Tag Archives: Featured

TV Eh B Cs podcast 23: Adam Barken’s Romper Room Revenge

BarkenHaving spent the last many years as a writer and producer on Rookie Blue, Remedy, and Flashpoint, Adam Barken’s name will once more be splashed across the screen this summer in the new Space series Killjoys.

Killjoys follows a trio of reclamation agents as they chase deadly warrants throughout the Quad, a distant planetary system on the brink of a bloody class war. The three Killjoys form a highly accomplished team of bounty hunters, each with distinct and valuable specialties to offer as they navigate the culturally rich, politically complex, and economically polarized worlds of The Quad.

You’ll hear all about Killjoys, plus some stories from previous shows he’s worked on, and an impending revenge plot against Romper Room.

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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My Banff baby

Originally published in Reel West Magazine

My last time at what’s now the Banff World Media Festival — my fourth time in five years — I’d had enough. The TV festival had just merged with NextMedia, the digital add-on in previous years, and was suddenly treating online media as not just the poor cousin of mainstream media, but as the poor cousin twice removed. Besides, I felt like I’d heard all the pontificating before and I was no longer covering US shows, which represented the bulk of the programming.

Why was I no longer covering American shows? Because my first time at Banff had inspired me to create a website called TV, eh? to cover exclusively Canadian series.

That first time, I resembled one of the Rocky Mountains’ ubiquitous deer, and the other attendees were like so many headlights. It was 2006 and I’d been writing about TV and movies online for a few years. I’d come for David Shore, since I’d been covering House regularly, along with Paul Haggis and some other great speakers.

That my inspirations for attending were Canadian – both from London, Ontario, seriously? — was incidental. In my recent quest to understand how television was made, stumbling onto blogs by Canadian TV writers, I’d had the epiphany that homegrown shows would come and go without me even noticing.

I lived in Canada, I covered television, I was getting news releases and access to screeners and interviews from US networks, but I hadn’t even heard of some of the Canadian shows mentioned on Dead Things on Sticksuninflected images juxtaposed, and The Legion of Decency, to name a few of those blogs (may the first two rest in peace).

Then in Banff, that first time, I sat in a giant conference room at the Fairmont and listened to a lot of Canadian television executives talk about the future of Canadian TV, and how its survival depending on making shows that would appeal to international audiences. Someone mentioned Corner Gas – one of the biggest homegrown successes — as an example of the kind of show that didn’t work globally.

And I thought of Robson Arms and Alice, I Think and Godiva’s and other shows I didn’t know existed until long after their premieres – often long after their cancellations – and wondered why these Canadian television executives weren’t more concerned with making shows that Canadian audiences want to watch. Or at least know exist so they can choose to watch or not.

I wrote companion pieces called “The Invisible Networks” and then “The Invisible Audience” about this new-to-me attitude in the industry. I’d lamented the lack of a Futon Critic or TV Tattle for our local industry and I’d been challenged in the comments to do something about it, if I saw this need. My reply was why would I? Not my circus, not my monkeys.

But what I heard at Banff swirled in my brain and I decided to float a test balloon. I started a crude WordPress site and when I felt like I might continue, I started letting the people whose blogs I’d been commenting on for the past year know about it. And they told other people, and I had a naming contest and bought a domain and tv-eh.com was born.

I’m sure other babies have come out of Banff liaisons, but hopefully none from the kind of frustration and anger I felt listening to the people who greenlight shows in Canada dismiss Canadian audiences.

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He Said/She Said: Canadian shows in need of a Netflix rescue

Join Greg and Diane every Monday as we debate what’s on our minds. This week: now that Netflix has helped bring Degrassi and Trailer Park Boys back to life, what are the top five Canadian shows we think they should they revive?

