The CRTC is enlisting broadcasters in its ground game to get Canadians into the digital TV age from August 31, 2011.
Regulation is not a dirty word. That was the message from the Writers Guild of Canada to a Heritage Committee formed to examine an issue which has flummoxed policy makers and industry leaders around the globe: media convergence.
…My problem with the 5% target is that all it served to do was quantify our defeat. It put a lackluster number to our aspirations and made us look amateur when we failed to live up to it…
Telefilm chair Michel Roy on Wednesday said the financier will introduce a new yardstick to measure the performance of Canadian film beyond the local multiplex.
Clearly frustrated with ACTRA and other artists’ groups public denunciation of his copyright law, Bill C-32, Heritage Minister James Moore suggested energy would be far better spent coming up with a realistic legislative proposal to protect creators.
Astral Media’s Super Ecran pay television channel will not face competition in the French-language market from TVA Group’s proposed pay TV movie channel Cine-TVA service, the CRTC ruled Friday.
As MPs debate the government’s proposed copyright bill, Bill C-32, a Quebec lobby group representing thirteen arts and culture groups has launched a public campaign to fight for changes to the controversial legislation.
ACTRA member and star of Murdoch Mysteries, Yannick Bisson, weighs in on proposed new copyright legislation.
This past weekend saw Minister of Industry Tony Clement roll out the third round of projects to receive conditional funding through the Broadband Canada: Connecting Rural Canadians program.
When is reality TV not a documentary, and when is a Canadian TV award show in the national interest?
A controversial documentary about Omar Khadr’s 2003 interrogation by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service from Montreal-based documentary filmmakers Luc Cote and Patricio Henriquez will be shown to federal MPs on on Parliament Hill tonight.
Recent comments by former CBC president Robert Rabinovitch about the tenuous nature of the Ceeb’s future certainly stirred the hornet’s nest.