TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 896
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Comments and queries for the week of May 13

Canada AM‘s Jeff Hutcheson announces retirement

Jeff, the very best to you in the next transition in your life. I retired two years ago, but before that, I woke up to the AM gang. Loved it, the laughs, the classy ways of all of you. Bev and Marci must feel like their brother is leaving. I’m trusting you that you aren’t hiking off to live with Kelly Ripa to replace Michael! KIDDING. Enjoy. —Beverley

One of the reasons I watch Canada AM is because of Jeff’s genuine character, sense of humour and all around likability. He gets my day off to a happy start. I am happiest when he, Bev and Marci are all there together—you can tell they have a wonderful relationship. He will definitely be missed, but who could deny him a well-deserved retirement? I wish him all the best and hope he’ll drop by Canada AM on Skype or in person, now and again. Happy everything, Jeff! Enjoy every minute in good health. —Sharon


Donnie steals the spotlight in Orphan Black

I think Kristian Bruun is spectacularly talented, just like Maslany, and is getting a chance to showcase it on this show. It’s so fun to watch more and more of this couple because they are such a spectacularly dysfunctional, want-to-look-perfect suburban couple. When I first saw the fertility clinic scene, I knew he was going to call her and they would do some role play over the phone. They are so into each other in these weird ways, she really gets off on his neediness … did you catch the admiring glance they threw each other when he said, “Clear, concise, and colour coded, well done.” I thought that was a kind of foreplay for them! Then when he said Air Italia, I thought, ‘Oh, they’re into accents?!!!!’ ROFLMAO. More serious aspects of show aside, this was just wonderful, as good or better than the money-in-the-bedroom scene. The two lead actors are probably letting improv dictate this chemistry, and the results are fantastic. You get plenty of literary references, both are college educated, they have adopted children of colour specifically. So now we can predict that with Donnie asking Helena to be understanding of his wife’s envy, that Helena will go out of her way to make Alison feel very included in her pregnancy. Hand on belly and everything. They better do this. It’s what you do for a sestra, innit?

I LOVE this show and the actors they’ve assembled are amazing (Jordan, too). I’m seriously thinking of writing my own weekly blog on this show and a few other semi-sci-fi (highly speculative fiction!) shows I love. I think we will get to see Donnie and Alison get to experience pregnancy through Helena—we saw an inkling of this when Donnie and Helena went to the ultrasound together—they both are giving each other something the other never had: families, and babies. How beautiful is this show on some cosmic level? Amidst all this ugly manipulation, for-profit-minded genetic tampering, and weird subcultures (bifurcated dicks and sister-kissing, no less), there is this amazing undercurrent of love, and of challenging of notions about what constitutes “kin.” This is what I believe this show is all about on an emotional level. And the biotech angle is just whipped cream on the cake … hey there is an idea for Donnie and Alison to explore! —Heather


Jennifer Valentyne exits Breakfast Television Toronto

I have no idea how some of you could talk about Jen’s Live Eye segments as if they were a waste of time. They made the show worth watching. She will be missed greatly by so many of us long time BT viewers for a reason: she was simply fantastic! Charming, funny, enthusiastic, full of energy, personable, beautiful and so on. Good luck Jennifer V. No, I will not be watching BT very much at all anymore. Idiotic decision by The Rogers Corp. to let her go. —Todd

I am so sad to hear that BT let Jen go. Well, no more BT and CityLine. Back to Canada AM. —Mary

 

Got a question or comment about Canadian TV? greg@tv-eh.com or via Twitter @tv_eh.

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Slasher reveals its killer

With Slasher‘s season finale airing next week, there are still a lot of unanswered questions lingering for the terrorized town of Waterbury.

We still don’t know who The Executioner is and why he’s killing everyone, except it has ties to Ariel’s disappearance. The latest victim, Chief Ian Vaughn, was revealed to have been keeping Ariel (and her son via Vaughn) captive in his basement and was burned alive in a coroner’s incinerator. (What a way to go.)

Super Channel teases Friday’s new episode, “In the Pride of His Face,” with the following logline: “Sarah learns that Dylan knew about her past before they met. Tom Winston escapes from prison, convinced that Sarah is going to be The Executioner’s final victim.”

We can do a little better than that, but we won’t spoil everything.

Slasher

Officer Sharma is freaked out
Sharma, who was strangled by The Executioner while he stood vigil in front of Sarah’s house earlier this season, makes a major discovery in the case that ties the suffocation deaths of the Vicker family to the present-day occurrences. A creepy memorial to the Vicker clan—and sketches of the six sins—results in one character revealing themselves to be the killer.

Flash back to 1988
No surprise that what viewers saw happen on Halloween night in 1988 back in Episode 1 wasn’t the whole story. Now that Tom has confessed to being her father, Sarah confronts him and demands to know why he murdered Rachel and Bryan. We learn there was another side to the married pair, one that affected Tom so much he turned to extreme violence.