She Said:

I don’t think every show — even every good show — should be revived. There are shows I loved that ran their course, or that petered out until I didn’t love them anymore, or whose time in the zeitgeist has passed. But here are my picks for shows I believe would benefit Netflix and its viewers alike — and in some case, more importantly, benefit me.

slings_and_arrows-image

  1. Slings and Arrows: Though it’s been off the air for almost a decade, a revival isn’t as far-fetched as it sounds. There were recent-ish rumours the creators were talking about a fourth season despite initial reports that it was always intended to be three and done. So good it tops my list of the best Canadian TV of all time, Slings and Arrows is also so good it gave The Wire‘s David Simon “writer-envy.” (The creators are probably a little more impressed with the latter.) Important to Netflix would be the cult followings of many individual cast members — Paul Gross,  Mark McKinney, Don McKellar to name a few — and the uniquely prestigious veneer and kooky humour of the behind-the-scenes of a Shakespeare festival series. It’s like House of Cards meets Arrested Development meets the Bard. Sounds like a keeper for Netflix to me.
  2. Intelligence: Creator Chris Haddock is a little busy with CBC’s upcoming The Romeo Section, but given the short CBC and Netflix seasons, I have faith he could do both. Intelligence‘s second and last season ended on the cliffiest of cliffhangers, meaning there’s a Netflix-sized audience already eager to find out the fate of Jimmy Reardon. It delved into topical conspiracies affecting both Canada and the US, meaning a reboot could work well on both sides of the border.
  3. Todd and the Book of Pure Evil: This is the high school horror show I said at the time really, really isn’t for me, but I’m very, very glad it exists. Like Netflix, it knew its audience well  and delivered appealing content for that specific audience. Since it no longer exists, and would be great fodder for the young male demographic, it’s ripe for a revival.
  4. Endgame: Torrance Coombs might give people whiplash going from Reign heartthrob back to chess geek, but he and Endgame star Shawn Doyle  have some niche star and sex appeal to add to this crime drama with a twist. Don’t tell Netflix the first season aired on Hulu without hitting big enough for a second — Endgame would fit right in to a streaming service that supplies a steady diet of crime dramas with a twist such as Sherlock, Murdoch Mysteries, The Bletchley Circle, Midsomer Murders, and on and on.
  5. Bomb Girls: The World War II series had decent ratings, but not enough to remain in Global’s minuscule stable of original programming. Decent ratings on broadcast should mean great numbers for Netflix, and Bomb Girls would be a natural binge-watch segue from The Bletchley Circle as well as Call The Midwife and Land Girls.

King

He Said:

  1. King: I know it’s only been a couple of years since King went off the air on Showcase, but I still miss it. Greg Spottiswood and Bernie Zukerman’s cop drama never really got a chance to breathe and expand on the direction (kind of like what happened with their most recent show, Remedy) it was headed in Season 2. Amy Price-Francis was whip-smart, snarky and, yes, sexy as Jessica King, a veteran cop put in charge of a Major Crimes Task Force. The writing was tight, the crimes were interesting and Jessica was flawed (and awkward) enough that you couldn’t help but get in her corner and stay, cheering her on as she battled bad guys on the streets and boorish behaviour in the office. King would fit perfectly in Netflix’s stable of crime dramas like Happy Valley, Wallander and Dicté.
  2. Da Vinci’s Inquest: Diane and I are on the same page with regard to wanting updated projects from Chris Haddock’s past on Netflix. I’d be quite happy to see Intelligence there, but would prefer Da Vinci’s Inquest. Maybe it’s because Inquest — about coroner Dominic Da Vinci solving crimes in Vancouver — introduced me to a style of TV writing that I hadn’t experienced up until then. Conversations were full of stops and starts, just like the real thing. Cops were fallible, Dominic was a bit of a slob … everything was authentic.
  3. Forever Knight: Netflix is the home to the quirky and the offbeat, and that’s where Forever Knight comes in. Rather than stick with the dark, serious premise of the original, the updated project can have a little more fun. It still works to have Nick Knight an 800-year-old vampire working as a cop in modern-day Toronto, but rather than hide who he really is, Nick embraces it. He’s not the only vampire around, in fact, and Nick is equally at home collaring human and supernatural criminals. Pair him with a wise-cracking partner — think Remedy‘s Jahmil French — and you’ve updated the show for the Netflix crowd.
  4. Hammy Hamster/Tales from the Riverbank: I’m going to finish off my list with a couple of kid’s shows — the genre is exploding on Netflix — starting with this classic. The stuff the handlers were able to get their rodent stars to do in the original and YTV update were amazing enough, but can you imagine what can be done now? Remote-controlled vehicles, CGI and drones mean Hammy, G.P., Turtle, Owl and the rest can get into more high-stakes adventures.
  5. The Hilarious House of Frightenstein: Time to update this psychedelic orgy of skits, memorable characters and groovy tunes. As for a Canadian actor to take on the majority of the roles, like Billy Van did? Jim Carrey.
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Comments and queries for the week of June 12

