



Advertising




| by: | Aug 7, 2006 |
The specially channels under the Alliance Atlantis umbrella have revealed their plans for the coming fall season, putting foul-mouthed cowboys, second-hand goaltenders and genealogists into primetime. Highlights of the lineup, all times Eastern, include:
Showcase
The half-hour hockey comedy Rent-A-Goalie from executive producer Chris Szarka debuts Oct. 1 at 9:30 p.m. - following the plum Sunday night slot of Trailer Park Boys.
Szarka professes to be a Trailer Park fan, but says his show has more of a family feel. It centers on a gang of freelance goaltenders who hire themselves out for minor-league games.
"The program should appeal to the same 18-34 male demographic as Trailer Park Boys, but our screeners showed that women also liked the show, because [lead character] Cake has a love interest and relationships are interwoven into the program," says Szarka.
Eight episodes, with a budget of $400,000 each, have been completed. Ten more are in development in anticipation that the show by Toronto-based Georgian and RAG-TV will be renewed.
The show is set not only at the hockey rink but also at an Italian café, where the dressing room culture is contrasted with the suave coffee set. Hockey greats such as Phil Esposito and Darryl Sittler make cameos.
Rent-A-Goalie will follow repeats of Trailer Park Boys, 10 new episodes of which won't air until spring.
Thirteen all-new episodes of Kenny vs Spenny begin Thursday, Oct. 19 at 9:30 p.m., while Naked Josh has been cancelled, though it will continue in reruns.
Showcase is also keeping its 10 p.m. timeslot campaign, pushing new seasons of Rescue Me, Weeds, The L Word and Six Feet Under. It has also picked up G-Spot - by Serendipity Point Films and Barna-Alper Productions, previously seen on The Movie Network and Movie Central - and the British crime drama Life on Mars.
Food Network
Oct. 3 will see the premiere of Heat at 10 p.m. The 13 x 30 reality from Toronto's General Purpose Pictures takes viewers into the kitchen of renowned chef Mark McEwan, owner of the North 44 and Bymark restaurants in Toronto. The Tuesday night show goes behind the scenes, as McEwan and his employees prepare food for the rich and famous, and organize corporate dinners, private parties and stadium-style events. Scott Clark McNeil is exec producer.
History Television
Ancestors in the Attic - a modern-day look at the genealogy of Canadians by Primitive Entertainment in Toronto - is an example of new programming aimed at drawing a younger audience to the often older-skewed History.
"We have been working for some years on various shows to really try to get the message out to our audience that History is not black-and-white, old archival documentaries. It's modern programming," says AAC's EVP of content Norm Bolen, citing Ancestors and the just-acquired U.S. program Deadwood as examples.
Ancestors is meant to be "feisty, and to appeal to a wide range of ages," says producer Dugald Maudsley. "The music that we've got is very current and hip. The way that we tell history is very contemporary.


