The Telegram (St. John's)

Recognizin­g a special milestone

APTN celebrates 20 years of representi­ng Indigenous peoples

- MELISSA HANK

Jean La Rose remembers the exact day that APTN launched in Canada. It was Sept. 1, 1999: Nunavut had just recently become Canada’s newest territory, with a mostly Inuit population, and APTN was the world’s first broadcaste­r to air programmin­g by and for Indigenous peoples.

“It was basically one of those moments where you just sat there and had a good cry because it was momentous, the realizatio­n of something that many of us held close as a dream,” says La Rose, APTN’S longtime CEO.

“We always knew that there needed to be a network that represente­d us, a network that was true to who we were and that allowed us to learn the technical skills to tell our stories. Now we could actually see ourselves and hear our stories.”

Twenty years later, the Winnipeg-based network has more than 11 million subscriber­s.

There are several feeds (including for Eastern, Western, and Northern Canada, as well as an HD feed) plus two radio stations (Toronto and Ottawa). The network has also won Canadian Screen Awards, World Indigenous Journalism Awards and Canadian Associatio­n of Journalist­s Awards, among others.

Still, for La Rose, it’s just nice to be seen. A citizen of the Abenaki First Nation of Odanak in Québec, he grew up in Ottawa watching but one person who looked like him on TV: Jean-paul Nolet, a CBC broadcaste­r who as also Abenaki.

“When he left the air in 1967, I think it was, then we disappeare­d. I never saw anyone else, other than the Indians — and I’m using the term loosely — that Hollywood had in movies. They were not Indigenous at all, just portrayed for the benefit of the movie,” he says.

“Only when Alanis Obomsawin started making movies (in the 1970s) we started seeing ourselves again, but being for the NFB, they were not wide market.

“Now with streaming you can watch them on the NFB website, but in the 1970s to see them you’d have to go and find out where it was screening.”

La Rose went on to study communicat­ions at the University of Ottawa/université Saint-paul, landed a government job, and eventually found work with The Assembly of First Nations.

Meanwhile, the push for Indigenous representa­tion in media was getting stronger. In 1980, the CRTC issued the Therrien Committee Report, which said the government had a responsibi­lity to support northern Indigenous peoples who wanted to develop their own media services.

“There was a need for a fair and exact portrayal of who we are, because everybody assumed at the time that being an Indian just meant being an Indian, and that was it. There was really not a distinctio­n between First Nations, Inuit and Métis people,” says La Rose.

“There was also concern that our languages and culture were being eradicated rapidly by the growth of television across the country — especially the north, where all of a sudden the images of the south and all these different lifestyles appeared on TVS. People felt totally dislocated from that.”

After much lobbying and negotiatin­g, Television Northern Canada (TVNC) launched in the territorie­s and northern provinces in 1992, with La Rose helping to develop the programmin­g grid.

Initially, the network mostly relied on National Film Board classics, offerings from the Northern Native Broadcast Access Program (NNBAP) and reruns of movies with an Indigenous actor tucked in there somewhere.

The bigger goal was to develop original children’s shows, comedies, newscasts and dramas. But by the middle of the decade, the network’s ambition started to chafe against government budget cuts.

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