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Industry Update – Bell Media/CTV 2012 Upfronts

This is the first year I attend CTV/Bell Media’s upfronts. Press conferences are held at Bell Media Queen Street. The upfront presentation is held at The Sony Centre for the Performing Arts, for the second straight year.

The fall 2012 slate for both CTV and CTV Two is about what one expects from the channel. Aside from Flashpoint, American shows are the order of the day. CTV Two airs Saturday reruns – it doesn’t use the term “encore presentations,” which is to its credit. CTV Two’s Saturday schedule features The Listener, The LA Complex, Saving Hope, and The Borgias. Midseason introduces a show called Motive (working title), a crime procedural.

Catherine MacLeod is the Vice-President, Specialty Channels at Bell Media. The most interesting thing she says to me is that The LA Complex will undergo a “retool” for its second season, possibly including a castmember shuffle. MacLeod is aware of the show’s poor performance, yet reasons that its poor showing on The CW is the result of everything doing poorly on The CW, and young people not watching as much television. MacLeod notes The LA Complex‘s positive critical reception.

As for Todd and the Book of Pure Evil and Picnicface‘s cancellations, MacLeod gives me a flat “they just weren’t performing.” The Borealis pilot is completed, but not yet scheduled. Four of the shows on The Comedy Network’s 2011-12 development slateHotz D.V.M., Spun Out, The Tim Steeves Project and Satisfaction – are still in development. No new channels, or rebrands of existing channels, are on the horizon for Bell Media.

The six press conferences take three hours total. For the most part, they’re breezy – light on detail, aside from the Flashpoint conference. Of note, Flashpoint will have a two-hour finale. CTV has no reason to screw with Flashpoint – it’s the rare case of a Canadian show ending on its own terms. At seventy-five episodes, it will live on in reruns for years to come.

The afternoon presentation formally announces Astral’s introduction into the Bell Media family, barring “little things” like CRTC regulations. That’s actually how Bell Media President Kevin Crull sells a $3.38 billion acquisition to advertisers.

The upfront presentation is strangely formatted. Stars enter, stand for five seconds, and leave. CTV Programming & Sports President Phil King says he won’t run down the schedule, then does so later in the presentation. I don’t understand why he teases the advertisers, and other attendees, like that.

Odd things in the base schedules stand out for me, like SportsCentre airing on CTV three times a week, on weekend afternoons. CTV allows Juicebox a two-hour, early-Saturday-morning block, while CTV Two gives Juicebox two hours of time early on Sundays. TSN’s documentary series, Engraved on a Nation: Stories of the Grey Cup, the CFL and Canada, follows CTV’s 4:00 PM ET Sunday edition of SportsCentre.

For the 2012-13 season, CTV still gives The Littlest Hobo ninety minutes of weekend, early-morning time. I’m surprised that dog isn’t the mascot for CTV’s 2012 London Olympics coverage.

Overall, I’m disappointed by Bell Media’s upfront. Upfronts should be a time to introduce new acquisitions and launches, but Bell Media is more interested this year in which companies it buys, instead of which shows it develops. Maybe the not-yet-completed Astral deal prevents Bell Media from showing its full hand, as Bell Media assumes Astral’s development properties. I don’t know. TSN’s Engraved on a Nation remains the most ambitious thing announced for Bell Media’s 2012-13 production slate, and that was revealed earlier in May.

This year’s upfronts have been, as a whole, underwhelming. Maybe a whole whack of shows will be ordered by the end of 2012. In a year where the Canadian television world threatens contraction, I doubt it.

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Industry Update – Shaw Media/Global 2012 Upfronts

This is my third year at the Shaw Media upfronts. If you don’t believe me, here are the scalps from 2010 and 2011. This year, as in 2010, there are two parts to Shaw Media’s upfront. The executive and talent sessions take place in the morning, at the Trump International Hotel and Tower. The presentation is held in the Elgin Theatre. Both the sessions and presentation are held in Toronto.

Shaw Media goes into 2012-13 with a few high-performing Canadian scripted shows. Rookie Blue is in its third season, while Bomb Girls is set for a second season. Lost Girl does well in its natural habitat, Showcase.

Among other Showcase shows, King struggles in its second season. It’s too early to tell what happens to Continuum, but its first-episode ratings hit with the force of at least two Lost Girls. Endgame is a dark-horse candidate to return, thanks to Hulu. Given Shaw Media’s string of homegrown successes, I go into Shaw Media’s 2012 upfronts with a positive outlook.