Dylan’s secret comes out
We’ve known about Dylan’s obsession with Tom, but someone else finds out too. The results are devastating.

Slasher airs Fridays at 9 p.m. ET on Super Channel.

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W Network’s Masters of Flip Returns for Season 2

From a media release:

W Network’s #1 rated reality series Masters of Flip is back at it again with higher stakes, massive flips, and even bigger drama when Season 2 premieres Tuesday, June 7 at 10 p.m. ET/PT on W Network. The series follows Canadian born, Nashville-based house-flipping couple Kortney and Dave Wilson (CMT Canada’s Meet the Wilsons, Kortney & Dave: By Request) as they transform “Music City” one property at a time.

In the second season, Kortney and Dave continue to grow their business as they hunt for new properties, take big chances, and deal with the chaos that comes with major renovations. With tight timelines Kortney and Dave use their house-flipping expertise to transform each real estate disaster into a stunning family dream home. The rollercoaster of buying, renovating, and staging each house all hinges on that final sale as Kortney and Dave debate how big a risk to take in order to garner the most profit.

Masters of Flip is produced by Rhino Content and developed in association with W Network. The series is also part of a growing slate of properties for international distribution from Corus Entertainment.

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Season 3 of 19-2 returns June 20 to Bravo; renewed for Season 4

From a media release:

Bravo announced today that its award-winning drama 19-2 has been renewed for a fourth season, just weeks before Season 3 premieres on Monday, June 20 at 10 p.m. ET. Winner of three Canadian Screen Awards including Best Dramatic Series, the 10-episode, hour-long drama sees the return of CSA-nominated actors Adrian Holmes and Jared Keeso as beat partners Nick Barron and Ben Chartier. Together, the pair navigate the blurred-lines between Montréal politics and organized crime while the squad searches for redemption and begins to heal from Season 2’s traumatic events. Production on 19-2’s upcoming fourth season is expected to begin this fall in Montréal. Seasons 1 and 2 of 19-2 are available for streaming on CraveTV. Catch the dramatic 19-2 Season 3 launch promo here.

Season 3 of 19-2 sees a fragmented squad reeling from the revelation that Sergeant Julien Houle (CSA nominee Conrad Pla), once the glue that held them together, was a pedophile and a mole for organized crime. As Commander Gendron (CSA nominee Bruce Ramsay) scrambles to save his own career in the wake of this blight on the force, the patrollers strengthen their bond to help them through this shocking news. Meanwhile, Nick, still rocked by guilt over his involvement in a murder, seeks closure by trying to find out what happened to his missing cousin Kaz. Ben finds love and happiness with Nick’s sister, Amelie, but struggles with the family he thought he’d left behind.

Also returning this season are CSA nominee Laurence Leboeuf as scapegoated officer and Nick’s former lover, Audrey; CSA nominee Dan Petronijevic as angry beat-cop J.M.; CSA nominee Benz Antoine as struggling alcoholic, Officer Tyler Joseph; Mylène Dinh-Robic as Tyler’s former partner and now Acting Sergeant Béatrice; Bruce Ramsay as manipulative District Commander Marcel Gendron; and Alexander De Jordy as rookie cop Richard Dulac. CSA nominee Maxim Roy returns to guest star as Nick’s ex-wife Detective Isabelle Latendresse.

New characters recruited to 19-2 include Juliette Gosselin (Les Jeunes Loups) as manipulative teen foster child Martine who claims to have information on Kaz’s death; Krista Bridges (DURHAM COUNTY) as Inspector Elise Roberge stationed at 19 to wrap up the investigation of Sergeant Houle; and Joe Pingue (THE EXPANSE) as Charlie Figo, an old-school mobster who goads Nick into uncharted territory.

In the season premiere episode “Burn Pile” (Monday, June 20 at 10 p.m. ET), the squad waits for findings from a task force into Sergeant Houle’s case. Nick and Ben find themselves at the centre of the fractured squad, the only partnership that has endured. On the job, the squad face a horrific accident that puts multiple lives in danger.

19-2 is co-produced by Sphère Média Plus and Echo Media in association with Bell Media. Bell Media Production Executive is Michele McMahon. Tom Hastings is Director, Drama, Independent Production, Bell Media. Corrie Coe is Senior Vice-President, Independent Production, Bell Media. Tracey Pearce is Senior Vice-President, Specialty and Pay, Bell Media. Randy Lennox is President, Entertainment Production and Broadcasting, Bell Media.

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Andrea Higgins makes sweet music for Wynonna Earp and Heartland

Music is a huge part of a television show. Dramatic scenes have them, they’re a montage staple, and help launch an episode through the all-important opening theme. Andrea Higgins has been accenting Canadian TV moments in current shows like Wynonna Earp, Heartland, Killjoys, X Company and Murdoch Mysteries, and past programs in The Listener, Bomb Girls, Flashpoint and Durham County, finding the perfect tune to amp up the feels in your favourite programs.

