On set with Horses of McBride

From Bill Brioux of TV Feeds My Family:

  • Set visit: CTV’s Horses of McBride brings Aidan Quinn back to Calgary
    The holiday horsey tale stars Aidan Quinn, Kari Matchett and Mackenzie Porter as a dad, mom and daughter who love horses, hear two are in danger and spring to the rescue. It is based on a real-life rescue in 2008 that took place in McBride, B.C. An avalanche trapped two horses behind a wall of snow. The family Quinn and the others portray in the movie help dig them out. The CBC series Heartland beat this movie to the story a year ago in a special holiday episode featuring Nicholas Campbell as an ornery old cuss. But, hey, it’s a feel good story, no harm in doing it again. Read more.
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Titanic miniseries marks 100th anniversary of sinking

Titanic

From a media release:

Shaw Media, along with ABC, ITV Studios and Lookout Point, unveils the epic mini-series Titanic on Global TV over four consecutive Wednesdays beginning March 21 at 10 PM. Created by BAFTA-winning producer Nigel Stafford-Clark (Warriors; The Way We Live Now; Bleak House) and written by Oscar® and Emmy® winner Julian Fellowes (Gosford Park; Downton Abbey), Titanic takes viewers on a heart wrenching journey through its last hours. Told through the perspective of characters ranging from steerage passengers to upper class guests, the story unravels under the shadow of the ship’s looming fate. Each episode culminates in a cliff-hanger as the ship falters, building to an explosive conclusion that draws each story together and reveals who survives…and who doesn’t.

Linus Roache (Law & Order, Batman Begins) and Geraldine Somerville (The Harry Potter films, Survivors) lead a talented cast that includes Canadians Noah Reid (Score: The Hockey Musical, Jane and the Dragon), Linda Kash (Cinderella Man, Best in Show) and David Eisner (Flashpoint).

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New tonight: That’s So Weird, Genie Awards, Doc Zone

George Stroumboulopoulos HIRES

That’s So Weird, YTV – “That’s So Musical”
The episode where Kayla’s crush on James is finally resolved. Also features favourite characters like the hyper active Lyle, the insane Italian talk show Telebonjourno, the Raptor Kid, over grown child interviewer Daniel Book, and the usual terrible products from Jamco. The show stars Kayla Lorette, James Hartnett, AJ Vaage, Alana Johnston, Hannah Hogan, Joey Lucius and Alex Spencer. Musical sequences directed by show runner Gary Pearson.

32nd Annual Genie Awards, CBC
Honouring and showcasing outstanding achievements in Canadian cinema with hosts Andrea Martin and George Stroumboulopoulos. A star-studded extravaganza featuring a dazzling list of celebrity presenters and superstar musical performers.

Doc Zone, CBC – “Conspiracy Rising”
Princess Diana was murdered by her ex-husband. Sept. 11 was an inside job. Area 51 conceals a massive alien cover-up by the American government. These are just a few of the conspiracy theories DOC ZONE explores in Conspiracy Rising, Thursday, March 8 at 9 p.m. (9:30 NT). Set against the global socio-political landscape, Conspiracy Rising is a timely look at the conspiracists, the kooks and the deeply gullible spirit that lurks inside us all. Why do people believe in conspiracy theories? What’s really at the root of society’s skepticism of the “official story?” And what type of person believes a sinister and secret society is manipulating the government? These are the questions explored in this fascinating and thought-provoking documentary.

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TV, Eh? Industry Roundup – CBC/Quebecor, Andrea Martin, Yahoo, and more

CBC, Quebecor end trade “war”

CBC, apparently, was in a “war” with Quebecor Media Inc., over CBC not advertising in its French-language newspapers. The claim, by Quebecor, is that CBC withheld advertising from Le Journal de Montréal and Le Journal de Québec, after Quebecor waged a two-year lockout with Le Journal de Montréal‘s union, Confédération des Syndicats Nationaux.

In retaliation, Quebecor’s telecommunications subsidiary, Vidéotron, withheld CBC’s specialty cable services from its programming lineup. CBC’s specialty cable services include CBC News Network, Réseau de l’information (RDI), ARTV, bold, and documentary. The new “trade relations” mean CBC’s specialties are again welcome on Vidéotron, while CBC will advertise in Quebecor Media’s print and online properties.

Whether this ends Sun News Network’s anti-CBC pieces remains to be seen.

Andrea Martin pulls out of Genie telecast

Andrea Martin was to co-host the 32nd Genie Awards, with George Stroumboulopoulos. Martin will now appear in taped video segments, instead of being on-stage with Stroumboulopoulos for the live telecast.

The reason for this pullout: Martin is cast in an untitled Judd Hirsch/Ben Falcone pilot, for CBS. Principal shooting on the CBS pilot begins March 8, 2012, and was allegedly cast March 6, 2012.

I won’t ascertain whether this is an error on the pilot production company’s, and/or Martin’s, part. Rather than mull over the reasons why Martin’s Genie role is reduced to video cutaways, at least she never backed out of the Genies to do this:

Yahoo to buy Canadian rights to the Olympics?

After the International Olympic Committee rejected two bids by the Bell Media/CBC consortium for the 2014 Winter Olympics and 2016 Summer Olympics, Yahoo wants a piece of Olympic action.

The Bell Media/CBC bids were worth about $70 million, for the two-Games package. To put this in perspective, $153 million was paid by CTVglobemedia/Rogers to the IOC, for the 2010 Winter Olympics and 2012 Summer Olympics.

Yahoo wants to stay relevant in the tablet/smartphone age. Since Rogers is no longer interested in Olympic Games coverage, this could be a way for Yahoo to be a spoiler in the Canadian market. The bids are affected by whether NHL players participate in the 2014 Winter Olympics.

While I don’t have a problem with the bidding war – the process is supposed to be competitive – I wonder if Yahoo’s bid is serious. I think the Olympic Games television rights are marked up (see: NBC spending more than $4 billion to sew up Olympic television rights until 2020, despite NBC’s $223 million loss on the 2010 Vancouver Olympics), but…Yahoo? That’s more of a left-field choice than Eric Thames and Travis Snider.

Odds and sods

Pelmorex’s The Weather Network shares its spring 2012 weather outlook. British Columbians could face colder-than-usual temperatures. In Southern Ontario, it’s going to rain more.

TVO chooses five finalists for its first annual TVO Doc Studio Contest.

The CRTC allows Viewer’s Choice Canada to expand from a regional to a national service.

As of January 23, 2012, cable/satellite providers who carry a Category B third-language, general-interest service, and/or a foreign-language, general-interest service, must provide a Category A channel in the same language. In layman’s terms, a cable/satellite provider can’t carry an optional foreign-language channel, without a must-carry channel in the same language.

Zodiak Media Group sells Rogers on a possible Canadian version of Secret Millionaire. Citytv airs the American, ABC version later in 2012.

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