TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 1166
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

New episodes of Sunnyside in production

From a media release:

Welcome Back to the Sunnyside of Life!

Original sketch-comedy series Sunnyside, created by award-winning comedy writers Gary Pearson (This Hour Has 22 Minutes, The Ron James Show, MADtv) and Dan Redican (The Kids in the Hall, The Jenny McCarthy Show, Puppets Who Kill), is shooting new shows. Production on seven half-hour episodes began May 14 in Winnipeg and will run until June 23, completing a full 13-episode first season to air this fall on City.

Sunnyside is co-produced by Toronto-based Counterfeit Pictures and Winnipeg-based Buffalo Gal Pictures. It stars an all-Canadian ensemble cast made up of the industry’s brightest and hottest comedic talents: Kathleen Phillips, Pat Thornton, Alice Moran, Kevin Vidal, Rob Norman and Patrice Goodman. It is set in Sunnyside – a not-so-typical fictional neighbourhood where anything can happen, and almost always does.

Anton Leo, Shane Corkery and Dan Bennett from Counterfeit Pictures and Phyllis Laing from Buffalo Gal Pictures serve as Executive Producers, Rhonda Baker from Buffalo Gal Pictures as Producer, and Paula J. Smith as Supervising Producer. For Rogers, Nataline Rodrigues is Director of Original Programming, and Hayden Mindell is Vice President of Television Programming & Content. Sunnyside is produced with the participation of Manitoba Film and Music and the Rogers Cable Network Fund.

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Tonight: Bahama Blue

Bahama Blue, Love Nature – “The Sand Flats”
Beyond the iconic and pristine white beaches of the Bahamas, the Sand Flats are home to fierce Iguanas, camouflaging stingrays, and the beautiful bottlenose dolphin. All of this sand is the surprising waste product produced by resident parrotfish nibbling on coral, producing one tonne of sand per fish every year. Each species relies on the surprising abundance in the sand flats both onshore and off. Green sea turtles spend most of their lives grazing on the sea grasses of the sand flats. Stingrays use incredible electro sensitivity to locate crustaceans hidden away in the sand. The creatures of the sand flats have unique skills for turning seemingly desert conditions, in to an advantage.

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Link: Netflix’s ‘Between’ Puts a Polite Damper on Growing Old

From Mike Hale of The New York Times:

Netflix’s ‘Between’ Puts a Polite Damper on Growing Old
Not all Netflix series are created equal. “Between,” a Netflix original whose six-episode first season begins appearing weekly on this video-streaming site on Thursday, is a Canadian science-fiction series — Netflix money, north-of-the-border talent and formulas. So we’re talking about something a lot closer to the Syfy channel — home of Canadian shows like “Bitten,” “Lost Girl” and “Continuum” — than to “Daredevil” or “Orange Is the New Black.” Continue reading.

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Dark Matter Exerts Its Gravitational Pull, June 12 on Space

From a media release:

Space takes its rightful place in the far reaches of the galaxy with the premiere of Canadian series, DARK MATTER,  Friday, June 12 at 10 p.m. ET.  Produced by Prodigy Pictures and created by Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie, the one-hour series shot in Toronto follows the crew of a derelict spaceship who awaken from stasis, with no memories of who they are or how they got on board. Facing threats at every turn, they have to work together to survive a voyage charged with vengeance, betrayal, and hidden secrets. DARK MATTER is created by Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie, the team behind the Dark Matter graphic novel and the fan-favourite STARGATE franchise.

DARK MATTER’s crew are One (Marc Bendavid, BITTEN), the charming, moral centre of the crew; Two (Melissa O’Neil, Broadway’s Les Misérables), the tough and determined leader of the group; Three (Anthony Lemke, 19-2), the mercenary who looks out for only himself; the calmly ruthless and stoic Four (Alex Mallari Jr., Robocop); Five (Jodelle Ferland, The Cabin in the Woods), the team’s youngest member with a skill for mechanics and a mysterious ability; the low-key Six (Roger Cross, MOTIVE), a man of integrity; and The Android (Zoie Palmer, LOST GIRL), an outsider among the ship’s human passengers yet an indispensable member who possesses control over the ship’s systems.

In the premiere episode of DARK MATTER (Friday, June 12 at 10 p.m. ET), the crew searches for answers leading them to a rebellious, off-world mining colony and a shocking revelation. Episode 2 of DARK MATTER (Friday, June 19 at 10 p.m. ET) follows the debut of Space original action adventure series, KILLJOYS, at 9 p.m. ET.

