TV/FILM/VIDEO:
Nine Canadians are among those nominated for the 89th Academy Awards. They include Howard Barish, co-producer (13th), Documentary (Feature); Sylvain Bellemare (Arrival), Sound Editing; Bernard Gariépy Strobl and Claude La Haye (Arrival), Sound Mixing; Ryan Gosling (La La Land), Actor in a Leading Role; Shawn Levy, co-producer (Arrival), Best Picture; Theodore Ushev (Blind Vaysha), Short Film (Animated), National Film Board of Canada; Patrice Vermette (Arrival), Production Design; and Denis Villeneuve (Arrival), Directing. CTV will carry the Oscars live on Feb. 26.
Michael Landsberg is being awarded a Meritorious Service Medal (Civil Division) for his mental health advocacy. Landsberg will be presented with the honour by Governor General David Johnston at a ceremony at Rideau Hall at a later date. The Meritorious Service Medal is awarded to Canadians who have performed exceptional deeds or activities that set an example for others to follow, improve the quality of life of a community and bring benefit or honour to Canada. Landsberg has spoken publicly about his personal battle with depression since 2009 and considers his ability to help reduce the stigma of mental illness as his most important professional calling. A recognizable on-air personality at TSN since its launch in 1984, Landsberg can be heard every weekday morning on TSN 1050 Radio (CHUM-AM) in Toronto as the co-host of Naylor & Landsberg.
CraveTV’s third Canadian Original series What Would Sal Do? begins streaming March 24. From New Metric Media, the producers of CraveTV comedy Letterkenny, the eight-episode, half-hour comedy follows an underachiever who discovers he’s the second coming of Christ. The series received three Canadian Screen Award nominations last week including Best Performance by an Actress in a Continuing Leading Comedic Role (Jennifer Dale); Best Performance by an Actor in a Featured Supporting Role or Guest Role in a Comedic Series (Ryan McDonald); and Best Writing in a Comedy Program or Series (Andrew De Angelis).
CBC Radio One’s The Current continues to host public forums around the public broadcaster’s first-ever short, virtual reality documentary that takes the viewer to British Columbia’s notorious Highway 16 where it’s believed as many as 50 women have gone missing since 1969. The four-minute doc, directed by Anishinaabe filmmaker Lisa Jackson, can be experienced using the CBC VR Android or CBC VR iOS app. Alternately, you can watch the 360 video using the YouTube or Facebook apps on a smartphone.