A big announcement for Shaw Media is the addition of two new channels, H2 and Lifetime. These are part of the A+E Networks stable of channels. The morning press releases reveal the return of Global Toronto’s News at Noon, more news overall, and new Canadian dramas…on Showcase and other specialties. Also, History Television will assume its distaff American cousin’s branding.

The Cave, Showcase Diva, and Global Reality Channel aren’t mentioned in the upfront press materials. Showcase Diva slips on the Lifetime branding this fall. Global Reality Channel was heavily featured in the 2010 upfronts, and doesn’t even have its own catered cookie this year. As for The Cave, it exists, but for how much longer?

Canadian content on Global this fall includes newsmagazine 16X9, POV documentary newcomer Close Up, something called “Canadian Documentary,” and Recipe to Riches. Aside from 16X9, which airs Friday at 10:00 PM ET/PT, every Canadian show on Global’s fall schedule airs Saturday night.

Crimetime Saturday is the only non-Canadian primetime Saturday offering, and it’s…reruns of crime dramas. Is Global introducing its version of the CBS block? If so, why?

During the executive and talent sessions, my mind tunes out around the time Ricki Lake sells her new talk show as the “old Oprah,” which could mean anything – even the old Ricki Lake. At the time LL Cool J sells the media on NCIS: Los Angeles, I’m busy trying out Google Voice for the first time.

In the afternoon, the Elgin Theatre plays host to the presentation itself. The presentation is more ornate than usual, but when the big reveal is Big Brother Canada, it’s a bit underwhelming.

Reality programming is Shaw Media’s format of choice, and is well-represented on Slice, History, HGTV and Food Network. Shaw Media favours this format – it’s cheap, can air across multiple channels, and allows Shaw Media to claim a large amount of Canadian content. At the same time, Showcase has a couple of hit originals (Lost Girl, Haven.) A few of Global’s originals (Rookie Blue, Combat Hospital, Bomb Girls) regularly earned at least one million viewers in 2011-12. Does a higher number of returning shows mean a reduction in new ones?

Shaw Media is involved with Showcase/BBC America’s Copper, and Showcase/ReelzChannel’s World Without End. Copper is from Canadian companies, yet is American in scope. World Without End is a sequel to Starz/The Movie Network/Movie Central’s The Pillars of the Earth, and is a Germany/Canada co-production. The two new major Canadian dramas, and they’re co-productions on a specialty channel. Weird.

Shaw Media’s overall strategy is the same as it ever is, aside from the heavier focus on news and documentary programming. Shaw Media also takes a page from Corus Entertainment, slapping American trademarks on existing Canadian channels. I don’t have a problem with Canadian program services airing American shows, but one of Shaw Media’s main priorities is Ricki Lake. There’s something disconcerting about that.

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Industry Update – Rogers/Citytv 2012 Upfronts

This is my first time at the Rogers Media/Citytv 2012 upfronts. This year, they are held at Toronto’s Massey Hall. Historically, the Rogers upfronts don’t provide much in the way of Canadian scripted fare, or Canadian content. In fact, Murdoch Mysteries‘ Citytv run ends this summer. If viewers miss the fifth season, they can watch it on CBC this fall…or watch Citytv’s reruns of the fifth season, if they air as “encore presentations” this fall. Try to wrap your head around that one.

I go into the Rogers upfronts not expecting much – maybe a low-rated documentary series for Citytv, foreign reality-show formats with the word “Canada” flour-pasted onto the side, and American programming – the usual.

Citytv’s fall schedule is its usual heady mix of American shows, and “encore presentations” of Rogers “original series.” Saturday, by now, is Citytv’s Canadian cultural ghetto. Less Than Kind will even air 9:30 PM ET on Saturdays this fall, and it better not be four-year-old reruns of the first season.

More encouragingly, Citytv has two original comedies up for 2013, Seed and Package Deal. Seed is about a sperm bank donor, and how he deals with the byproducts of his white gold. Package Deal is “about three overly close brothers and the woman who comes between them,” which reads as generic. So did Shaw Media’s Continuum, when it was announced.

The Citytv press conferences are basic. There are the usual American stars to sell their wares – Katie Couric promoting her new talk show, Brandon Routh and Michael Urie promoting Partners, and Max Greenfield shilling New Girl. Dominic Monaghan beats the drum on Wild Things with Dominic Monaghan, an OLN/Channel 5/BBC America nature show, while Tyler Harcott sells viewers on the merits of The Bachelor Canada.

