Tag Archives: Featured

Help us help kids: Contributions wanted for TV, eh?’s charity auction

Almost a year ago, this site came back from the dead thanks to the injection of another partner in Greg David and the generosity of our Indiegogo contributors. To celebrate the first birthday of TV, eh? 2.0 on August 5 — and pay some of that generosity forward — we’re reviving our charity auction. 100% of the proceeds will go to Kids Help Phone, a free, anonymous and confidential phone and on-line professional counselling service for youth. The previous auctions raised $10,000 for them.

In advance of the auction launch, we are asking for contributions to the cause — particularly TV-related swag or experiences, but anything that might grab the interest of our readers. So far we have some amazing items that will go up for bid: a set visit and walk-on role, one-on-one career advice from a senior writer, memorabilia from various shows, DVDs, books, magazine subscriptions, and more.

If you or your organization have items or experiences you can contribute, please contact us. And look for the auction to go live on August 5.

KHP

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Interview: Andrew De Angelis readies rookie comedy What Would Sal Do?

Is Canada ushering in a new age of television comedy? Andrew De Angelis sure hopes so. After writing for Mr. D, 18 to Life, Little Mosque on the Prairie and Orphan Black, De Angelis takes the reins on his own show, What Would Sal Do?

The eight-episode half-hour Super Channel comedy—about an entitled underachiever who is challenged to be a good person when he discovers he’s the Second Coming of Christ—begins production in Sudbury, Ont., this summer. De Angelis reveals how Sal came to be, his hope for sitcoms in Canada and how working with Mark Forward and Alex Levine has made him a better writer.

Let’s go back to the beginning: how did the idea for What Would Sal Do? come about?
Andrew De Angelis: The show actually came from two ideas in my head. One was just this thought of if there was a Second Coming, how would it go in today’s world? What would the difficulties be? I’ve also been fascinated with the entitled generation who are raised—mine included—spoiled rotten and they just think they’re great and that everything they do is wonderful. Once they’re adults they’ll realize how ill-prepared for the world they are.

So, I wanted to have this Second Coming where his mother knew what he would become and spoiled him rotten and let him believe that he was perfect and infallible. Now he’s in his 30s and he’s just an asshole. He’s spoiled and entitled and does not have the tools he needs to do this job that is to be the best person in the world—to be the kindest, most forgiving person in the world—because he doesn’t know what that means. But he’s going to try and do it because his mom asked him to do it but also because he’s in a place where he realizes he’s done nothing with his life and he’s looking for a purpose.

Everything goes badly.

Do you touch on religion at all?
There are elements of it because it’s hard not to do it without addressing religion but the show is not about any of that. You could strip away all of the Second Coming business and it’s about a guy who has been spoiled rotten by his mom and she is at a point where she tells him, ‘That’s enough. You have to step up now.’


If shows like this and Letterkenny do well, maybe things will open up. I think this is the direction we need to go in. Take chances, what have we got to lose?


How did you become involved with Mark Montefiore and Patrick O’Sullivan over at New Metric Media and have them come on board as producers?
Mark and I have been friends for awhile, since we got out of the Canadian Film Centre. He contacted me just because he wanted to meet up. He was just starting out as an independent producers and wanted to build up this stable of comedy writers to work with. We met up and hit it off; he’s hard working and driven. And one of the first things I ever showed him was this idea and he responded to it right away. Mark’s been the driving force behind this being made. We’ve had a lot of no’s because of the content and he never gave up. We’ve been pushing ever since and believing in it and, luckily, Super Channel believed too.

What’s your take on the TV industry in Canada? Do you think it’s an old guy’s club as some have stated?
I for sure got that vibe for awhile, but I can’t say that now because I’m getting a chance. Until this show was put into development, I felt the same way. The same people getting the same development deals … there was nothing new or exciting. From here we’ll see what happens. Maybe things are changing. If shows like this and Letterkenny do well, maybe things will open up. I think this is the direction we need to go in. Take chances, what have we got to lose?

Super Channel seems like the perfect proving ground for a new show like this or Too Much Information or more established comedy like Tiny Plastic Men.
They were our white knight. Everyone told us no, and here comes Super Channel saying, ‘Let’s do it.’ They are fully aware of the content and are pushing us to make it better. They’ve given me so much hope for this entire industry.

You guys are heading up to Sudbury, Ont., to start production soon. Where are you at in the process?
We’re pretty heavy into casting. The eight scripts are written and we’re going through them with our director, Samir Rehem, right up until the cameras roll. Casting is going very well; there is a lot of great talent in Canada.


I learned there is a huge difference between what’s funny on the page and what is actually going to make people laugh.


Let’s talk about the writer’s room. I know Mark Forward was in there with you … who else?
Mark was in there with Kurt Smeaton. They were my full-time writers. And then I had consultants who would come in. I had my brother, Mark, and Alex Levine, who was on Orphan Black. That’s the thing, funny comes from good story and good conflict and that’s drama. Alex has been a huge help. We also had Steve Dylan and Josh Gal. Brandy Hewitt was our story editor.

Mark is a comic and Kurt has done a lot of improv and I learned there is a huge difference between what’s funny on the page and what is actually going to make people laugh. These guys know what it’s like to be on stage and have people genuinely laugh. It’s not enough to be clever or cute on the page. You really have to push it and find the funny.

Mark is so good when it comes to the writing. He’s always the guy to say, ‘Why?’ He’s got a nose for bullshit and it’s good to have someone in the room like that who can call you out on your shit. It’s frustrating because he’s so good at it, but in the end you come out with something that’s bulletproof.

