Everything about Small Achievable Goals, eh?

Links: Small Achievable Goals, Season 1

From Patricia Karounos of Elle Canada:

Link: CBC’s Small Achievable Goals Is The Menopause Comedy You’ve Been Waiting For

The first thing I do during my interview with Meredith MacNeill and Jennifer Whalen, the creators and stars of new CBC comedy Small Achievable Goals, is bring up my mom. Continue reading.

From Sarah Liss of Toronto Life:

Link: Lady Parts

There’s something cartoonishly indulgent about meeting for oysters and prosecco at noon on a Thursday, but when I asked Meredith MacNeill and Jennifer Whalen to suggest an activity for our first interview, this was their pick. Continue reading.

From Matthew Simpson of That Shelf:

Link: Small Achievable Goals Review

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Two coworkers, one a little uptight and by the book and the other perhaps a little too loose for their own good, have their fates and jobs intertwined by happenstance. Then, hilarity—with a dash of honesty and vulnerability—ensues. Continue reading.

From Debra Yeo of The Kit:

Link: The New Show Small Achievable Goals Makes The Torments of Menopause Funny

Meredith MacNeill and her friend Jennifer Whalen were together writing their new TV comedy about two menopausal women when MacNeill felt the prickling, burning sensation of her first hot flash. Continue reading.

From Jen Zoratti of the Winnipeg Free Press:

Link: Hot takes on hot flashes

“There’s no Are You There, God? It’s Me, Menopause.” That’s an observation Jennifer Whalen’s character makes to Meredith MacNeill’s in the first episode of Small Achievable Goals, their new coming-of-middle-age comedy about menopause as experienced by two very different women. Continue reading.

From Alex Nino Gheciu of the Canadian Press:

Link: ‘Baroness von Sketch’ alums explore ‘the gift of menopause’ in new CBC comedy

Jennifer Whalen wasn’t quite prepared for the intensity of menopause. Continue reading.

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CBC’s Small Achievable Goals and Son of a Critch embrace female stories

Howie Mandel has a joke/observation he told years ago that has stuck with me. In it, he is talking about being out on the town with his wife, who is dressed immaculately, interacting with guests and having fun. All this, he says, while she is menstruating.

“If we were the race that was menstruating, we wouldn’t go anywhere,” Mandel opines. “There would be no nights out. Your buddy could call you, ‘Do you want to come over for a beer?’ ‘No.’ ‘No? Why not?’ ‘Because my crotch is bleeding!'”

I couldn’t help but reflect on Mandel’s remarks while I watched the first episode of Small Achievable Goals because it plays a major part in world-building and character development.

Airing Tuesdays at 9 p.m. on CBC and streaming on CBC Gem, Small Achievable Goals follows the adventures of Julie (Jennifer Whalen, top left) and Kris (Meredith MacNeill, top right), two women trying to navigate different stages of menopause. When they’re forced together to produce a podcast, Kris and Julie help each other through workplace challenges and office politics, dating disasters and relationship drama, health concerns and parenting woes. The project reunites co-creators Whalen and McNeill, who CBC viewers last saw on the award-winning Baroness Von Sketch Show. Whalen recalls how the pandemic caused her to reflect on her own menopause experiences and that a TV show could be made around it.

“I started to realize that some of my existential crisis was not actually just the pandemic,” she says. “Maybe I was in some stage of [menopause] and I realized that I knew nothing about it and what I did know was relentlessly bleak. I thought, ‘I can really use a laugh about this. I’m sure other people could.'”

The result? A series that is hilarious, shocking and touching. The first episode features Kris experiencing sudden, heavy perimenopause bleeding moments before she’s to participate in a photo shoot to promote her podcast … while wearing white. Kris’ emotions are already heightened thanks to learning a younger woman will be her podcast co-host (to pull in a younger audience, she is told), and furtively asking for help securing a tampon. The scene’s final, bloody conclusion may be shocking for some, but it’s about time the plight of half the population was shown on-screen. So too of Julia’s experience in that first episode, dealing with menopause hot flashes as she’s told she has, once again, been passed over for the top producer gig in favour of someone younger and, it should be said, male. What took it so long for this kind of storytelling to be shown?

