TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 1196
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

A weekend at The Toronto Screenwriting Conference

By Marsha Greene

After a jam-packed weekend at the Toronto Screenwriting Conference, I went home feeling totally stretched — my mind from the insightful panelists, my voice from greeting and meeting industry folks, and my stomach from Caplansky’s grilled cheese sandwiches.

If you’ve talked to me or follow me on Twitter, it’s no secret that I was most looking forward to seeing Mara Brock Akil at the conference. She did not disappoint. One of her many insights from the panel was this: own your authority. When she was the youngest person in the room, she owned it to be the authority on the voices of the young characters. She was raised by a single parent, and she owned her ability to speak to that experience. It’s great advice in general, and especially for young writers trying to find their place in the room. If you haven’t seen her newest BET show Being Mary Jane, you should— it’s a masterclass in owning your vision, and there’s nothing like it on television right now.

Day 1 also included “Crafting Mythic Stories with David. S. Goyer,” who delivered a fine-tuned presentation that was the perfect blend of instruction and personal reflection. He spoke about finding the universal truths in mythic stories that connect with the audience on a human level, even if your subject matter is super-human. Goyer is a total pro, and it doesn’t hurt that from the middle of the theatre he looked remarkably like Stanley Tucci.

I was disappointed to have missed Corey Mandell’s “Creating a Successful TV Series Engine” in the afternoon. Call it the gift and the curse of free coffee — I took a bathroom break and by the time I returned to the theatre it was full. But I did manage to get highlights from the magical TSC Twitter Elves, who diligently captured each panel in a series of 140-character posts.

“Checking In with Eugene and Dan Levy” was the perfect start for a sleepy Sunday morning. They took us through their journey of bringing Schitt’s Creek to the screen, and it was super fun hearing the more personal father-son moments, like when Eugene said to Dan re: the show, “This isn’t Girls, Daniel.”

Jeff Melvoin’s panel “Running the Show: Moving from Writer to Showrunner” managed to terrify us with the responsibilities of showrunners and delight us with the best use of clip art since the early 80s. I left it thinking, “You have to be crazy to want to do this job!” Luckily, Melvoin implied being crazy is a prerequisite.

Day 2 ended with the hilarious Katja Blichfeld and Ben Sinclair of High Maintenance, “The Greatest Show not on Television.” It was their first trip to Canada and they praised our politeness as a people (though I submit one ride on the TTC during rush hour would banish that opinion). While the success of their web series is probably not duplicable, they gave great insights on their collaboration with Vimeo and filmmaking on a budget.

All in all, it was a great weekend and I’m incredibly grateful to TV, eh? for the opportunity to attend the conference. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go find out what moisturizer Mara Brock Akil uses.

A graduate of CFC’s Bell Media Prime Time Television program, Marsha has a degree in Creative Writing from York University and was the recipient of the Brian Linehan Award for Outstanding Artistic Promise from Humber’s TV Writing and Producing program. Marsha has lent her skills to scripted and factual productions for Discovery, Food Network, Family Channel, Global and the award-winning documentary Chinee Girl. Most recently, Marsha worked as a story editor for Global’s medical drama Remedy, and as the interactive writer for Epitome’s new teen drama series Open Heart. 

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Review: Allen saves the day on Remedy

I’ve been a fan of Enrico Colantoni’s for a long time. I had the incredible luck of interviewing him when Veronica Mars first hit the small screen (I nervously called it “Victoria Mars” during our interview), then a couple of times during Flashpoint‘s run. He plays characters you can’t help but cheer for, get behind and support. I think that’s why it’s been so fun to watch him portray Allen on Remedy, especially this season.

I’m not sure if it was Remedy‘s showrunner, Greg Spottiswood, who deserves the credit, but demoting Allen to the emergency room was a masterstroke in storytelling. I referenced the long-running NBC medical drama ER in last week’s review and I’ll revisit it again by saying my favourite part of that show during the first season was seeing the ER through Dr. John Carter’s eyes. Now we’re getting that on Remedy with Allen.

