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Edgy Soho wins five Tellys

Soho staffers are walking with their heads just a little higher after taking home five awards at the Tellys, the Ohio-based showcase for non-network and cable commercials.
The Toronto post-production and graphics studio won one statuette for an on-air design package for Turner South in Atlanta, one for a title sequence for a Broadcast Design Association show, and three for a pair of spots for Humpty Dumpty snacks.

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Yokomites invade YTV

The Yokomites are coming! From Feb. 26 to March 16, YTV will unleash these animated glowing green bugs that will attack the kids network’s show credits and on-air promotions. YTV even secured permission to have the Yokomites storm its programs, and…

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At Tango, design comes first

In the world of broadcast design, Toronto-based Tango Media Group puts the emphasis on talent….

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Front eyes the world

Front thinks beyond national borders, which is what sets it apart from the competition. "2001 is the year we’re ready to take on the world," proclaims Jeff Rustia, president and head of creative at the Toronto-based design and production house….

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A Big hit in the U.S.

Big Studios, formerly Big Animation, has amassed an impressive array of design credits for U.S. networks and shows including ABC News, ABC’s Wide World of Sports, Good Morning America, HBO Boxing, ESPN and MTV. The Toronto 2D and 3D studio also…

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Web tie-in Netting viewers for shows

One reality show using the Internet to best advantage is Pioneer Quest.
The current site for Pioneer Quest – which puts two couples in the shoes of pioneers on the Manitoba prairie and tracks them for a year – was launched to coincide with the show’s initial air date in November 2000. Features and functions have been phased in since, with input from Winnipeg prodco Credo Entertainment and broadcaster Alliance Atlantis as well as Web company Ecentricarts.

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Inconspicuous technology key to reality shows

Technology is integral to the presentation of reality programming, which producers maintain is different from the ‘reality’ game shows hogging so much limelight.
A child can’t seem to sleep through the night and wanders around the house, driving his parents to distraction. It looks like a case for Dr. Michael Weiss and the crew from Real Families.

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They shoot hockey pucks, don’t they?

Vancouver: Fans of Paul Newman’s 1979 hockey classic Slapshot can stop holding their breath.
Slapshot II Breaking the Ice goes into a month of production at Vancouver rinks March 12. And yes, the notorious Hanson Brothers from the original film return, although 20-odd years older. Other major casting was still underway at press time.

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Credo revs up car doc series

Principal photography is almost wrapped and editing is well underway on Winnipeg-based Credo Entertainment’s 13-part, half-hour doc series Head Over Wheels, detailing the relationship between women and their cars.
‘We’re beginning to rough cut episodes and they’re looking fun,’ says Credo executive producer Andrew Koster, producer of the series.

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Portfolio goes prime time with Stolen Miracle for CTV

Making its foray into primetime programming, notable children’s producer Portfolio Entertainment has gone to camera on Stolen Miracle, the next CTV Signature Presentation Drama.
Based on the true story of the 1993 Christmas Eve kidnapping of a newborn baby from the maternity ward of a Southern Ontario hospital, the $4-million MOW is from Gemini Award-winning director Norma Bailey (The Sheldon Kennedy Story) and writers Peter Lauterman (The Aladdin Project) and Shelley Eriksen (Cold Squad).

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Neron enflames in “ad jungle” drama Tribu.com

Montreal: The standards for primetime drama on Quebec TV are high. Productions Sovimage president Vincent Gabriel, producer with Andre Dupuy of the new Reseau TVA series Tribu.com, says the audience threshold for drama is in the 1.2 million range. And unless there’s something very specific about a show’s mandate, other than audience, underperforming series are promptly canceled, easily replaced by programmers with less expensive and often no less competitive teleromans.
In the 10-hour series Tribu.com, thirtysomething professionals share their ambitions, insecurities and sexual proclivities against a backdrop of the wonderfully ironic and carnivorous world of an advertising agency.
In developing the show’s bible, Gabriele (Diva, Caserne 24) says head writer Michelle Allen’s (Diva, Lobby, Graffiti) characters took form ‘through the filter of their sexuality.’

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Quebecor offers $30M for TVA

Montreal: Quebecor Media is offering a $30-million benefits package as part of its application to take over Groupe tva, a significant element of its $5.4-billion purchase of tva parent company Groupe Videotron last October….