The Listener among “shows worth watching” tonight

From Andrew Ryan of the Globe and Mail:

  • TV: Five shows worth watching tonight
    The Listener (CTV, 10 p.m. ET/PT) For all the kudos and critical praise showered on homegrown TV dramas like Flashpoint and Republic of Doyle, this series remains the success story of Canadian television. Recently returned for its third season, the show finds fans wherever CTV puts it and routinely garners a viewing audience in the million-viewer range. Read more.
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TV, eh? Rewind: SCTV

By Dexter Brown

What look back at Canadian TV would be complete without SCTV? So grab your Shower In A Briefcase and fling your TV out the window, we’re taking a trip to Melonville.

SCTV (Global 1976-1979, CBC 1980-1983, Superchannel 1983-1984) played out like a warped funhouse mirror to the television landscape of its day. Satirizing everything from Hollywood blockbusters, campy B-movies, network news, overly dramatic soap operas, idiotic children’s programming, bland talk shows to commercials and network bumpers, SCTV is probably one of the most versatile TV shows to hit the airwaves. Each episode consisted of sketches intended to mimic programming from a typical broadcast day from a low-budget station in a town called Melonville.

Characters from the show have turned into Canadian icons; Bob and Doug McKenzie are perhaps the most popular, spawning a movie and an animated sitcom long after SCTV bit the dust. Guy Caballero, the president of SCTV, local celebrity Johnny La Rue, and news anchor Floyd Robertson (yes, named after CBC/CTV news anchor Lloyd Robertson) all could be characterized as jerks with short fuses. These characters are in addition to a wide array of impersonations, including Bob Hope, Tammy Faye Bakker and Divine.

With a host of characters striking a chord with the public, it would only be logical to think that SCTV would’ve launched its stars into the mainstream, and it did. Many of the stars went on to bigger and better things on television and the big screen. John Candy appeared in Home Alone, Cool Runnings and JFK. Eugene Levy has appeared in the American Pie film series as well as A Mighty Wind and more recently Goon. And Martin Short went on to become a cast member on Saturday Night Live (as did fellow cast members Tony Rosato and Robin Duke), starred in Primetime Glick and was a judge on Canada’s Got Talent.

Memorable episodes of SCTV include The Battle of the Networks Stars parody “The Battle of the PBS Stars,” where Julia Child and Mr. Rogers, for example, competed in athletic events. Another episode consisted of a spoof simulcast of the CBC due to a writer’s strike at SCTV. Also memorable was the show’s Towering Inferno parody, “Top of the Reactor,” where the SCTV studios were moved into the world’s tallest and thinnest building and a nuclear reactor was placed on top.

With its brilliant satire of late ’70s and early ’80s TV, you can’t help but imagine what SCTV would be like in today’s world of 500+ channels, the majority owned by three or four large corporations. The essence of SCTV did carry over to the YTV series That’s So Weird. Both SCTV and That’s So Weird consist of a series of sketches meant to be taken as television shows or commercials airing on a fictional low budget television network. Sadly however, That’s So Weird’s writing feels lazy compared to SCTV, the actors don’t seem nearly as versatile, and overall it feels less inspired. Still, those are points that could be made when comparing many of the shows today to ones from yesteryear and you have to take into consideration That’s So Weird is a kids’ series airing on basic cable in Canada.

CBC’s long-running series This Hour Has 22 Minutes also shares a bit in common with SCTV. Although 22 Minutes is largely a satirical news show (SCTV did have fake news sketches but they were not as prominent as the news bits of 22 Minutes), it did have television and ad parody sketches that are very SCTV-esque. CTV’s Canada AM was regularly satirized as “Canada in the Morning” and Nancy Grace as “Panic Room with Betty Hope” for example. The television show and ad parody sketches are brief and typically appear as bumpers to commercial breaks leaving their presence limited.

Perhaps there won’t ever be a show quite like SCTV again. Catch reruns on The Comedy Network and Comedy Gold.

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New tonight: The Listener, Murdoch Mysteries

The Listener, CTV – “The Taking”
Toby (Craig Olejnik) and Michelle (Lauren Lee Smith) investigate the abduction of an African teenager whose bodyguard, Kwesi (Toronto native K.C. Collins, A Day in the Life), was shot during an altercation. The case is nuanced and far-reaching because the victim, Ibrahim Ayim (Stephan James, THE L.A. COMPLEX), is the son of Abassi Ayim (Eugene Clark, former Toronto Argonauts offensive lineman), a deposed Liberian politician accused of defrauding his country of millions and committing a slew of atrocities. When the kidnappers send Ibrahim’s severed finger to prove the temerity of their ten million-dollar ransom demand, Michelle puts the pressure on Toby to make sense of the barrage of violent images he’s seeing.(Encore episode airing on Sunday, June 24 at 8 p.m. ET on CTV)

Murdoch Mysteries, Citytv – “Evil Eye of Egypt”
When Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) investigates a series of deaths linked to an exhibition of Egyptian antiquities, Constable Crabtree (Jonny Harris) is convinced a mummy’s curse is to blame.

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