"Woke Ideology" in Canadian Films
December 26th, 2020
The Line:
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By: Christina Clark
I’ve been working in documentary film and television in Canada since I graduated from university in Montreal nine years ago. I climbed the ladder from production assistant to story producer. I even got to direct. I’ve worked with a lot of talented people — many of whom now feel trapped in an industry that is stagnating, writing and directing an endless feedback loop of predictable storytelling formats.
Last fall, I decided to stop.
Somewhere along the way in my career, I became part of what we call in Quebec a “machine à saucisse” — a sausage factory — churning out content to fit predetermined narratives to please public broadcasters who don’t actually have to satisfy their audience to earn revenue. In the last few years, I’ve noticed a not-so-subtle shift in the documentary industry: we have begun to tell stories that serve ideological narratives, instead of telling stories that enlighten curious audiences.
Many of the stories now told through documentary skew the truth by reinforcing the viewpoint du jour. Interviews and scenes that break with the chosen narrative, that offer something other than a black-and-white approach to society and the complexities of humanity, happen off camera or end up on the editing room floor. This is all in an effort to promote diverse voices and the political opinions that allegedly support them. But when we lay claim to a singular viewpoint or dismiss a perspective because the creator’s or the subject’s skin tone or gender does not fit the narrative of inclusion, we are actually removing diversity from the storytelling equation. And what we’re left with are one-sided storylines that reinforce an echo chamber of virtue signalling.
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Christina Clark
I don't want anyone being too critical of Christina Clark. Yes, she's not making 100% the arguments that we would make here, doing the sort of Cuckservative bit here of "but, but, you're actually removing diversity of thought and blah blah." We're not dealing with a Jason Kenney type here, this is the type of story that the Donor-Right would love to have buried.
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To secure public funding for a documentary film or program in Canada, producers typically need to have a broadcaster already signed on to the project. Then, they can apply to funds like the Canada Media Fund, Telefilm or Rogers. Without a broadcaster licence, you cannot apply for public funding. The criteria for licencing a film or television series has narrowed in recent years — not unlike the audiences these programs are targeting.
Take, for example, the Creative Relief Fund that the CBC put together during the early months of COVID to award $2 million in development and production funding for new projects, ranging from fiction and non-fiction television to documentary shorts to plays and podcasts. This was an enticing invitation for creators in lockdown. During this time, friends and colleagues of mine in the industry were messaging each other back and forth, offering feedback on each other’s ideas, as we were all intending to apply. These are some questions we all wondered aloud, in the safety of our private chats: “Do you think this story is diverse enough?” “This story might be too white…” “I don’t think the language is woke enough, do you think they’ll see the bigger story here?” That's because many broadcasters have “Inclusion and Diversity Plans” that you have to fill out for your project, that track the racial and gender makeup of your crew and your interviewees. While it is not explicitly mandatory to accommodate broadcasters’ criteria for diversity, a lot of filmmakers already know before they even pitch an idea that their chances of getting greenlit are greater if they do.
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Actually, who does run the CBC? Well, according to Wikipedia, the CEO is Catherine Tait.
CBC CEO Catherine Tait
The first Executive Vice-President is Barbara Williams, who was directly responsible for the "Covid Relief Fund," amongst many other things of course.
CBC Executive Vice-President Barbara Williams
The second Executive Vice-President is Michel Bissonnette. He's responsible for the French networks.
CBC Executive Vice-President Michel Bissonnette
So two catladies and one of the creepiest guys I have ever seen. Seriously, usually these propagandists have a good picture or two somewhere or other, every picture I saw on DuckDuckGo of this last guy he has this weird lopsided creepy face.
They're all like this. If he's not a homosexual he's some other kind of fucked up and weird.
Now, of course these people are ultimately still just employees. High level employees with some agency, but employees nevertheless. Finding out who precisely put them into their current positions is far more difficult. But I would love to find out who their handlers are.
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What many filmmakers and storytellers fear to admit publicly is that, as a result of these shifts, they feel beholden to perform wokeness in the way they pitch their stories. I have felt this way, too, often at the expense of the story. This is done with the hope that we might appeal to the current wave of broadcasters, who are equally afraid of failing to choose projects that mirror the ethos of woke ideology. But it contravenes the original mandate of the National Film Board to promote a plurality of voices and opinions.
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Just say "Anti-Whitism and Pervertism." But don't worry, the next part is great.
