Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

CBC Apologizes For 'Canada: The Story Of Us': 'Some People Felt Misrepresented'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Apr, 2017 12:14 PM
    TORONTO — The CBC is apologizing in the wake of accusations of inaccuracies in its docu-drama "Canada: The Story of Us."
     
    In an emailed statement, a spokesman for the public broadcaster acknowledges that "after the first two episodes, some people felt misrepresented."
     
    Chuck Thompson adds the network never intended "to offend anyone or any group, nor diminish the importance of any of the stories that were not included."
     
    Thompson says the CBC is listening to feedback on the series and is planning to host live digital conversations about it.
     
    The first conversation will take place online on the show's website, in English and French, after the next episode airs on April 18.
     
    Thompson says each broadcast will also include the perspectives of those who have sent emails, called in, or posted on social media with criticism.
     
    Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil is among those who have complained about the 10-hour series, which recounts Canada's history.
     
    He said the show was wrong to assert that the country's first permanent European settlement was established in 1608 near what is now Quebec City. McNeil said the history of Canada started three years earlier, when French explorer Samuel de Champlain founded a settlement at Port Royal, N.S., which is part of his riding.
     
    Politicians in Quebec and the mayor of Annapolis Royal, N.S., have also denounced the show as a disrespectful and erroneous version of what really happened when Europeans first settled in Canada.
     
    "Whenever you recount a country's history, there will inevitably be citizens, historians and politicians who will have different points of view, and that's certainly been the case with 'Canada: The Story of Us,'" Thompson said Tuesday in the statement.
     
    "After the first two episodes, some people felt misrepresented and for that, we apologize. We fully recognize that not everyone will agree with every perspective presented."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    One Woman Dead After Van Crashes Into Several Vehicle In Surrey

    One Woman Dead After Van Crashes Into Several Vehicle In Surrey
    Surrey RCMP say they responded to a collision at the intersection of 72 Ave. and 152 St. Wednesday evening.

    One Woman Dead After Van Crashes Into Several Vehicle In Surrey

    Surrey RCMP Lay Multiple Charges Against Man Accused Of Fleeing Police In Stolen SUV

    Surrey RCMP Lay Multiple Charges Against Man Accused Of Fleeing Police In Stolen SUV
    Surrey RCMP has arrested and charged a man alleged to have occupied a stolen SUV that tried to evade Police.

    Surrey RCMP Lay Multiple Charges Against Man Accused Of Fleeing Police In Stolen SUV

    Fake Surrey Municipal Worker Steals From Restaurant Employees

    Fake Surrey Municipal Worker Steals From Restaurant Employees
    Surrey RCMP are warning the public about a man disguised as a city worker who allegedly conned his way into businesses to steal employees' belongings from staff rooms.

    Fake Surrey Municipal Worker Steals From Restaurant Employees

    Two-Week-Old Baby Boy Dies After Going Into Cardiac Arrest On British Columbia Highway

    Two-Week-Old Baby Boy Dies After Going Into Cardiac Arrest On British Columbia Highway
    Sgt. Norm Flemming with Merritt RCMP says the family was travelling from Vernon to Vancouver along the Coquihalla Highway on Monday when the little boy's father realized he wasn't breathing.

    Two-Week-Old Baby Boy Dies After Going Into Cardiac Arrest On British Columbia Highway

    Vice Reporter Must Turn Over Materials To RCMP, Ontario Top Court Rules

    Vice Reporter Must Turn Over Materials To RCMP, Ontario Top Court Rules
    TORONTO — A Vice Media reporter must give the RCMP the background materials he used for stories on an accused terrorist, Ontario's top court affirmed Wednesday.

    Vice Reporter Must Turn Over Materials To RCMP, Ontario Top Court Rules

    Tories Take Aim At $127,000 Bill For Trudeau's Trip To Aga Khan's Private Island

    Tories Take Aim At $127,000 Bill For Trudeau's Trip To Aga Khan's Private Island
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau's family vacation over New Year's is back in the spotlight after documents tabled in Parliament revealed the cost of the trip down south was north of $127,000.

    Tories Take Aim At $127,000 Bill For Trudeau's Trip To Aga Khan's Private Island