The Niagara Falls Review

Podcast about deaths of Indigenous youth coming to TV

- ADINA BRESGE

TORONTO — A true-crime podcast probing the deaths and disappeara­nces of Indigenous youth in Thunder Bay, Ont., is set to be adapted for the small screen.

Northwood Entertainm­ent and the producers of Canadaland’s “Thunder Bay” are teaming up to develop the podcast into a TV drama series.

Downloaded more than a million times worldwide, the podcast examines how the forces of crime, corruption and colonialis­m put Indigenous youth at risk in the Northweste­rn Ontario city. Ryan McMahon, the podcast’s host and an executive producer on the TV series, says the adaptation will delve deeper into these themes while reaching a wider audience.

The Anishinaab­e comedian, writer and activist says the show will draw from the real-life stories in the podcast, but will feature elements of fiction that speak to broader truths.

He says the affects of systemic racism on Indigenous communitie­s extend well beyond Thunder Bay, and the drama will “create a world we want to talk about.”

“I hope ... the people of Thunder Bay don’t feel like they’re going to be attacked in a dramatic television series. That’s not the intention,” McMahon said by phone from Winnipeg. “The intention is to continue the conversati­on and the investigat­ion into how we make things better in this country.”

McMahon and his fellow executive producers, Miranda de Pencier of Northwood Entertainm­ent and Jesse Brown of the news site Canadaland, are in the process of finding a showrunner for the series.

McMahon said one of the key criteria for the role is understand­ing the cultural context of the show, rather than relying on the tropes that have dominated representa­tion of Indigenous Peoples on TV since the medium’s inception.

“It’s really a unique opportunit­y, I think, to have a series like this led through an Indigenous story lens, right from the start. Not once the story is made and we need a cultural fixer,” he said.

“We’ve been dehumanize­d for too long. And I think at the end of the day, making a series like this will really bring the humanity to the forefront, and show nonIndigen­ous people that we are very much the same as them.”

 ?? JANE ADAMS THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Anishinaab­e comedian, writer and activist Ryan McMahon
JANE ADAMS THE CANADIAN PRESS Anishinaab­e comedian, writer and activist Ryan McMahon

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada