The fifth and final season of APTN’s Blackstone premieres on Nov. 3

From a media release:

Prairie Dog Film + Television announces that the fifth and final season of the award-winning prime time drama Blackstone will feature the characters moving towards hope, healing and retribution – and will conclude with a dramatic finale on Dec. 22. Blackstone season five (8 x 60’) airs Tuesdays starting November 3 on Aboriginal Peoples Television Network (APTN) (check below for exact times per region).

In the new season of Blackstone, there is hope in the midst of adversity as the Blackstone First Nation strives toward a better life by building a stronger community. Panicked and grief-stricken, the Stoneys fight for the authorities to expand the search for Wendy.  Meanwhile, Andy tries to work his usual channels to stay out of jail. Chief Victor’s lack of leadership has left the Blackstone community struggling. Leona gets close to a foster child, but is left seeking justice when tragedy strikes. A sober Gail searches for a new identity and a new path while coping with Wilma’s failing health. Smokey moves back to Blackstone to serve the community, and Daryl makes a business decision that pulls him and Gina deeper into a criminal world.

Blackstone airs Tuesdays at 10 p.m. ET on APTN HD and APTN East starting Nov. 3; Tuesdays at 10 p.m. MT on APTN West starting Nov. 3, and Saturdays at 11:30 p.m. CT on APTN North starting Nov. 7.

The award-winning predominately Aboriginal cast has roots across Canada including Carmen Moore (Arctic Air, Godiva’s), Eric Schweig (Last of the Mohicans), Michelle Thrush (Arctic Air, Jimmy P.), Steven Cree Molison (Brokeback Mountain, Fifty Shades of Gray), Ashley Callingbull (the newly crowned, Mrs. Universe), Jennifer Podemski (Degrassi), Glen Gould (Mohawk Girls) and Tantoo Cardinal (Legends of the Fall, Dances with Wolves).

Canadians can catch-up on seasons one, two, three, and four on http://aptn.ca/blackstone/. In the US, viewers can watch season one, two, and three on Hulu.com and Hulu Plus. Season one and two are also available for purchase on iTunes Canada and will soon be available on iTunes in the U.S.

Blackstone is produced by Prairie Dog Film + Television, with Ron E. Scott as executive producer, writer and director, Jesse Szymanski as co-executive producer, and Damon Vignale as writer/producer. The series currently broadcasts in Canada on APTN, in the United States on Hulu and HuluPlus, in New Zealand on Maori Television, and in Australia on SBS/NITV.  Blackstone has been nominated for 86 awards including Best Dramatic Series, and Best Dramatic Writing at the Canadian Screen Awards.

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BNN’s The Disruptors returns for Season 2

From a media release:

Uber creating cabbie riots. Facebook and Google redefining the advertising market. Over-the-top services that turn every device into a TV. And apps that turn every home into a hotel. The pace of disruption is accelerating at breakneck speed, and the only way to stay on top of it is to know what’s next before it hits. Airing Thursdays at 5:30 p.m. ET beginning Oct. 8, THE DISRUPTORS returns to BNN for its second season, charting the latest emerging technology trends and tracking game-changing innovations like no other television program in Canada. BNN Anchor and Reporter Amber Kanwar, along with digital pioneer and entrepreneur Bruce Croxon, return to helm the weekly, half-hour program.

Each week, the duo reviews pitches from Canadian start-ups, providing expert advice, insight, and analysis. In addition to identifying the big tech trends rocking the worlds of information, transportation, finance, and workplace, THE DISRUPTORS introduces an exciting new interactive component, allowing viewers to vote for Top Disruptor. The start-up that is chosen will get a chance to be spotlighted on the program and given the opportunity to pitch Croxon’s investment company, Round 13.

Each week, THE DISRUPTORS speaks with CEOs of Canadian and international technology companies who share their own success stories, along with their thoughts on the risks faced by start-ups fighting for traction.

Long before social networking became an underpinning of modern society, Croxon was making his mark as a digital pioneer, co-founding the dating website Lavalife in 1987, consequently revolutionizing how people connect. Under his direction, Croxon grew this early tech start-up from four to 600 employees, creating a marquee brand of online dating with more than 200 million users and nearly $100 million in revenue. Since then, Croxon has earned success as an investor and advisor in early-stage companies in the technology and hospital sectors. A familiar face to Canadian viewers, Croxon was a judge on the hit television program DRAGONS’ DEN from 2011 to 2014. His latest endeavor is as Principal in Round 13 Capital, a firm investing in the Canadian high-tech field looking to find and create the next wave of disruptors.

BNN’s Kanwar specializes in equity markets and is constantly digging for stocks flying under the radar, recognizing trends that are about to emerge, and curating research to make it accessible to viewers. Kanwar has interviewed CEOs from across the continent, from BlackBerry’s John Chen to Marriott CEO Arne Sorenson, and brings the day’s biggest business stories to viewers on BNN, CP24, and CTV News Channel. She’s an expert at finding the big deals before they are announced and bringing those scoops to viewers.

THE DISRUPTORS is produced by BNN, with additional research provided by BetaKit, the nation’s foremost source for Canadian start-up news and tech innovation.

