing so, Mailloux and the station had broken the human rights clause of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Code of Ethics.
On June 23, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission released a similar ruling on two other comments, including a statement that "Native Americans and Black people from the Americas were born less intelligent than whites because of artificial selection from slavery (he said Europeans used to kill the smartest of them), and that accounts for their poverty and high unemployment rate", and one that "Janet Jackson, like her brother Michael, exhibits unacceptable conduct, and this is typical of African or black people, who do not know how to behave even though they left Africa many years ago."
On September 25, 2006 he appeared on the widely-viewed Québec television talk show, Tout le monde en parle and cited unspecified studies allegedly used at the Université de Montréal in psycho-education classes, stating that Black people in the Americas and Native Americans had lower IQ in average, a currently controversial topic of study about race and intelligence.
He was indefinitely barred from the Collège des médecins in January 2007 for prescribing abusive doses of neuroleptics to two of his patients and because of his earlier radio and TV claims and comments. The collège determined that Mailloux posed a threat to the medical profession. However, the CKRS radio station and a viewer circulated a petition order the College to reinstate Mailloux until his hearing in front of the discipline commitee.[1]
On March 20, 2007 a Journal de Montréal news article reported that in an interview with Tele-Quebec host Richard Martineau in the show Les Franc-Tireurs, Mailloux said that woman are inferior to men for resisting to stress and to decide under pressure and that he would never work for a woman. He also made rude gestures and obscene language towards the host. Tele-Quebec confirmed that they will not air the interview. [2]
[edit] External links
- Pierre Mailloux on the CKAC website (in French)
- Le Dr Pierre Mailloux et le Collège des médecins s'entendent (April 25, 2002) (in French)
- Le Collège des médecins fustige Loft Story et le Dr Mailloux, Le Devoir, November 15, 2003 (in French)
- CKAC-AM re an episode of Doc Mailloux (Canadian Broadcast Standards Council decision)
- CRTC decision