Everything about Uncategorized, eh?

Upcoming episode: October 1970, CBC, Nov. 30

From CBC:

Thursday, November 30, 2006, 9:00 p.m.
Eps 8

The eight-hour mini-series October 1970 is a detective thriller, a hostage drama and a political nail-biter. On October 5, 1970, the political landscape of Canada was changed forever when terrorists from the Front de iberation du Québec (FLQ) kidnapped British diplomat James Cross from his Montreal residence. Five days later, another FLQ cell snatched Pierre Laporte, Québec’s Minister of Labour.

y October 17th, Laporte had been killed, the police were overwhelmed, the city was in chaos, and the army, in full battle gear, patrolled the streets. Ottawa invoked The War Measures Act suspending civil liberties in Canada.

Eps 8 – The police raid their farmhouse hideout and capture the Chenier Cell.
The October Crisis is over. Detective Giguère (Patrick Labbé) goes back to his paperwork and his real life. (Described Video)

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In the news: CRTC hearings

Usually I stick to news about Canadian TV programs here on TV, Eh?, not the Canadian TV industry, but with the CRTC hearings this week, there’s a lot of discussion that will affect how many Canadian TV programs we’ll have to talk about in the future.

From CBC via Dead Things on Sticks:

Actors, broadcasters and producers are all in Ottawa for hearings this week in front of the CRTC. The broadcasters are looking for more money, more flexibility and the right to air as many commercials as they choose. Meanwhile the artists and people who make the shows say it’s high time the broadcaster started giving Canadian stories or drama, a decent swath of air time! In 1999 the CRTC changed the rules … the broadcasters didn’t have to make Canadian dramas, instead cheap reality-based shows (like ET Canada) flooded the airwaves. The result: broadcasters spend $401 million on US shows, and a paltry $86 million on Canadian. Now maybe if Canadian shows were better they’d spend more … and maybe if they spent some more money the shows would be better. It’s a tricky problem, and to share some inside knowledge we’ve booked guest Denis McGrath, screenwriter and outspoken TV critic.

That will be on various CBC radio shows between 3-6 p.m. ET. See Denis McGrath’s post on 10 Things that Would Make Canadian TV Better for a taste of the “outspoken TV critic.”

More on the CRTC hearings:

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