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It’s been somewhat amusing watching producers scramble in the wake of every progressive movement to pump out content that bolsters their allegiance to causes that are still unfolding — the #MeToo movement, LGBTQ2S+ issues, Black Lives Matter. Documentary is a deeply reflective medium, ill suited to keeping up with trends. But because we are all working in this industry — mostly as freelancers — and because we want a shot at creating something in a field we’re passionate about, we bend and flex our storytelling principles to fit the sensibilities of the morally righteous gatekeepers of public funding.
Pictured: Narcissistic NPC Filmmakers attempting to get funding.
Some of us express our discomfort — it feels incredibly condescending and disingenuous to hire someone or interview them because they check a box on a diversity mandate. Some of us are afraid to lose work. Some of us are now part of what I call the “converted,” for it has indeed begun to feel like a cult-like mentality has taken over the airwaves.
Ironically, many people who work in the film and television industry are highly critical and dismissive of Canadian society as racist, homophobic or sexist. They are also the people who make their living off of cultural institutions funded by Canadians. And there is something very insidious and hypocritical in that that makes me wonder how it’s possible they can demand more money from the government to fund their creative aspirations while showing such disdain for “the system.”
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You know, back when I was a trucker, I went all up and down a route from California to Vancouver, and sometimes out East in Canada. I met a lot of working class people. And do you know what was on the tips of all our tongues, exchanged in hushed tones around Truck Stop Luncheons and Cheap Diners?
"When are we getting Gender-Queer Liberation."
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There are two documentary films I’ve wanted to make in the last four years. One story connected the lives of three different men living in different parts of Canada to the opioid epidemic, tracing its history from prescription painkillers to fentanyl-laced recreational drugs to intravenous drug use. This is a crisis that has been blowing up in the United States for decades. In 2018, data revealed that 128 people die every day of an opioid overdose in the U.S. In Canada, someone dies from an overdose every two hours. Most of those people are young men. And it is massively underreported.
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Meet the Sacklers.
The fuck is wrong with this bigot? Doesn't she know that White People being murdered by the Jew Sackler Family and Billionaire Pharmaceutical Companies is NOT A NEWS STORY. We can't take precious time away from some random brown face.
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The other story was about the declining fertility rates in Canada, its consequences on our society and how this reflects a growing global trend that will have major impacts on our country in the not-too-distant future. Having worked on a short documentary about Quebec’s former public in vitro fertilization (IVF) program, I was curious about the story we’re not telling about fertility, the rise in average age of first-time mothers, and the cultural framework that sends a very mixed message to young women in the workforce.
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Okay I'm actually pissed now. These were great documentaries that absolutely needed to be made. Fuck these people.
Incoming wall of text, because what she says now is so important I can't find a way to meaningfully edit it.
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For the first story, I was told “now is not a time for stories about white men.” My three main participants were — are — white. They also represent the demographic most affected by the opioid epidemic in North America. Meanwhile, in the documentary on declining fertility rates, we cut most of the serious discussion on women's infertility and the mixed cultural message on family formation in favour of a simplistic viewpoint that subsidizing IVF for women and freezing eggs is ultimately the progressive thing to do.
Through these experiences, I slowly learned that the stories we fund for public broadcasting also cater to the biases of people living in Canada’s wealthiest cities. The divide between issues that matter to rural populations and those that matter to urbanites is growing, across Canada and the United States. By comparison, there is little room for Canadians to openly debate issues of public importance because there is no major platform here that has managed to avoid this callow, creatively stifling ideology. This is another consequence of having state-run and state-funded media that decides for us. Important, nuanced stories — stories that speak to all Canadians — remain untold.
We pay taxes for media funding because it was deemed necessary in service of a unified Canada, and as a bulwark against American cultural imperialism. But when your prime minister states that his country “has no core identity,” it’s a contradictory message to digest. If there is no core identity, why bother having a public funding model at all? And what's the value in a publicly funded cultural organization that reinforces tribalism over universalism?
In our current public-funding model, if no one watches the films or docu-television series we pay to make, there is no accountability for failure. Our own national broadcaster doesn’t need positive ratings for renewal. Documentaries that get funded are watched mostly at film festivals attended by industry folk, and a dwindling number of devoted Canadian movie-goers. And now there’s a tax credit to buy viewership. Instead of creating genuine incentive to watch Canadian programming, we are paying people to subscribe and avoiding the embarrassing question of why there’s little interest in what’s on offer.
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