TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 1299
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Link: The Book of Negroes a history lesson that’s ‘even more relevant today’

From Tony Wong of the Toronto Star:

The Book of Negroes a history lesson that’s ‘even more relevant today’
Playing a slave in The Book of Negroes resonated deeply with Aunjanue Ellis, leading the cast as Aminata Diallo, who is kidnapped as a young girl and sold into bondage in the CBC adaptation of Lawrence Hill’s Giller Prize-winning novel. Continue reading.

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TV, eh? podcast episode 173 – Jesus on a Segway

Anthony, Greg and Diane recap what’s coming up for the winter season of Canadian TV and whether Netflix is thwarting people trying to thwart geoblocking.

Listen or download below, or subscribe via iTunes or any other podcast catcher with the TV, eh? podcast feed.

Want to become a Patron of the Podcast? We’ve got a Patreon page where you can donate a small amount per podcast and get a sneak peek of each release.

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Tonight: Best of the Mercer Report, 22 Minutes, Just for Laughs Gags, Guilt Free Zone, The Candy Show, Close Up Kings

Best of The Mercer Report, CBC
Rick and Jann Arden go rock-climbing in Calgary and then Rick goes to Chapman’s Ice Cream Factory in Markdale, Ontario.

22 Minutes, CBC
This season’s best moments so far.

Just For Laughs Gags: 15 Years, CBC
In honour of Gags 15th Anniversary, Just For Laughs has produced a one-hour special showcasing the series’ greatest hits. It’s a compilation of all the most popular and iconic Gags from the show’s history, hosted by comedian Mark Critch.

Guilt Free Zone, APTN – series premiere
Host Derek Miller masters the stage: enticing guests and viewers with his unique sense of humour and interview style. He’ll shake off the Monday Blues with a marvelous medley of Aboriginal musicians, dancers and comedians from across Canada.

The Candy Show, APTN – Season 5 premiere
Candy Palmater hosts a new lineup of stars from across Canada – musicians, performers, poets, even circus performers – and it’s going to be a rip-roaring time. Candy’s guests often share their best secrets from her pink palace and pink bed. It’s time to get right cozy in your seat!

Close Up Kings, OLN
Close Up Kings brings audiences the adventures of three best friends, who also happen to be America’s top sleight-of-hand artists. Magick Balay, Loki, and Johnny Blaze travel from city to city taking on different challenges and attempting to outperform one another. Viewers will be enthralled by the trio’s carefully orchestrated and artfully executed capers and tricks that become more complex as the stakes get higher. From bringing a bird back to life and teleporting a person 700 yards across the desert, to performing an amazing Houdini-style jail escape in front of a crowd, these magicians will have audiences asking, “how did they do that?!”

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Link: Hating Canadian TV Is No Longer That Funny

From D.K. Latta:

As someone who writes a lot about Canadian film and TV I had been thinking of writing a post titled something like: “It’s Okay to Dislike a Canadian TV Show.” There are people within the Canadian entertainment biz (as well as their fans) who feel the industry is so fragile it behooves critics to “get on-side.” And that you have to like particular shows or movies to be considered Canadian.

Which is complete and utter balderdash. Continue reading.

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Preview: APTN enters the late-night talk show ring

It’s been awhile since Canadians had their own late-night talk show to tune in to. Since 2004, in fact, when The Mike Bullard Show decamped from Global due to low ratings.

Now, over a decade later, there’s a new kid on the Canadian late-night block. Juno award and Canadian Aboriginal Music Award winner Derek Miller hosts Guilt Free Zone, debuting Tuesday on APTN, a ribald no-holds-barred talker that spotlights Aboriginal artists and performers, Miller’s offbeat sense of humour and a promise to discuss delicate subjects without fear of being judged.

Tuesday’s first instalment, “I Like Sex and Fonzie,” (the first of six episodes taped in front of live studio audiences across the country), sets the offbeat tone from the start with Miller introducing himself and outlining the show’s mantra to chat openly about sex. His first guest is Inez Jasper, a nurse, public speaker and singer-songwriter who stresses educating First Nations youth about avoiding sexually-transmitted diseases and pregnancy by using condoms, at which point Miller produces a handful. Jasper then jumps up and performs an original tune. Miller’s second guest, Jayli Wolf, chats briefly about her acting career on Mohawk Girls before performing as well.

When not chatting with his guests or watching them sing, Miller is yukking it up with a guy dressed up like Jesus who rides by on a Segway.

Guilt Free Zone is a little rough around the edges–there were several moments of dead space between bits and a little bit of stilted conversation–but on the whole I was entertained, especially when Miller grabbed his guitar and jammed with the GFZ house band to close out the episode.

Check GFZ out and let me know what you think.

Guilt Free Zone airs Tuesdays at 10 p.m. ET/MT on APTN.

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