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Confessions of a new entry

The electronics equipment is still being shipped, sets are still being painted and new office cubicles are still being added. This is Stornoway Communications just over a month after champagne corks were popped at 6 a.m. on Sept. 7 to mark the launch of the upstart broadcaster’s three diginets, iChannel, bmp:tv and Movieola. (The short-movie channel, Movieola, was acquired in early October, pending CRTC approval.) And balloons are still afloat.

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Canadian animation houses

The following is an alphabetical listing of Canadian animation houses. Information is based on questionnaires completed by companies which chose to respond to Playback’s survey. (The number of commercials listed refers to completely animated – as opposed to post – jobs.)

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A legacy from the past, challenges for the future

There are two questions everybody asks as I prepare to leave the Canadian Association of Broadcasters after 13 and a half years at the helm.

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The Canadian dilemma, the local solution

Jay Switzer (a self-confessed TV brat) is president of Toronto-based CHUM Television.

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The shifting relationship of producer and broadcaster

Christin Shipton has worked as an executive in television movies and series for over 15 years at CBC, Alliance, Alliance Atlantis and recently the CTV-affiliated Landscape Entertainment.

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Industry foresees shift in TV revenue model

In this special report, we present the results of the Playback/Blue Spark iTV Convergence Survey.

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Artisan deal means changing Landscape

Vancouver: In a deal worth $57 million (US$36 million) in cash, shares and assets, Landscape Entertainment has bought a 20% stake in L.A.-based Artisan Entertainment. While the deal should be final by the end of October, less clear is what kind of a Canadian presence Landscape will maintain.
Equal partners CTV and an investor syndicate headed by Canadian Bob Cooper founded Landscape Entertainment in 1999 as a Canadian parent company with offices in Toronto and L.A. creating film, television and Internet content.

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U.S. investor to battle for Cinar

Montreal: Distressed securities specialist Chapman Capital L.L.C. of Los Angeles has acquired close to one million Class B shares of Cinar at US$2.34 a share. The investment gives the U.S. securities specialist an estimated 2% of the 41 million Cinar shares issued and outstanding. Robert L. Chapman Jr., managing member, known in the U.S. investment community as a ‘corporate raider’ and ‘stock activist,’ says the ‘strategic block’ of shares will be used ‘to pressure Cinar management to get a deal done, and we’re going to see a very combative situation, a war over the money.’
Chapman is projecting an ultimate Cinar selling price ‘in the mid to high single-digit range’ per share. Or somewhere between US$200 million ($313 million) and US$360 million ($564 million).

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Trudeau – just watch it

Halifax: It’s a quiet September day on the campus of Halifax’s Dalhousie University, but its popular female dormitory, Shirreff Hall, is bustling with equipment trucks blocking the drive, crew members frantically running in and out of the building’s front door and confused students trying to figure out why it is so difficult to get to the cafeteria for dinner.
While most students are genuinely oblivious to what is going on, one man is looking very much at ease in a brown leather jacket, two cameras slung over his shoulder. He wanders around, chats on his cell phone from time to time, and takes pictures. He is actor Colm Feore, and he is looking eerily similar to the man he is portraying on this day and the many days to follow. He has the daunting task of playing Pierre Elliot Trudeau in the first biographical miniseries ever produced on the late prime minister.

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Core review threatens B.C.’s domestic film industry

Vancouver: B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell, already spearheading a Core Services Review, announced late last month that the cost of government will be cut by an average 35% by 2005 – a prospect that has industries across the province bracing for layoffs, service reductions and program eliminations.
In practice, it means that all government ministries, except for those overseeing health and education, must cut spending by 20% and 50% over the next three years.
For the domestic film and television industry specifically, the budget-slashing means that funding agency B.C. Film, marketer B.C. Film Commission, the domestic tax credit, the production services tax credit, Bridge Studios, the B.C. Arts Council, sponsorships for programs such as the Vancouver International Film Festival, the talent agent registry, apprenticeships, occupational health and safety programs, training and the Knowledge Network, among other relevant spending initiatives are in question.

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Jump Cuts

CTV to revise CFCF benefits

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Changes abound

Between the time that I’m writing this editorial – that is on Monday afternoon Thanksgiving Day – and the time that this paper hits the street, news related to our economy and the state of world warfare will likely change, maybe even more than once. Certainly the second cancellation of the Emmy Awards was an unexpected twist to a story that seemed, at least until Saturday’s bombing of Afghanistan, to be losing some of its incisive news appeal. And of course while CBS is claiming it rolled up the red carpet because ‘Hollywood felt uncomfortable about celebrating at this time,’ the decision also came just days after word was leaked that the next terrorist attacks would be targeted at U.S. military and entertainment centres.

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Corrections

In the Oct. 1 On the Spot,

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New directions at Nelvana

Cannes, France: Unlike a number of major players in the U.S. and Europe who are reporting reduced children’s production slates for 2001, Nelvana co-CEO Michael Hirsh says the Toronto toonco is projecting 15% to 20% growth over last year.

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TV movies, miniseries top AAC slate

Cannes, France: MIPCOM represents three distinct but simultaneous sales and coproduction markets for Alliance Atlantis Communications.