We spoke to the head of music supervision at Arpix Media about her career working with on-staff composers who create original music and hunting down the perfect song for a scene.

How did you get into this gig?
Andrea Higgins: It’s been a journey. I’ve been at Arpix for almost 15 years, which is crazy. I listened to music growing up and I was in bands and I was obsessed with movies and TV and music. I was always kind of star-struck with the behind-the-scenes of the music industry and in high school thought, “I want to be an A&R person that scouts bands.” I’m from Hamilton, Ont., so I moved to Toronto and went to the Harris Institute, which is a recording arts school. There are two different sides to the school—the producing and engineering side and the music management side—and I took the management side and learned a lot about the industry, marketing and publishing.

andrea-higgins
Andrea Higgins. Image courtesy of Arpix Media.

I interned at some record companies and I hated it. It felt very corporate to me and I didn’t like the music they were pushing out into the world. I started hanging around film school kids, going to  movies and somehow discovered, “Oh, that’s a job!” The way I got into music growing up was via soundtracks and musicals and Tarantino soundtracks. I had an epiphany moment and decided to find the person that did that job and work for that guy. A week later, I was in this class called Music and Film, taught by this guy named Ron Proulx. We clicked instantly and I’ve been working with him for 15 years. I started out alphabetizing CDs and faxing things and making coffee. Then I started going to meetings and learning, through osmosis, how to negotiate deals with rights holders.

What I do now really all started with Heather Conkie. One of the first shows that I ever worked on was Dark Oracle. Heather and I hit it off instantly and were always in sync. I was very young, but she clearly saw something in me. So, when Heartland came along she said, ‘I want to do this with you.’

Walk me through the process you go through every week. With Heartland as an example, do you get all of the scripts?
Typically, we have our one staple song in the show, the end montage to kind of wrap it all up and that helps me get what the tone and the emotion is. Is it a sad ending? Is it a happy ending? Is someone breaking up or making up with someone else? Then I kind of pull some ideas for the emotional theme, but I’m a visual person. I need to see the way the camera is moving, the pacing of the scene. There are songs that are scripted, like Georgie is at the father-daughter dance and they are dancing to a song on-camera so they can film it. Or more recently, there was a scene with Lou and Mitch dancing and it was really important to Heather to have a song for filming. I sent her a couple of options that fit lyrically and tonally and it worked out.

Do you have a bunch of bands and their songs lined up for possible use? Are you always on YouTube or the radio, listening to music for use in shows?
It’s a mixture of things. I have several labels, publishers and managers sending me music and singer-songwriters sending me music every day. I dig through blogs, I’m a word-of-mouth person. There is so much music out there, you can’t know about everything. I’m also lucky enough to be invited to music festivals. I am also lucky enough to be invited to music festivals all around the world. I’ll hear something and I’ll make a quick note: “Heartland.”

Can someone get into the music industry by having their song featured on a TV show?
Absolutely. A lot of the music you’re hearing on these shows are unsigned artists. Some are signed, some are signed to indie labels, some have a publisher and some don’t. I think it’s an amazing way to at least get heard and be able to say they’ve had their song featured on Heartland. It’s amazing to see all of the feedback we get regarding the music on these shows.

Let’s switch gears and talk about Wynonna Earp. Who wrote the theme, “Tell That Devil”?
The song is by an artist named Jill Andrews. We had a conversation with Emily Andras and the producers. We wondered if we should get a big song, an indie artist cover a well-known song … we had all kinds of ideas. I’d been gathering a ton of music that felt right for the show early on and there was this one that I kept playing over and over and over. It was “Tell That Devil.” I had put together a playlist and I told my co-worker Kyle Merkley, “This is the one.” I sent them the playlist with an asterisk next to it. Emily loved it, the producers loved it and everyone on the crew responded to it. There was just something special about that one that grabbed all of us.

Who composes the instrumental music for Wynonna Earp?
It’s Robert Carli and Peter Chapman. We thought they’d be a really interesting pair because Rob has an orchestral, more traditional background, and Peter is kind of a young composer with a video game background. He worked on Durham County, which is dark and very sound design-y, with a lot of improvised sounds. We wondered what it would be like to pair them together. Emily wanted an orchestral score from the very beginning and wanted it to sound cool.

What are you working on now?
Right now it’s Wynonna Earp and Killjoys. Heartland is starting back up again, but I won’t dive back into that until summer when we start seeing some picture on that.

Wynonna Earp airs Mondays at 9 p.m. ET on CHCH. Killjoys returns for Season 2 on Friday, July 1, at 9 p.m. ET on Space. Heartland returns in the fall on CBC.

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