All posts by Diane Wild

Diane is the founder of TV, eh? She loves books, movies, TV, science, space, traveling, theatre, art, cats, and drinking multiple beverages at the same time.

Steph Song finds Blood and Water in her bones

Blood_Water2

OMNI isn’t a network I look to for scripted dramas. In fact, it’s not generally a network I look to at all.  But with tonight’s premiere of Blood and Water, the multicultural network is suddenly home to one of the most intriguing Canadian series on air.

A half hour, eight-part procedural, Blood and Water stars Steph Song as Detective Jo Bradley leading her first case, the murder of a man from a prominent Chinese-Canadian family, immediately following her diagnosis of uterine cancer. While her boss admonishes her to slow down on the investigation, her doctor encourages her to quickly make a decision between chemo and a hysterectomy. Full of her own doubts, she faces the second-guessing of her resentful more senior partner, played by Peter Outerbridge.

Drawn in by the premise, flawed characters and quiet intensity, Song jumped on a plane from Australia where she’s been living with her husband and three-year-old daughter back to Vancouver which has been her home through Dragon Boys, Everything’s Gone Green and my personal favourite, jPod.

Born in Malaysia and raised in Canada, when Song was 14 her mother decided she couldn’t take the Saskatoon winters anymore. Two weeks later the family was on a plane to Australia.

Early in her career, particularly when she moved to Los Angeles, Song saw more Asian caricatures  in the roles on offer — the bad guys, the dim sum waitress, the request to put on an accent. “That’s not me,” she says. “But now doors are opening and the industry is getting more diverse.”

Much is made of the fact that Blood and Water is a trilingual series — English, Mandarin and Cantonese — but the premiere sets up the initial action and characters in English and there’s nothing jarring to non-Chinese speakers about the eventual subtitles. Plus an audience used to sampling Scandinavian noir and the like on Netflix are sure to be less subtitle-phobic than the olden days of TV (circa 1995).

The multilingualism of her current show isn’t a gimmick, either. It’s a reflection of the Vancouver I see all around me and a way in to these characters. Bradley, for example, understands but does not reply to characters addressing her in Chinese. Though put in charge of the high-profile case for optics, as her last name suggests she was adopted by non-Chinese parents.

Song points out that her character is an outsider to both cultures. Adding to her isolation: because her diagnosis means she won’t be able to have children, her lineage stops with her. And because she’s adopted, her only connection to her lineage would be to trace it backward.

Like her character, Song is no stranger to juggling different cultures, and calls both Canada and this type of meaty role “close to my bones.”  Regardless of language or ethnicity, “we’re all fighting our own battles, and I think this show will appeal to a wide demographic.”

Blood and Water airs Sundays on OMNI.

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Link: With a new government, it’s time for a clear-out in Canadian TV

From John Doyle in the Globe and Mail:

With a new government, it’s time for a clear-out in Canadian TV
This column takes note of the epic shift in our nation and sees it as the occasion for a complete changing of the guard in the Canadian TV racket. Things change, things come to an end. It’s time for a clear-out, now that PoH’s reign has begun. Continue reading.

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Link: The Romeo Section’s Andrew Airlie talks bromance with Chris Haddock

From Melissa Hank of Postmedia:

The Romeo Section’s Andrew Airlie talks bromance with Chris Haddock
Andrew Airlie might play a spy mastermind on TV, but he says he’d fall apart if he had to perform any covert shenanigans in real life. “When I was at University of Toronto, I sat the diplomatic test before I went into my master’s degree. I got an interview with a fledgling CSIS, but CSIS wasn’t very interested in me when I was in my intellectual prime — however short that window was,” he says with a laugh. Continue reading.

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W5 airs interview with Justin Trudeau on October 24

From a media release:

W5 Delivers Exclusive Interview with Prime Minister-Designate Justin Trudeau, October 24 on CTV

CTV announced today that Chief Anchor and Senior Editor Lisa LaFlamme will deliver to W5 audiences an exclusive interview with Prime Minister-Designate Justin Trudeau, just days after he led the Liberal Party to an historic majority win in Canada’s 2015 Federal Election. Airing Saturday, Oct. 24 at 7 p.m. ET/PT on CTV, CTV GO, and CTVNews.ca, W5’s MR. PRIME MINISTER offers Canadians an exclusive, up-close, post-election campaign glimpse at the country’s Prime Minister-Designate in his first one-on-one interview since being elected earlier this week. From how and why he won the election, to what Canadians can expect in the days, months, and years to come, LaFlamme guides a candid conversation with the country’s next Prime Minister.

