What with the actor who played Hudson having been fired, and the dog who played Rex having died, it seems a bit rich to be still calling the series #HudsonAndRex .

But I am reminded that they continued to call it #Taggart for 16 years after Mark McManus died.

Not a good look to have fired an actor for being treated for cancer, though.

#CanadianTelly #STV #RogersMedia #NewfoundlandAndLabrador

The Broadcasters’ Online News Act Submission: Demanding An Even Bigger Piece of the Bill C-18 Pie for Bell, Rogers and the CBC - Michael Geist https://bit.ly/45Psj97 #CAB #OnlineNewsAct #BellMedia #RogersMedia #CBC #Journalism #cdnpoli @canadiangreens @cdnpoli
The Broadcasters’ Online News Act Submission: Demanding An Even Bigger Piece of the Bill C-18 Pie for Bell, Rogers and the CBC - Michael Geist

The government has yet to release its final regulations for the Online News Act, but recent comments from News Media Canada seemed to suggest that it is hoping to find common ground with Google, stating that it supports the company’s proposed amendments to Bill C-18 draft regulations. While that may be a long shot - I posted that Google’s call for legislative changes signals that it has arrived at the conclusion that regulations alone cannot fix the foundational flaws in the law - the Canadian Association of Broadcasters has created yet another complication. The lobby group representing private broadcasters such as Bell and Rogers isn’t looking to find a compromise position. Instead, its submission indicates that wants all broadcasters (which given the law would include the CBC) to get an even bigger portion of the potential Bill C-18 revenues by expanding the definition of “journalist” to include everyone from sound and video engineers to researchers and fact checkers. The expansive definition prioritizes many broadcasting jobs, which would mean conventional newspaper services likely would get even less than the current estimate of 25% of revenues.

Michael Geist