TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 339
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Link: “When in doubt, play insane.” An interview with Catherine O’Hara

From Rachel Syme of The New Yorker:

Link: “When in doubt, play insane.” An interview with Catherine O’Hara
“I’d found all these pictures of Daphne Guinness. Her wardrobe, it’s just so great and extreme. It’s strong and it’s armour, which is perfect when you’ve had your life ripped out from under you, like Moira, and you’re in this place that’s like the town you got out of earlier in life.” Continue reading.

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Links: Cardinal, Season 3

From Heather M. of The Televixen:

Link: Previewing Cardinal Season 3 with Billy Campbell
“As I first read the script, I was able to entirely see myself in the role. That’s not always the case, not even often the case. But with this role I felt it was me as soon as he started speaking on the page. Can’t say exactly why.” Continue reading.

From Tim Arsenault of The Chronicle Herald:

Link: Dartmouth actor, film composer Josh Cruddas lands Netflix roles
“I got to work with my good friend Billy Campbell. I had wanted to get on that show for a while and finally the right part came along so I was able to go up to North Bay and hang out with him and work on an amazing, amazing piece of television. I think it’s some of the best TV Canada has ever put out.” Continue reading.

From Debra Yeo of the Toronto Star:

Link: Director Daniel Grou found ‘dream cast’ in Cardinal’s Billy Campbell and Karine Vanasse
You’ve heard of method actors; how about a method director?

When Daniel Grou first signed on for the CTV detective drama Cardinal he asked the production team to find him an isolated house near a lake to live in during the shoot in Sudbury — like the one main character John Cardinal occupies. Continue reading.

From Bridget Liszewski of The TV Junkies:

Link: Cardinal’s Billy Campbell on the detective’s struggles in Season 3
“The closeness he had with Catherine has been amputated. He’ll be feeling all kinds of things and needing someone to lean on, while not wanting to burden Kelly. An impossible situation.” Continue reading.

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The search for Canada’s best amateur bakers begins as CBC announces the return of The Great Canadian Baking Show

From a media release:

Bakers, fire up your ovens! CBC today announced that hit culinary competition THE GREAT CANADIAN BAKING SHOW will return for a third season (8×60) as the public broadcaster kicks off a nationwide search for Canada’s best amateur bakers. Interested home bakers can apply online now at cbc.ca/greatcanadianbakingshow for the chance to participate in the upcoming season. Based on the hit British format and produced by Proper Television, Season 3 will begin production in Toronto this summer and will air on CBC and the free CBC Gem streaming service in the fall. Amateur bakers can apply online now until Sunday, March 10, 2019 at 11 p.m. ET.

Canadians had a big appetite for Season 2 of THE GREAT CANADIAN BAKING SHOW, which was CBC’s most-watched factual entertainment series during the 2017/18 broadcast season and reached 1.4 million viewers in Canada each week*. Fifty-eight-year-old software engineering consultant Andrei Godoroja from Vancouver, B.C. won the Season 2 Great Canadian Baking Show title and trophy, following a tight competition with finalists Megan Stasiewich of Leduc, Alberta, and Sachin Seth of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Baking fans can catch up on the first two seasons of the series on CBC Gem.

Based on the beloved British format, THE GREAT CANADIAN BAKING SHOW brings together 10 amateur bakers from across the country to compete in a series of themed culinary challenges that celebrate their diverse backgrounds, families and communities. Competitors on the homegrown series have the opportunity to go up against Canada’s best bakers, while also competing against themselves as they strive to achieve their personal best. Each episode features three rounds including the Signature Bake, the Technical Bake and the Show Stopper. After the bakes are tasted and critiqued, the judges decide who will become the week’s Star Baker and who will be sent home, with the final three bakers competing for the Great Canadian Baking Show title.

THE GREAT CANADIAN BAKING SHOW is produced by Proper Television in association with CBC and Love Productions.

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