Talk about shooting in Sudbury. Are you looking forward to it?
I am. I’m excited about going up there and showing off Sudbury too. Sal is set in Sudbury; he lives in Sudbury. I think that it’s important for all shows in Canada. All of the great shows, you know where they are geographically, Canadian or otherwise. You knew Cheers was in Boston, Frasier was in Seattle, Golden Girls was Florida, Roseanne was just outside of Chicago. It’s important to give your show a place on a map. I think it grounds it. You don’t have to hit people over the head about it.

You mentioned the Canadian Film Centre before. You were there as a story editor on Orphan Black when it was being workshopped. Did the CFC help you, specifically, with your career?
It was huge. More than anything, working with Graeme Manson, we knew we were lucky then before it was even a TV show. What the CFC does so well … everyone in this industry that you should know and meet, they bring them to you. When you’re done, everyone knows who you are.

What Would Sal Do? will air on Super Channel.

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Preview: To Russia with Love focuses on LGBT community in Sochi’s shadow

There were a lot of headlines and TV broadcasts spotlighting the LGBT community leading up to the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia. The country makes no secret of the fact homosexuality is viewed as deviant behaviour and that one could be arrested just for protesting in favour of that life choice.

CBC focuses its documentary lens on the LGBT community leading up to—and during—the Games from several angles. Narrated by Glee’s Jane Lynch, To Russia with Love follows U.S. figure skating commentator Johnny Weir, Canadian speed skater Anastasia Buscis, New Zealand speed skater Blake Skjellerup and Australian snowboard cross racer Belle Brockhoff in the days preceding Olympic trials. With the UN renouncing Russia’s views on the LGBT community and Billie Jean King being named to the U.S. Olympic delegation, Buscis, Skjellerup and Brockhoff realized that if they did medal in Sochi they could be public spokespeople for their community on the world stage.

The well-rounded To Russia with Love includes interviews with LGBT activists in Russia who worry of reprisals after the cameras and eyes of the world turn away after Games are done and the challenge facing Konstantin Yablotskiy, who aims to host the gay-friendly Open Games just days after Olympic Games end.

Some of the most gripping footage is captured at Mark Tewksbury’s home in Calgary where he not only reflects back on his life post coming out and asks tough questions of Weir and the athletes over dinner. They may have high hopes of making a statement in Russia, but what would it cost them?

It’s a question they grapple with during their whole trip and reflect back on once they get home. Should they have staged a protest—as Tewksbury secretly hoped—or were the public discussions about the issue a big enough step?

To Russia with Love airs Thursday at 8 p.m. on CBC.

Check out this teaser for tonight’s broadcast:

 

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Letterkenny co-stars reprise standout roles for TV series

They may play a couple of dopey hockey players, but Andrew Herr and Dylan Playfair take their comedy seriously. The pair co-star in CraveTV and The Comedy Network’s upcoming Letterkenny as Jonesy and Reilly, two dunderheaded, expletive-spouting friends who share a distaste for hicks Wayne (Jared Keeso, 19-2) and Daryl (Nathan Dales, King & Maxwell), a love for hockey … and the same girlfriend.

First introduced in one episode of Keeso’s web series Letterkenny Problems—which was then picked up to series by Bell Media—the characters of Jonesy and Reilly had to be bulked up for the TV show’s six episodes.

“On the web series, there was just a few seconds of chirping,” Herr (Mr. Hockey: The Gordie Howe Story) says from an on-location shoot in Sudbury, Ont. “Now we see why these two are the way they are.” Both guys knew (or know) fellows who are a lot like their TV personas on hockey teams they’ve played on, so they relate to  the verbiage and actions. The scene Canadian TV critics saw being filmed that day included a riotous face-off between Jonesy, Reilly, Wayne and Daryl, with the former pair showcasing macho puffery and an urgency to “tarp off” (take off their shirts) and engage in a “donnybrook” (a fight) with the latter pair. Instead, Wayne and Daryl undressed the hockey players with a rapid-fire delivery of chirping that left Jonesy and Reilly befuddled. Herr says everyone sticks to the scripts written by series creator and executive producer Keeso and executive producer and director Jacob Tierney (The Trotsky), though Playfair’s scene-ending ad libs left Tierney and the crew crowding the monitors cackling several times.

Letterkenny spotlights three social groups—the Hicks, the Skids (Less Than Kind‘s Tyler Johnston is lead Skid, Stewart) and the Hockey Players—who are constantly at odds with each other. But when outside forces attack one faction, the other two come to their defence. Despite their differences, Letterkenny’s three social circles have a sense of community and family, something Playfair says was reflected in real-life by a promise Keeso made to he and Herr.

“Jared told us right away when he was pitching this, ‘You guys are going to be the guys,'” Playfair (Some Assembly Required) recalls. “Herrsie and I realized that we needed to take as many acting classes and get as much experience as we could so that [the network] would have to hire us. Fast forward a year and a half and here we are in Ontario filming Letterkenny with guys we were friends with before we became part of this project.”

Letterkenny will debut on CraveTV.

Check out Reilly and Jonesy in their Letterkenny Problems debut. Warning: expletives abound.

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TV, eh? podcast episode 185 – Suddenly Sudbury

Diane, Greg and Anthony discuss CBC’s summer comedy series Still Standing and Fool Canada and Global moving Rookie Blue to Wednesday nights. Also on the docket: Killjoys and Dark Matter score for Space, the Directors Guild of Canada nominations, Diane chatted with CBC boss Sally Catto, and the trio opine whether Canada is ready for another shot at the late-night talk show genre and who might host it.

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