TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 1111
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Link: The mystery of Yannick Bisson

From Neil Crone of DurhamRegion.com:

The mystery of Yannick Bisson
Although Yannick and I have worked together on only two shows — Nothing Too Good for a Cowboy and Murdoch Mysteries — I feel like I know him very well. To the point where I would not hesitate to call him my friend. If that sounds weird, I think it’s because what makes him so infinitely watchable and likeable on television and in films comes from the essence of who he really is. He is a kind, gracious, tremendously grounded, hardworking guy who also just happens to be ridiculously handsome. Yannick, in a nutshell, was summed up for me during my last appearance on Murdoch Mysteries. Continue reading.

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Link: Zoie Palmer brings Dark Matter’s android to life

From Bridget Liszewski of the TV Junkies:

Zoie Palmer brings Dark Matter’s android to life
When the crew of Dark Matter wakes up, with no memory of who they are and what they are doing on board a spaceship, they may have more than just each other to worry about. Members of the new Syfy/Space channel adventure series, premiering Friday, June 12 at 10 p.m. ET, will also be dealing with another unknown element on board the ship – an Android with total control over all the ship’s on board systems. Continue reading.

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Link: Jason Bourne meets the Sopranos in Dark Matter

From Tony Wong of the Toronto Star:

Jason Bourne meets the Sopranos in Dark Matter
Joseph Mallozzi is standing on the bridge of his newest creation, an intergalactic spaceship with a mysterious past and a questionable mission.

“It’s not like anything you typically see in other science fiction shows,” he says, looking distinctly out of sync in the futuristic setting in a navy blue suit while acting as tour guide of the set in an industrial mall in Etobicoke. Continue reading.

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Think outside the pink toy box, Nelvana

When the Nelvana and Topps Company television series Mysticons was first announced in 2013, the head of Topps’ parent company – ex-Disney CEO Michael Eisner — said in a media release: “Nelvana has a strong history of success in building and launching hit boys action properties and the partnership with Topps sets the stage for Mysticons to be the next big global boys action franchise.”

Yesterday, Corus Entertainment’s Nelvana sent another media release about the reworked series, still in partnership with Topps, calling it an “epic animated series for girls 6+” and using the phrase “Girls Action series” throughout.

I have some questions.

Why the proper noun for Girls Action? But more importantly, why is it necessary to specify in a media release that the show is for girls, any more than it was necessary to specify in a media release the show was for boys?

I guess the answer to both questions is in a tab on Nelvana’s website called Boys Action. They are going for broke in putting a gender to their action shows, at a time when corporations like Eisner’s former employer Disney and Toys R Us are removing gender labels in response to consumer demand.

Of course demographics are everything when selling a show to advertisers. Demographics will tell you where you’ll get the most bang for your marketing buck. All of that is important to advertisers and marketers … behind the scenes. Not to media. And by specifying before you’ve even produced the show that your marketing and advertising will target girls, it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy when boys shy away from it.

If it’s truly self-evident that a show with girl characters is more appealing to girls, let it be self-evident and therefore unstated publicly, especially in a time when that casual normalizing of this kind of gender division is under siege by the very people affected by it: kids.

There are rules about how you can advertise to children because they’re impressionable, not yet formed. And it shouldn’t be up to Nelvana to form kids along an unnecessary gender line. There should be in-house rules for production companies and broadcasters on how to publicly discuss a show without excluding boys from Dora the Explorer and Doc McStuffins and girls from Beyblade and Di-Gata Defenders.

We’re talking an age where companies like Lego and Disney are being reminded, loudly, that not all girls like pink and some boys like to play with dolls. Some girls want to dress up like Darth Vader and some boys like Elsa from Frozen. The kids themselves will let you know when you fail them.

Nelvana, you’re failing them.

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Gerry Dee and Project 10 develop CBC sitcom

From a media release:

Project 10 has partnered with Gerry Dee’s (Mr. D) production company to develop a single-camera comedy, My Scottish Family, at CBC, Andrew Barnsley (Schitt’s Creek) announced today.

The half hour comedy is loosely based on the real life (and Scottish relatives) of award-winning comedian and creator Gerry Dee. Project 10 is currently looking for U.S. and international partners for My Scottish Family.

My Scottish Family tells the story of Francis MacPhee (Gerry Dee), a Catholic, and his extended Scottish family. Canadian-born, low-key Francis lived in Scotland where he met and married Lizzy Knox, his polar opposite and a Protestant. Years later, Francis returns to Canada with Lizzy, their three teenaged children, and his “accidentally” racist and sexist father-in-law who dislikes Francis simply because he is Catholic. The Knox side of the family are brash, brutally honest, and firmly believe that “everyone wishes they were Scottish.” They drink, argue, fight, don’t trust anyone, and they’re never wrong – but they love each other fiercely. Blending into their Canadian neighbourhood won’t be easy…for the Canadians. The Knox-MacPhees have their share of challenges, and how they deal with them is awkward, hilarious, and sometimes even heartwarming.

Project 10 recently announced it has inked development deals at Bell Media for Beyond Repair, a single camera comedy co-created by Cobie Smulders (How I Met Your Mother) and Paul Campbell (Spun Out) and Darcy, a family sitcom co-created by stand-up comedian Darcy Michael (Spun Out) and Carl Johann.

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