Dini Petty

Dini Petty
Born 15 January 1945
Occupation TV & Radio Host, Author
Genre Children's Literature

Dini Petty (born January 15, 1945 in Kingston upon Thames, Greater London, England) is a Canadian television and radio host. At 22, wearing a trademark pink jumpsuit and working for Toronto radio station CKEY, she became the first female traffic reporter to pilot her own helicopter. She clocked 5,000 hours as pilot-in-command of a Hughes 300.

Later, at Citytv Toronto, she worked as a writer, reporter and co-anchor, with Gord Martineau, of evening newscast CityPluse at 6. There she hosted an afternoon program, Sweet City Woman. Petty also anchored CITY-TV's short-lived 5:30 p.m. news and current affairs program CityWide from May 1987 until 1989 when she left for CFTO-TV.

Personal Life

In 1980, a documentary camera followed her pregnancy and the birth of her son Nicholas.

On Citytv's daily talk show CityLine, Petty established herself as one of Canada's foremost television talk show hosts.[1] She left her news anchor position to concentrate on CityLine.

In 1989, Petty moved to CFTO and the Baton Broadcasting System. Her hour-long general interest talk show, The Dini Petty Show, aired until 2001.

In the 2000s, Petty hosted Weekends with Dini Petty, a syndicated weekly radio program focused on health and wellness for baby boomers. Sheila Copps succeeded her as host of Weekends.

In August and September 2010, Petty returned to guest-host several episodes of Cityline while host, Tracy Moore, was on maternity leave.

Publications

Petty has written a children's book, The Queen, the Bear, and the Bumblebee, published in 2000.[2] Joanne Findon (professor of English literature at Trent University, Ontario)[3] described the book as ... a charming fable about the value of being yourself and recognizing your own strengths.[4]

See also

References

  1. Cronenberg, David; Irwin, Mark (Spring/Winter 2004). David Cronenberg/Mark Irwin Commentary [Videdrome DVD; Audio Track 2]. Criterion Collection. Los Angeles, California; Toronto, Canada.
  2. "The Queen, the Bear and the Bumblebee (First Edition) quote="Written to entertain children at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children, this book is about believing in yourself."". www.isbns.net. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
  3. "English M.A. (Public Texts) Faculty". www.trentu.ca. Trent University. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
  4. "Reviews: The Queen, the Bear and the Bumblebee". www.quillandquire.com. Quill and Quire. December 2000. Retrieved 2 February 2015.

External links