‘The stakes have never been higher,’ says Sandra Cunningham, just weeks before she chairs the CFTPA Prime Time in Ottawa conference for the first time.
The inconvenient truth about film and television production is that ‘we are operating in a very disposable industry.’
Many people think ‘green’ when British Columbia comes to mind, so it’s not too surprising that B.C. is leading the way in Western Canada when it comes to striving for film and TV productions that leave a smaller carbon footprint.
Green is fashionable for the third time in as many decades, and the trendy film industry is re-embracing the cause, hoping for ‘third time lucky,’ with green initiatives sprouting in Quebec and taking root in Ontario.
A green initiative will be pitched to producers at the CFTPA Prime Time in Ottawa conference later this month, according to Minds Eye Pictures’ Kevin DeWalt, cochair of the CFTPA’s recently formed green committee.
The Incredible Hulk is an excellent example of a film production that strived for a reduced carbon footprint when it shot at Toronto Film Studios last summer.
The big game peaked at 5.83 million on CTV, and kept fans tuned in until the very last nail-biting minutes. Good news for advertisers, despite the high number of house ads, say buyers
Comedy Le bonheur de Pierre puts Quebec star Rémy Girard next to France’s Pierre Richard, playing on the tensions between Quebecois and Parisians
The tooncaster is going after kids 8-12 in French and English with a wish-fulfillment show about tween surfers by busy Toronto prodco Fresh TV
Network news in Ontario now comes with sports highlights from Score Media
A record year in domestic TV kept the industry on its feet despite slumps in film and service shoots, according to a sneak peek at the CFTPA’s 2006/07 numbers
Looking to regain lost ground with key viewers, CBC has swapped the sporty soap with its oddball office comedy