“Blood and Guts,” written by Ellen Vanstone, spent a lot of Monday’s episode tracking Allen as he went through stages I’m sure all doctors do. He was viewed as a hero by the staff when he massaged the heart of a gunshot victim, got a kick to the ego when he accidentally put his finger (gulp!) through the guy’s heart, then was bucked back up again and feeling pretty good about life when the man made it through surgery. Because I care so much about Allen, I’m right there with him, laughing when his shoes get sprayed with puke, or worrying when he’s stressed over a mistake.

Weirdly, I just didn’t connect with Zoe’s storyline this week. It’s not that I don’t care about Zoe—I think she’s great for Griff and her back story makes my heart ache—but I wasn’t emotionally invested in her struggle over whether to help Leona or not. Maybe it’s just me, and I’d love it if readers let me know how they feel.

As for Griff, I couldn’t be any more pissed off at him right now. Back on drugs, he just couldn’t help but meddle in the life of Tommy because of his own issues with Allen. The fact he got in the father’s face was so over-the-top I wonder if that will come back to haunt him. I get that Griff is taking pills to numb the pain he’s feeling from Jayne’s death but come on man, get it together!

Finally, we all knew this was coming, didn’t we?

Remedy2

Yep, we did.

Notes and quotes

  • Enrico Colantoni is known most recently for his dramatic television work, but he’s got comic chops too. That short scene of him carrying the plant had me giggling like a fool.
  • “You gonna eat that or put it under your pillow?” Nice zinger from Sandy.
  • Kudos to the effects folks who made that human chest look so realistic, complete with spraying blood.
  • Those numbered coffee room mugs are cool. Anyone know where I can get some?

Remedy airs Mondays at 9 p.m. ET/PT on Global.

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Rookie Blue returns May 21 to Global

From a media release:

Global announces premiere of Rookie Blue Season 6

Global fights winter blues by packing plenty of heat with the world premiere of homegrown hit Rookie Blue starting May 21 – 9 pm ET/PT. Season 5 ended with two bombs being dropped on the officers of 15 Division – the explosion in the evidence room, and the revelation that Sam’s ex-girlfriend Marlo is pregnant with Sam’s baby. Season 6 promises to take the raucous rollercoaster ride to new heights with nail-biting storylines, curveballs abound and a heavy dose of romance and heartbreak.

ROOKIE BLUE, SEASON 6 – Thursday, May 21 at 9 pm ET/PT
Last season the officers at 15 Division unearthed their sins of the past – dug through it, aired it out, and paved the way to move forward. They have all grown and are more resilient than ever. This season, they will have to learn to embrace living in the gray areas, because life is complicated and the best laid plans are just that. But sometimes it’s the unpredictable things life throws our way that turn out to be exactly what we need. Season 5 saw an average weekly audience of 1.5M (2+), growing seven percent (2+) and nine percent (A18-49) over Season 4.

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Link: Emergency Latest Canadian Reality Outing

From James Bawden:

Emergency Latest Canadian Reality Outing
Don’t get me wrong –there are some reality shows I wouldn’t miss: Dog The Bounty Hunter, Pawn Stars, Storage Wars. And a few even are Canadian or at least Love It Or List It (Hillary Clinton’s favorite show) was until it returned last week with episodes made south of the border. The latest Canadian entry is the finely made Emergency which premieres Thursday April 16 at 9. It has nothing to do with the old fictional series Emergency –I remember visiting the set of that one to interview Julie London. Continue reading.

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Link: CanCon is up Schitt’s Creek without a paddle

From Kerrie-Ann Bernard of the Hamilton Spectator:

CanCon is up Schitt’s Creek without a paddle
CBC’s latest prime-time offering, Schitt’s Creek is the embodiment of all that is wrong with current Canadian content regulations (commonly referred to as CanCon regulations). While the show is technically Canadian, starring as it does two of Canada’s most iconic comedians (Eugene Levy and Catherine O’Hara), the program conscientiously avoids having any identifiably Canadian characteristics. In an attempt to woo international program sales and generate much-needed income for the CBC, Schitt’s Creek has eschewed Canadianness for blandness. Continue reading.

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