Developed by Prodigy Pictures in association with Space, executive producers for DARK MATTER are Jay Firestone (LOST GIRL), creators Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie, and Vanessa Piazza (LOST GIRL).

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Picking the best of the West

Originally published in Reel West Magazine‘s 30th anniversary issue:

Choosing the best TV show to come out of Western Canada in the last 30 years is almost as hard as figuring out whether Nick or Relic was my favourite beachcomber. I loved them for such different and opposing reasons.

And that is the obvious nostalgia winner, if I’m going to make a choice: I spent more time with The Beachcombers as a kid than I did with most of my extended family. Though it was not the Canada I knew as a land-locked Edmontonian, I recognized how unusual it was to see my own country represented onscreen in something other than a Hinterland Who’s Who segment. The Beachcombers aired for about 567 years, give or take, but I haven’t seen it in decades, meaning it might not hold up as truly the best choice.

There’s the “everyone else loved it” choice in Corner Gas. Hugely popular, hugely influential, it just wasn’t my cup of joe. Canadian networks are still trying to replicate its success. A movie was enthusiastically crowdfunded and attracted a huge audience. The show is worthy to be someone’s choice for best of the west – just not mine. Call me a jackass if you will, Oscar.

My “think outside CanCon” choice would be The X-Files, The Vancouver Years. I ignored the first couple of seasons thinking it was a reality show (seriously), then binge-watched it before binge-watching was cool … and had the nightmares to show for it. I bailed when the later seasons disintegrated into a pile of convoluted conspiracy, but the mostly-monster-of-the-week seasons remain a favourite today. Except “Home.” I don’t need those kind of nightmares again.

APTN’s Blackstone would be my socially conscious choice. It’s The Wire of Canada, equally relegated to a cult audience – which in Canada means a cult of a cult audience — and equally willing to delve into complex socio-political issues surrounding a community. It’s not as ponderous as that sentence made it sound, but it’s not light viewing either, and I find myself needing to be in the right frame of mind to settle in with a season. So picking it as the best of the lot would also be the pretentious, hypocritical choice.

A modern family-friendly choice would be the long-running Sunday stalwart Heartland, but while it reminds me of my younger days of obsessing over Anne of Green Gables and slightly less young days of looking in on Road to Avonlea for the Lucy Maud Montgomery completism, I’m not family-friendly enough as an adult to really enjoy it.

And then there’s the right choice: SCTV. I can hear you now – does that really qualify as a Western Canadian show, when most seasons were produced in Ontario? As a born and bred Edmontonian, where you can take an SCTV shooting location walking tour, I can definitively say yes. Just as Gretzky will always be ours, so too will SCTV. Argue with me and I’ll send Dave Semenko after you.

The series helped define Canada’s sketch comedy identity in ways that are obvious even today. Kids in the Hall, This Hour Has 22 Minutes, Rick Mercer, even this season’s Sunnyside – does anyone working in sketch comedy not owe a debt to the shenanigans of the SCTV gang? How can I, someone who runs a website on Canadian content called “TV, eh?”, not owe a debt to a series that gave us Bob and Doug and “eh?”, the mockery of Canadian content.

It helped define a sense of humour for at least a generation. My brother and I – not having a video recorder – would create our own radio station using a tape recorder and our best attempt to capture some of the SCTV spirit. Those tapes didn’t survive for long, but I don’t think the SCTV writers would have been quaking in their boots at the competition.

It made household names out of people who are still household names 30 years later. Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara are draw enough that CBC’s Schitt’s Creek premiered to 1.4 million viewers – a reflection of their star power that the series itself couldn’t hold on to. Andrea Martin came back to host the Canadian Screen Awards broadcast ceremony, forever Canadian to Canadians though she’s actually American by birth and citizenship. Martin Short, John Candy, Dave Thomas, Rick Moranis, Harold Ramis, Joe Flaherty – whether they were born here or not, this cast will always be our people.

And so many of the cast of this low-budget Canadian show became prominent figures in US entertainment – always a favoured trajectory for us approval-seeking Canucks. So when naming a best show of Western Canada – a fool’s errand – what better than a show that unites east and west, north and south, and irreverently tells us all to take off, eh?

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