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Murdoch Mysteries by the numbers

Did you know Murdoch Mysteries is CBC’s top Canadian entertainment program? Since its CBC premiere in fall 2012, over 13.5 million Canadians have tuned in — that’s about 40 percent of the population, or 2 in 5 Canadians.

In honour of the show’s Season 9 premiere tonight, and thanks to Shaftesbury and CBC fact gatherers, here’s the lowdown on Canada’s favourite artful detective:

9 seasons
134 episodes
177 murders solved
Sold to 110 countries

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736 days of shooting
More than 8800 hours of filming
135 unique locations
1 screeching in
8500 production jobs triggered in Ontario

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25 historical figures
32 inventions and counting…
90 guest stars including 1 prime minister and 1 Star Trek captain

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2332 sideburns
1002 ties
184 corsets

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1 proposal halted
1 proposal denied
1 proposal accepted
2.5 weddings

CBC

3 coroners
3 career changes for Ogden
10,346 complaints from Higgins
756,348 karate kicks

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1 steamship
1 new millennium
2 trips to the future
1 future British prime minister
1 nudist camp
1 bottle of absinthe
1 James Gillies
2 disruptive Garlands
1 game of dominoes
2 nights on an island with an axe murderer
1 dose of ginseng in Brackenreid’s dinner

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0 Martians
0 werewolves
0 vampires
0 Egyptian curses
0 Venusians
0 ghosts
0 revenants
0 zombies, Haitian or otherwise
0 lake monsters, which Crabtree said all along
0 mole men???
0 leprechauns (yet…)
1 Artful Detective

Murdoch Mysteries airs Mondays at 8 p.m. on CBC.

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Review: This Life has heart, humour … and no yelling

It’s hard to convey the tone of This Life in a quick recommendation to friends. I’ve resorted to: “It’s about a single mother with cancer, but it’s good.” And: “It’s like Parenthood without all the yelling.” It’s poignant and funny and warm, and the ensemble cast have their own storylines apart from the central fact that the central character explores what she wants from life after she’s been given a death sentence.

Based on the Radio-Canada series Nouvelle Adresse, This Life premieres tonight as CBC’s best new ratings hope this fall. It feels like a show that belongs on the public broadcaster while also feeling like a subtle move toward their cable-esque hopes. Less sharp right turn than a Strange Empire, more a curve toward complexity.

ThisLifeLawsonsThe pilot starts with single mother and newspaper columnist Natalie Lawson (Torri Higginson) finding out her cancer is back, and terminal. She’s reluctant to tell her children Caleb (James Wotherspoon), Emma (Stephanie Janusauskas) and Romy (Julia Scarlett Dan) and parents (Janet-Laine Green and Peter MacNeill). Younger sister Maggie (Lauren Lee Smith) is an unreliable confidante, spilling the news to siblings Matthew (Rick Roberts) and Oliver (Kristopher Turner) who rally around Natalie. Neighbour Danielle (Rachael Crawford) and Romy’s principal and Natalie’s new love interest Andrew (Shawn Doyle) round out the regular cast.

Developed by Michael MacLennan, the series is helmed by showrunner Joseph Kay who shows tremendous confidence in moving slowly through time and plot to linger on character. Natalie’s diagnosis slowly becomes known to some of her extended family, and the ripple effects on their lives is seen in poignant details, mostly the expressive faces of a wonderful cast.

I didn’t know of Higginson before seeing the first four episodes of the series, but she brings a warmth and natural ease to a difficult role. Natural is a word that kept popping into my mind, from the acting to the way the show is lit, and yet there’s a stylishness to the direction as well — a well-shot image at the end of the pilot is both beautiful and meaningful, for example.

Sometimes the diagnosis seems almost an afterthought to the characters in the expanding soap stories of the extended cast, and I’d find myself wondering if the reactions were too small, but then we’re hit with the quiet devastation unfolding, often beneath the surface.

Even Natalie’s story isn’t all about cancer. She’s a woman who becomes dimly aware before the prognosis that her life might not be the one she meant to lead, her identity and her writing wrapped around her children, her sister Maggie wondering if Natalie has lost herself.

Maggie herself is experimenting with sex and with being a more responsible adult, one of which tends to get in the way of the other.  The character sometimes feels like the familiar lost woman-child trope, the show teetering on judging her for her and allowing herself to own her sexuality, but Smith plays her with an awkward charm and awareness that feels fresh.

11-year-old Julia Scarlett Dan is fantastic, playing the troubled youngest child with an unaffected maturity, and there are wonderful performances from the seasoned professionals as well.

English audiences won’t likely be spoiled by foreknowledge of the French version — 19-2 in a similar position hasn’t seemed to suffer from spoilers – but it will be interesting to see if Kay and his writing team follow the same path as the original.

In a puzzling oddity of scheduling, the English and French versions appear to share a timeslot, meaning the devoted francophone audience may not have the opportunity to watch the remake live even out of curiosity.

If they did, they might find it equally puzzling that an unabashedly Montreal-set series, with French-language signs prominently displayed, is otherwise lacking evidence of French-speaking people . But the setting adds a unique visual element even if not all the cultural elements make it onscreen.

Quibble aside, This Life is a wonderfully chaotic family drama that will draw you in, quietly but firmly.

This Life airs Mondays at 9 on CBC.

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