Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Netflix should add more to Canadian culture: feds

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2022 04:21 PM
  • Netflix should add more to Canadian culture: feds

OTTAWA - Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez says streaming platforms such as Netflix, Disney and Amazon are "the new big players" and should contribute more to Canadian culture.

In a debate in the House of Commons about a bill to regulate online streaming, Rodriguez says updating the broadcasting law is long overdue and needs to cover commercial content on social media and streaming platforms.

He says the last time the law was updated in 1991, people took out videos from Blockbuster and listened to Walkmans.

Rodriguez says he wants to see the creation of more Canadian programs to promote homegrown talent, such as CBC's "Schitt's Creek" and "Anne with an E," which also streamed on Netflix.

But he says he is flexible about how streaming platforms contribute to Canadian culture, and they could use different models including putting money in a fund.

The minister says he has "fixed" concerns raised by critics of a previous version of the bill that it would clamp down on people watching or creating content for social-media platforms.

Conservative MPs expressed worry that non-commercial creators of digital content could be affected by the law.

Rodriguez says in an interview he met with influencers and online creators and "the bill is not about them."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Top court sides with woman in snow squabble

Top court sides with woman in snow squabble
Taryn Joy Marchi alleged the City of Nelson, B.C., created a hazard when it cleared snow from downtown streets after a storm in early January 2015. The removal effort left snow piles at the edge of the street along the sidewalk early in the morning of Jan. 5.

Top court sides with woman in snow squabble

Vaccine passport for travel on the way

Vaccine passport for travel on the way
Canadian officials have been working with international travel organizations and border service agencies of top Canadian destinations to ensure the document will be recognized around the world.

Vaccine passport for travel on the way

Pfizer to ship 2.9 million vaccine doses for kids

Pfizer to ship 2.9 million vaccine doses for kids
Pfizer and BioNTech asked Health Canada Monday to approve the vaccine for children between five and 11 years old but said the doses already shipped for adults are different.

Pfizer to ship 2.9 million vaccine doses for kids

Federal COVID-19 aid gets last-minute reshape

Federal COVID-19 aid gets last-minute reshape
The federal wage and rent subsidies are scheduled to expire on Saturday, along with benefits for some unemployed workers. Freeland says the measures were always designed to be temporary to get through the crisis.    

Federal COVID-19 aid gets last-minute reshape

How to prove you're vaccinated enough to fly

How to prove you're vaccinated enough to fly
All provinces and territories have agreed to conform their proof-of-vaccine documents, or COVID-19 vaccine passports, to a national standard so that they can be used for international and domestic travel. The idea is that the standardized document will make it easier for travel authorities domestically and abroad to verify the vaccine status of Canadians.

How to prove you're vaccinated enough to fly

Cash stash found in donated clothing: Surrey RCMP

Cash stash found in donated clothing: Surrey RCMP
On September 10, 2021, a substantial amount of cash was found in a box of clothing that had been donated to a thrift store located in the 10600 block of King George Boulevard. The employee who located the cash suspected it was inadvertently donated, so they turned it into police.

Cash stash found in donated clothing: Surrey RCMP