The Province

CanCon comes to YouTube

Vintage TV, movies returning for new viewers

- MELISSA HANK

Vintage Canadian films and television shows are finding new life in the digital age.

Several key media companies have teamed up for Encore+, a YouTube channel that streams shows including Da Vinci’s Inquest and The Littlest Hobo for free.

Already, more than 300 videos related to 100 films and TV series fill the channel, some of it newly remastered.

Content is available in French and English and includes comedies, dramas, children’s shows, documentar­ies and short films. New offerings will arrive weekly at youtube.com/EncorePlus­Media.

“Many of the titles we’re featuring have been enjoyed by audiences from different generation­s and were funded through public support.

“They have since disappeare­d from most screens,” said Valerie Creighton, president and CEO of the Canada Media Fund.

Among the TV series currently available: Da Vinci’s Inquest, Degrassi High, Due South, Little Mosque on the Prairie, Moccasin Flats, Mr. Dressup and The Littlest Hobo.

Films include I’ve Heard the Mermaids Singing and New Waterford Girl, while French titles include Cornemuse, La Petite Vie and Watatatow.

The Canada Media Fund collaborat­ed with producers, distributo­rs and unions for the project, as well as Google Canada, Bell Media, BroadbandT­V (BBTV), Deluxe Toronto and Telefilm Canada.

“Canada is one of the world’s most vibrant YouTube communitie­s, with watch time growing 30 per cent over last year, and we are certain that these celebrated titles will find an engaged audience both here at home and around the world,” said Sabrina Geremia, the country director for Google Canada.

To wit, YouTube unveiled in July the curated page Spotlight Canada, featuring the nation’s most successful content creators and viral videos, such as astronaut Chris Hadfield’s collaborat­ion with the Barenaked Ladies from space. It was the first time a country was singled out with its own curated section.

Streaming services in Canada currently offer relatively newer homegrown movies and TV shows: Netflix boasts Trailer Park Boys (which it co-produces) and the 2011 film Goon, for example, while CraveTV serves up such shows as Letterkenn­y and Corner Gas.

 ?? — CBC FILES ?? Mr. Dressup (Ernie Coombs) with Casey and Finnegan.
— CBC FILES Mr. Dressup (Ernie Coombs) with Casey and Finnegan.

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