When does Season 4 of Saving Hope start? —Terri

Production on Season 4 of Saving Hope began June 1 in and around Toronto and continues until December. The season is comprised of 18 episodes with Kim Shaw and Max Bennett joining the cast. Rookie Blue star Travis Milne will pop in for a four-episode arc.

Now to answer your question: CTV announced last week that Saving Hope returns to Thursdays this fall, but an actual date has not been revealed. Here’s a teaser on what to expect when Season 4 does return:

“Season 4 picks up nine months after the devastating accident, as the Hope Zion staff continue to deal with the aftermath of the death of their colleague and friend, Dr. Joel Goran. Alex is back at work following maternity leave, trying to balance motherhood and a busy O.R. Meanwhile, Dr. Charlie Harris continues to be haunted by his ghost-seeing abilities and the looming question of whether or not he is Baby Luke’s biological father.”


Martin Sheen to star in new Anne of Green Gables TV-movie

This series should have been left alone and the movies could have expanded on Anne’s later life. It’s too early to do remakes of this movie when it has already been done and was done very well. There’s no reason why kids of today cannot enjoy what was already made. —Mel


Review: Orphan Black – The Six

You’ve mentioned Cosima dying a couple of times now. The Internet also seems awash with speculation that Delphine is a goner. (Nooooo!) However, I have a theory I thought I’d toss out here just on the off chance it’s correct: why not kill Alison?

My reason for considering it is that OB needs to up the stakes with the death of a core clone. Sarah can’t go, obvs, and Cosima is such a fan favourite (and a lesbian—there’s a sad history of killing lesbians on TV) that it seems OB would risk a ratings tank it can’t afford with her death. Also, who could step into her needed science role? Delphine and Scott could sadly carry on without her, but there is no clone available to take her place in both function and tone.

But with Alison, there is now Krystal. Assuming she can be saved, exploring Krystal’s world instead of Alison’s would offer the same light-hearted tone but perhaps in a lower-key Kimmy Schmidt-way rather than the Desperate Housewives/Weeds-way Alison’s world employs.

And Alison has been delving into some deep doo-doo (I feel she would use that word) with murders and drugs for three seasons now, and it’s all been played for laughs. I think she has some reality coming her way and most would never see it coming.

As for Kristian Bruun, let him stretch and get out of the constant comedy mode and play the shocked and grieving husband. He can have comedy again later (platonically with Helena or Krystal or whomever).

Anyway, I’m sure I’m wrong, but killing Cosima seems too obvious and too difficult to recover from. Plus, like I said, there’s no clone replacement standing by for her. So maybe she’s a great big red herring (complete with red coat). Alison has gotten away with a lot and lived in her own world, which more and more seems to have no connection to the central plot. Killing her would finally make her relevant and shake everyone up for S4 and S5, which is supposedly the last season.

Go ahead, tell me I’m crazy! LOL :)—Ellie

 

Got a question or comment about Canadian TV? Email greg@tv-eh.com or via @tv_eh.

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CanCon 101 – Part 2

In the first part in this series, CanCon 101, I wrote about what makes a show Canadian (i.e. point system, spending, ownership etc.). This post takes it to the next step – what are a broadcaster’s obligations when it comes to airing Canadian programming. Not to worry – I won’t lose myself down the rabbit hole of detail on broadcaster CRTC commitments but will try to stick to a top level explanation.

