In 1974, Cameron was hired by the fledgling national network
Global as writer, reporter and eventually host of the programme
Newsweek. In 1978,
Moses Znaimer, president of Toronto's
CITY-TV, hired him to anchor the hour-long newscast,
CityPulse which aired weeknights at 10 p.m. Cameron left CITY in September, 1983, when talks for his next contract collapsed over issues of salary and style. He was hired almost immediately by
Mark Starowicz, then executive-producer of the
CBC daily current affairs program
The Journal. Cameron split his duties between on-air hosting and documentary reporting and remained with The Journal until its demise in 1992. During this period, he also periodically hosted
Midday, CBC's national noon-hour talk show. Cameron then anchored the local television supper hour program,
CBC Evening News, which in 1995, won a Gemini award as Best Local News Program. In 1995, Cameron was hired by
CBC Newsworld to front the news network's national morning program,
CBC Morning, based in Halifax, where he worked until September 1998. Back in Toronto, he anchored
Sunday Report, CBC's National weekend news program, while hosting his own current affairs program on Newsworld during the week. In 1999, Cameron left the CBC for good when contract talks collapsed, acting briefly as the communications vice-president for an online financial marketing firm before returning to journalism from 2000 until late in 2001 as a reporter and columnist for
National Post. For a while in the early 2000s, Cameron hosted an interview show in
ichannel. During this time, he was awarded the chair in journalistic ethics at
Ryerson University's School of Journalism, and taught at Ryerson and its Chang School of Continuing Education. Throughout this time, Cameron was an occasional substitute host on CBC Radio's
Sunday Morning, on CBC Radio's flagship daily current affairs program
As It Happens, and on
Morningside, CBC's daily radio current affairs program. ==Other work==