Lloyd Robertson, born on January nineteenth, nineteen thirty-four, is a distinguished Canadian journalist and former news anchor, renowned for his impactful contributions to the field of broadcasting. He served as the chief anchor and senior editor of CTV's national evening newscast, CTV News with Lloyd Robertson, from nineteen eighty-four until his retirement in two thousand eleven. Following his retirement from the CTV National News team, he continued to co-host the acclaimed magazine series W5 until two thousand sixteen.
Throughout his illustrious career, Robertson has reported on numerous significant events that have shaped Canadian history. His coverage includes the momentous opening of Expo sixty-seven in Montreal, the historic Moon landing in nineteen sixty-nine alongside Percy Saltzman, and various Olympic Games. He also reported on Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope, the patriation of the Constitution of Canada, and both the nineteen eighty and nineteen ninety-five Quebec referendums.
Robertson's journalistic prowess has seen him cover pivotal moments such as the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, the September eleventh attacks in two thousand one, and the widespread power outage crisis that affected both Canada and the United States in August two thousand three. His on-the-ground reporting has included the construction of the Berlin Wall, the deaths of four former Canadian prime ministers, and the elections of nearly half of Canada's prime ministers, along with state funerals and visits from royalty, popes, and U.S. presidents.
In popular culture, Lloyd Robertson's name inspired the satirical news anchor character Floyd Robertson, portrayed by Joe Flaherty on the Canadian television comedy series SCTV, further cementing his legacy in both journalism and entertainment.