First, there are (still) both expenditure requirements and exhibition requirements. I say still because there are misconceptions out there that we are in a total on demand world and scheduling doesn’t matter (tell that to people trying to avoid “Game of Throne” spoilers on Twitter Sunday evenings) and that exhibition regulation no longer exists. Prior to the 2010 TV Policy there were only exhibition requirements for ‘priority programming’ and an overall day quota for exhibition and the result was a lot of cheaply made Canadian programming. Expenditure requirements were brought in to ensure that not only was there sufficient quantity of Canadian programming but also sufficient quality.  The Talk TV decision limited exhibition requirements to prime time (down from both the prime time and all day quota) as of the next licence renewals in 2016.

Another important concept is that we now have group-based licensing. So Shaw, Bell, Corus and Rogers are licensed as corporate groups. This allows those broadcasters to pool their Canadian Programming Expenditures (CPE) across the group and spend more on one service and less on another. Each service has a CPE that takes into consideration its genre of service (e.g. a higher commitment for children’s services, lower for third language services) but as a group their CPE is 30%.

One caveat is that conventional services can allocate a maximum of 25% of their CPE to specialty services, which is to prevent broadcast groups from moving all of the Canadian programming to the specialty services, where they would get smaller audiences (leaving the mass audience spots for their U.S. programming). The benefit is that broadcasters are free to air a program on a specialty first and then on their conventional service (e.g. “19-2” airing on Bravo and then CTV) or vice-versa (Global’s “Rookie Blue” airs on Showcase) to maximize the audience. The downside is that these programs are broadcast across the entire group for one licence fee, reducing potential revenues to producers and potential new programming for audiences.

The other expenditure requirement is for Programs of National Interest (“PNI”), which are defined as dramas, documentaries and award shows that promote Canadian works. Note that drama is a defined term that includes comedy and feature film. The level of PNI expenditure is based on a group’s historical spending in most cases (Rogers has had to increase their spending as they acquire more channels in their network).

The result of these regulations is a system that provides broadcast groups with flexibility in their spending and exhibition but requires minimum spending on PNI in prime time. So how does Shaw get away with no new Canadian drama in the fall schedule? Exhibition regulations do not require original programming so can be filled with reruns. The prime time exhibition requirement covers 6pm to 11pm so is also fulfilled by news, entertainment magazine shows, reality programming (i.e. “Big Brother Canada”) and sports. Expenditure requirements also do not specify original programming but it is a lot harder to spend PNI dollars on licensing old programming so tends to be spent on new programming. However, expenditure requirements are reported on an annual basis based on when the money is spent (i.e. during the show’s production) and not when it airs.

So the broadcaster is free to decide to air all of their Canadian drama and documentaries in the summer (when fewer people are watching TV but also there is less competition from US shows) or spread them out around the year. They can commission shows one year and not air them until the next year or later. The CRTC has consistently stayed away from ‘micro-regulation’ and insisted that broadcasters know best how to program their schedules.   Shaw can decide how it wants to spend its money, and it tends to spend it on one or two big budget dramas like “Remedy” and “Rookie Blue” rather than a number of smaller budget dramas.

So how is that Bell Media consistently has more Canadian drama than Shaw? Diane Wild alluded to the answer in her assessment of the fall schedules – benefits spending. When a broadcast licence changes ownership, the CRTC requires that a percentage of the purchase price has to be spent on programming (and off screen benefits as well) to benefit the system as a whole and this ‘benefits spending’ has to be incremental to what they are already required to spend.

Bell has acquired more other services (Bell buying CTV twice, CITY specialties and Astral) than Shaw (Global and taking over the obligations from Global buying Alliance Atlantis) or Rogers (the CITY conventional channels and a few smaller specialties). Some notable examples of benefits spending have been on “Corner Gas”, more episodes of “Degrassi” and the development of “Flashpoint”. Over the years the benefits spending has also triggered more Canada Media Fund allocations, which are in part based on historical spend (as well as audience success, regional spending and digital media investment), resulting in more money to spend on Canadian drama, documentaries, children’s and performing arts shows (the four categories supported by the Canada Media Fund).   It will be very interesting to see whether Bell’s level of support of Canadian drama (they do very little documentary work) continues once their benefit spending expires in 2018.

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