In the second story of the evening, W5 reporter Tom Kennedy delivers EMOTIONAL RESCUE, an investigation into Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) in adolescents – a particularly debilitating and often dangerous psychiatric condition which has gained recognition only in recent decades. Characterized by mood swings with little or no apparent reason, BPD can be deadly as those afflicted may take their own lives. Kennedy speaks to families, whose children took their own lives, and who wonder if an earlier diagnosis of the disorder would have saved them. W5 reveals that doctors are often reluctant to diagnose the disorder or misdiagnose it, with potentially deadly consequences.

Last Saturday’s broadcast made W5 the most-watched non-sports program in primetime when it featured an investigation into a Calgary car dealership consignment operation and inaction by the auto sales regulator in Alberta, and provided an inspirational look at Canadian charity Three To Be.

In addition to Saturdays at 7 p.m. ET/PT on CTV, W5 airs Saturdays at 10 p.m. ET and Sundays at 5 p.m. ET on CTV Two, and at 7 p.m. ET on CTV News Channel. W5 can also be seen on Investigation Discovery on Tuesdays at 11 p.m. ET, and Wednesdays at 12 noon ET; on demand at CTVNews.ca/W5, on the CTV NEWS GO app, the CTV Mobile channel on Bell Mobile TV, and through video on demand partners, such as Bell Fibe TV (visit CTV.ca for local listings).

Source: Numeris (BBM Canada), Oct 17, 2015 – Live + Playback 4 days.

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Mohawk Girls returns October 27 on APTN

From a media release:

Mohawk Girls Season Three Debuts Tuesday, October 27 – 9 p.m. Exclusively on APTN

APTN’s (Aboriginal Peoples Television Network) critically-acclaimed and much-loved dramedy Mohawk Girls returns for season three. Our four leading ladies deal with wild situations and unexpected choices as they continue to define what it is to be a modern-day Mohawk woman – not that any of them can agree on what that means. And their families and friends only make matters worse.

In season three, Mohawk Girls will lead the audience further into Mohawk culture, as the girls visit the longhouse and learn ancestral methods of survival while navigating the oh-so-complicated dating world. Sex, romance, tradition: Mohawk Girls celebrates friendship while never shying away from the complexities of life on the rez.

Filmed and set in Montreal and the Kahnawake Mohawk Territory, the six-episode, third season of the half-hour dramedy premieres Tuesday, October 27 with back-to-back episodes airing weekly on APTN East and APTN HD at 9 p.m. ET, and on APTN West at 9 p.m.

Viewers may also delve into the world of Mohawk Girls via the interactive website, with web-exclusive behind-the-scenes videos, a quiz app and entertaining graphic content. The devoted online community of the series can connect via Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Tumblr.

This season Bailey (Jenny Pudavick) continues on her quest to become the “perfect” Mohawk and discovers a side of herself no one saw coming. Caitlin (Heather White), still having her life ruled by bad choices and bad boy Butterhead (Meegwun Fairbrother), takes a hold of her own destiny. After her embarrassing meltdown at Lollipop’s (Devery Jacobs) wedding, perfectionist Zoe (Brittany Leborgne) spins headlong down the rabbit hole of kinky sex. Ever the fish-out-of-water, Anna (Maika Harper) has found love with Mohawk heartthrob Thunder (Kyle Nobess), but will she ever truly belong?

Returning as the girls’ friends, foes and family members: Rachelle White Wind (Dream Big, Moccasin Flats), Glen Gould (Da Vinci’s City Hall), Tantoo Cardinal (Dances with Wolves, Legends of the Fall) and Alain Chanoine (The Amazing Race Canada).

The first season of Mohawk Girls received positive reviews from major national media outlets, and won several awards, including a Golden Sheaf Award in the Comedy category at the Yorkton Film Festival, the APTN Award at the Festival Présence Autochtone (Montreal First Peoples’ Festival) and a nomination for Best Sitcom at the Banff Rockie Awards.

Mohawk Girls is created and executive produced by Tracey Deer and Cynthia Knight; Tracey Deer directs the episodes and Cynthia Knight is the head writer. The series is produced by Rezolution Pictures’ Catherine Bainbridge, Christina Fon and Linda Ludwick, and executive produced by Catherine Bainbridge, Christina Fon, Linda Ludwick and Ernest Webb. Innovate By Day is the Digital Media Producer and is creating the second-screen experience content on the LVL platform, Purple. Monika Ille is the Executive Director, Programming and Scheduling for APTN. The show is represented by US distributor GRB for worldwide sales representation and has recently been licensed to SBS network in Australia.

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