Andrew Orenstein and Joseph Raso promote their respective shows, Package Deal and Seed. Citytv sells Package Deal as the first Canadian multi-camera sitcom in decades, which ignores YTV’s Mr. Young. Perhaps youth sitcoms aren’t as glamorous as adult sitcoms. Package Deal shoots in Vancouver, and has Mr. Young‘s production company, Thunderbird Films, behind it.

An interesting announcement concerns Citytv and Sportsnet sewing up rights to HBO’s 24/7 Maple Leafs/Red Wings: Road to the NHL Winter Classic. This isn’t a Canadian series, but the Toronto Maple Leafs are the first Canadian team with a 24/7 profile. Given that Rogers is set to own 37.5% of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, this is Canadian content, in a way. Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment owns quite a few sports channels, so Rogers wants to feature a prospective acquisition.

Hopefully, Rogers and Citytv build on their commitments to homegrown programming. It’s nice to see Rogers and Citytv muster a little more effort than usual, even if the overall strategy is “let’s buy a lot of American programming, and here’s our version of a popular reality show format.” I didn’t expect Citytv to announce any new shows, beyond The Bachelor Canada.

One niggling issue: no announcements regarding G4 Canada, or bio? What did they do, break Rogers Media’s priceless Ming vase, or something?

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Not an Industry Update – Of Todd and the Book of Pure Evil, and Picnicface

It’s upfront season now, both in the United States and Canada. Attention turns to which Canadian dramas and comedies survive into 2012-13. There are already surprising cancellations, such as SPACE dropping Todd and the Book of Pure Evil after its second season, though TBPE‘s producers wish to keep the show alive. The Comedy Network’s Picnicface is also among the cancelled, and Picnicface troupe members won’t take this cancellation lying down.

Todd and the Book of Pure Evil creator/showrunner Craig David Wallace recently admitted that the show’s SPACE ratings weren’t high enough for the channel to approve a third season. Its runs on MuchMusic and The Comedy Network, a run on American horror cable channel FEARnet, plus its DVD releases on both sides of the border, suggest that it still has a healthy audience. When Todd and the Book of Pure Evil‘s first season was rerun on The Comedy Network last summer, TBPE was that network’s top Canadian show.

Picnicface, another Bell Media cull, earned soft ratings in first run…but that might be due to The Comedy Network’s practice of reairing the same episode multiple times a week, as CanCon filler. On YouTube, videos from Picnicface‘s first season regularly earn 20,000 or more views. A couple have more than 100,000 views. Stupidly, those videos are geoblocked for non-Canadians.

The Canada Media Fund alloted Picnic Pictures Inc. $624,000 for Picnicface‘s thirteen-episode first season. (PDF) Even if the CMF money is a fraction of Picnicface‘s budget, it’s still a low-budget show. By comparison, the Canada Media Fund alloted $5,415,000 to Todd and the Book of Pure Evil‘s second season. (PDF) TBPE is the bigger risk, and is harder to defend on a purely financial level.

On the flip side, I can’t think of any current shows in TBPE‘s genre, adult-oriented horror-comedy set in a high school. TBPE arguably takes Buffy the Vampire Slayer‘s lead, yet TBPE is more rooted in horror conventions, metal, and being the anti-Degrassi. There’s almost nothing else like it in Canada. Bite’s The Cutting Room is a horror-comedy series, but comparing it to TBPE is like comparing apples and a lawnmower.

I think Bell Media underestimates the interest in Picnicface and Todd and the Book of Pure Evil. Canadian shows do fall through the cracks sometimes. One only needs to look at Combat Hospital‘s cancellation to figure that out – 1.5 million viewers in Canada, yet the show was done in by high costs, and a weak American showing on ABC. Luckily, some Canadian shows find life after death – Shaw Media/Showcase’s Endgame underperformed on that channel last year, and has since found a more receptive home on Hulu – enough that Hulu might commission its second season.

A sub-billion-dollar PBIT, on $3.7 billion in 2011 revenues, suggests that Canadian broadcasters are in decent shape. At the same time, killing shows like Todd and the Book of Pure Evil and Picnicface after one or two seasons does nothing for the Canadian television industry. It might not be obvious now, but these shows could be to the 2010s what Trailer Park Boys and Corner Gas are to the 2000s.

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Industry Update – CRTC Decisions April 16 – May 1, 2012

After the 2012 Toronto Screenwriting Conference on March 30 and April 1, 2012, I took a sabbatical from the Industry Update. In the past few weeks, the industry has roared into overdrive, especially when it comes to CRTC decisions. This update will focus solely on decisions made by CRTC between April 16 and May 1, 2012.

Continue reading Industry Update – CRTC Decisions April 16 – May 1, 2012

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