“I think it is a function of our patriarchal society that it does feel like menopause is this dividing line that if you’re no longer fertile, you’re no longer a value to our society,” Whalen says. “And I think that a lot of people didn’t want to talk about it because you have a lot to lose by talking about it publicly.”

Claire Rankin as Mary on Son of a Critch

Ironically, CBC’s Son of a Critch is exploring a similar storyline. Season 4 of the veteran comedy, airing Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m. on CBC and CBC Gem, and based on Mark Critch’s award-winning, best-selling memoir about growing up in Newfoundland, is all about pursuing one’s passion. And for the character of Mary (Claire Rankin), that means entering a new stage in her life.

With sons Mark (Benjamin Evan Ainsworth) and Mike Jr. (Colton Gobbo) older and relying less on her, Mary is experiencing a loss of identity. Is she still a mother? Yes, of course. But what else? Upcoming storylines follow Mary as she goes back to school—igniting her passion for a possible career—and experiencing her first steps into menopause. The growth of Mary’s character came at the suggestion of Rankin herself.

“After the first season, Mark basically came to me and said, ‘You know, if you have any ideas please sort them out,'” Rankin says. “[I said] she’s going to need a menopause story, something that actually tells that journey.”

And, like Small Achievable Goals, Son of a Critch explores ageism through Mary’s eyes. An ego-boosting trip to have her pictures taken at a Glamour Shot-esque mall kiosk gets the wrong reaction from husband Mike (Critch) and her first college class results in trepidation until she’s called upon by the teacher.

“There’s still this unattainable standard that we’re somehow supposed to constantly be striving for in the sense that we even created a term ‘aging gracefully,'” Rankin says. “Do we use that for men? No. Guys are just allowed to age. They’re allowed to look rugged and wrinkles are kind of sexy in an older man, and so is gray hair”

“And yet we are somehow supposed to maintain this bizarre sense of looking 25 when we’re in our 50s.”

Son of a Critch airs Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m. on CBC and CBC Gem.

Small Achievable Goals airs Tuesdays at 9 p.m. on CBC and CBC Gem.

Images courtesy of CBC.

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CBC and Sphere Media start production on menopause comedy Small Achievable Goals from Meredith MacNeill and Jennifer Whalen

From a media release:

CBC and Sphere Media today announced that production is underway on new original comedy series SMALL ACHIEVABLE GOALS (8×30), co-created by and starring Meredith MacNeill and Jennifer Whalen. The series, which is currently filming in Toronto and Hamilton, will premiere in winter 2025 on CBC and CBC Gem. 

SMALL ACHIEVABLE GOALS follows odd couple Julie (Whalen) and Kris (MacNeill), as they are thrust together to produce a podcast while grappling with “the change” – aka menopause. The duo embark on a journey of transformation, helping each other through workplace challenges and office politics, dating and relationship drama, and some serious health concerns. Like a phoenix rising from the ashes, they will be reborn as sexy, silver-haired, wizard women! Or at least wiser, less sweaty versions of themselves. 

“We want to make a joyful comedy about menopause because in this time of life we could all use a laugh,” said Whalen. “For those of us going through it, we see you. For everyone else, enjoy the ride!”

“Making something hot and bloody with Sphere and the CBC — everyone’s revved up to take it all the way home,” said MacNeill. “Normally one would say that we stand behind the message, but the message is so strong, we believe it stands behind us.”

“This series is at times hilarious, surprising, and revealing as it looks at a very normal part of aging that affects half the population but is still spoken about in hushed tones,” said Trish Williams, Executive Director, Scripted Content, CBC. “This workplace sitcom is bound to become a conversation starter as audiences relate – and react – to the experiences of Kris and Julie as they discover what it means to experience menopause.”

“We’re so thrilled to be working with the talented Jennifer and Meredith, and with CBC on this fresh, funny look at menopause and midlife,” said Elise Cousineau, Executive Producer at Sphere Media. “It’s hilarious, highly relatable, and we’re excited to be a part of bringing it to the screen.”

A CBC Original Series, SMALL ACHIEVABLE GOALS is produced by Sphere Media. The series is created by Meredith MacNeill and Jennifer Whalen (Baroness von Sketch Show), who also serve as Executive Producers alongside Stacy Traub, and Sphere Media’s Jennifer Kawaja, Bruno Dubé and Elise Cousineau. 

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